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Posted
2 hours ago, Lewie London said:

Right, so I’m standin’ at the zebra crossin’ near Terminal 21, yeah, sun beatin’ down on me belly, sweat tricklin’ down me arse crack, and I’m waitin’ for what should be a basic civic miracle, a car to stop for me to cross the Asoke intersection. Green man’s flashin’, I step out, and what happens? Some bloke in a Honda Accord floors it like he’s in bloody Mario Kart and I’m just another banana skin on the track.

 

And this ain’t just a one-off. Nah mates, it’s every day. Every road’s a roulette wheel. I’ve seen toddlers, pensioners, even a geezer in a wheelchair nearly mown down by grannies in pastel Toyotas, one hand on the wheel and the other clutchin’ to a bubble tea like their life depends on it. Thai people pride themselves on bein’ passive, non-confrontational, cool as cucumbers on a valium drip. But get ‘em behind a wheel and it’s Mad Max on Meth.

 

Same goes for elevators. You’re tryin’ to get out, yeah, doors open, and bang, it's a bloody stampede. Aunties, schoolkids, delivery drivers, all surgin’ in like it’s Black Friday at Big C. I got wedged once, shoulder to shoulder with a bloke stinkier than a fish market bin loaded up on M-150, just ’cause no one had the patience to let people out first. It’s like manners clock out the minute you step inside a shopping mall.

 

And don’t even get me started on queues. Or more accurately, the complete absence of ‘em. At 7-Eleven it’s a bloody scrum. You’re standin’ there with your Leo, a toasty, and a packet of crisps, and some lad in flip-flops breezes past like you’re a ghost. Same at the BTS ticket machines. It’s not a queue, it’s a war zone. Hunger Games without the dignity.

 

I’ve travelled, alright? Europe, the US, Japan, Korea, Vietnam, even Cambodia. Never seen this sort of carry-on. Maybe China’s the only place that came close, but those barbarians, at least there you expect it. Here, it’s all wai to your elders, smile at strangers, and then shoulder-barge your way onto a train like you’re in a mosh pit.

 

And don’t feed me that “different culture” waffle. It ain’t culture, it’s selfishness in a smiley wrapper. No spatial awareness, no consideration, no nothin’. Everyone’s in their own little bubble, starin’ at their phone, pretendin’ they don’t see the chaos they’re causin’. But they do see. They know. It ain’t ignorance, it’s quiet, calculated rudeness in a polite outfit.

 

So I’m standin’ there thinkin’, how does a country that goes on about “saving face” have so little shame when it comes to basic public decency?

 

They’re all lovely until there’s a lift button, a zebra crossin’, or a queue involved. Then it’s every geezer for himself and sod the lot of you.

 

Land of Smiles, is it? More like Land of Side-Eye and Brake-Checks. Just watch out for the pickup truck doin’ ninety while you’re crossin’ with the green light and right of way.

 

17 minutes ago, CanadaSam said:

For those of you dissin the OP, you have to agree he is mostly right, and it is well written too.

 

Many, many wonderful things about LOS, but these are some annoying and sometimes dangerous behaviors.

 

There's road danger in every country. 

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Posted
17 minutes ago, CanadaSam said:

For those of you dissin the OP, you have to agree he is mostly right, and it is well written too.

 

Many, many wonderful things about LOS, but these are some annoying and sometimes dangerous behaviors.

Not really, and my experiences are a bit different.  No stating it doesn't happen, but not all the time, and actually the exception.  Getting in/out of BTS/MRT, yes, most times, but almost understandable, if you want to get in at rush hour.

 

Not much different from other big metros that I've visited.  Always a few inconsiderate folks.  

 

Whoosa ... 😎

 

Planes leave TH, a few every hour ... :coffee1:

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Posted
1 hour ago, newbee2022 said:

Yes, if you smile at them they will smile back. Honestly. Try. 🥰

I do on a daily basis and I get a genuine smile in return. However I live in rural Kamphaeng Phet province which, thankfully is nowhere near a tourist place, such as Pattaya or Phuket.

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Posted

I get on a scooter in Thailand nearly every day.

 

IMO it's less dangerous than doing the same in Australia.

 

The OP does not seem to understand the unwritten rules in Thailand.

 

Rule # 1 is never trust a pedestrian crossing.

  • Haha 2
Posted
2 hours ago, scorecard said:

There's road danger in every country. 

 

Which country would you rather drive in? Country A has the lowest rate of fatalities in the world and country B has the highest. Both countries have fatalities. Might as well flip a coin because it really doesn't matter either way, right? 🤔

Posted
6 minutes ago, NorthernRyland said:

 

Which country would you rather drive in? Country A has the lowest rate of fatalities in the world and country B has the highest. Both countries have fatalities.

 

🤔

That's not what I said or alluded to.

 

 "Might as well flip a coin because it really doesn't matter either way, right?" I didn't suggest that and I never would suggest that.

 

Like any human being I would prefer to live in a country which has a low accident / injury / death toll/ from traffic accidents. 

duced too.

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