proton Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago 2 hours ago, BLMFem said: Are you really that thick? Do you honestly not understand that to go into more details would be to touch on forbidden subjects, or are you just trolling to get the poster in trouble? You did not make the claim, nobody asked you about it 2
Gknrd Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago Miss the good old days of a good coup, Lets get Thailand back on track again. 1 1
BLMFem Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago 15 minutes ago, proton said: You did not make the claim, nobody asked you about it Correct, I asked you a question. 1 1
proton Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 19 minutes ago, BLMFem said: Correct, I asked you a question. BLM- Big Loud Mouth 😄 2
JackGats Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago A coup would do away with all the nice things coming from democracy, like taxation of remittances, re-criminalisation of cannabis, taxation of world-wide income etc. Let's hope there will be no coup for sure. 1
westsail Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 4 hours ago, khunPer said: 20 coup d'état since 1932 – that is in average one every 5th year – the last one was in 2014... We are overdue, and the current PM is not the one who the people elected so they may not be too troubled if she is ousted. 1
Jonathan Swift Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 12 hours ago, ozz1 said: Unfortunately Thailand won't change one coupe after another pp should have come to power but the elites running this country don't want power to the people Coupe? Yes, we need more than one coupe, one after another off the assembly line, give everyone a Coupe DeVille Cadillac, then we'll all be happy.
ronnie50 Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago I think it's very possible. But it would be a worse disaster than before on a number of levels. First, this time people would fight back - the disenfranchised majority - especially those who had the government they voted for stolen away from them in broad daylight have really now come to understand how the wealthy establishment, the monopolists, the royalists and their rubber stamp courts, and other pliable 'commissions', etc., are designed specifically to work against them. As someone said there is no longer a moral compass or saintly figure to cow them. Second, the economic future is already so bad that a coup would just turn this into another Burma. Third, much of the industrialized world would alienate the coup leaders. And finally, this time, a coup would risk civil war.
blaze master Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 14 hours ago, webfact said: Phumtham is urging all to study the past to fortify democracy. Ya pal nothing says democracy like the threat of a coup. What a complete db.
billd766 Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 2 hours ago, westsail said: We are overdue, and the current PM is not the one who the people elected so they may not be too troubled if she is ousted. The people do not elect the PM. They vote for a political party and if that party wins the most seats but less than an absolute majority it is offered first choice to form a coalition government with another party or parties. If they still cannot form a coalition government after a period of time (I think it is 30 days but I am not sure) the party with the next highest number of seats is given the chance to form a coalition government. If they are successful the the largest party in the coalition offers a name (or names) to be voted on by that party alone, to become the PM.
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