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Thai Opposition Slams Rally Figures for Encouraging Military Coup


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Posted
10 hours ago, webfact said:

leaders from the “United Power of Land Group” suggesting a coup

slamming rally figures for inciting a potential coup

certain rally speeches seemed to be laying groundwork for a coup

identify them by name, call them out, shine a spotlight on them, destroy their anonymity, make them widely known,

explain those speeches and their ramifications to the Thai people, use your forums and the media to show how these "figures" and their families will prosper with a coup while Thai people suffer.

  • Like 2
Posted
40 minutes ago, Krabi King said:

A democratically elected PM could be removed if violating the constitution. That is democracy too.

Not when those deciding on the removal are all from one faction.

  • Agree 2
Posted
1 hour ago, hotchilli said:

Elected by whom..... not the people.

I am confused, being from a country without a Prime Minister. Are countries with Prime Minister all directly elected by the people or, like in the past, the Head of State asks the head of the winning party to form a government?

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Posted
54 minutes ago, klauskunkel said:

identify them by name, call them out, shine a spotlight on them, destroy their anonymity, make them widely known,

explain those speeches and their ramifications to the Thai people, use your forums and the media to show how these "figures" and their families will prosper with a coup while Thai people suffer.

That's what the Defamation law is there to stop...

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Posted
36 minutes ago, wwest5829 said:

I am confused, being from a country without a Prime Minister. Are countries with Prime Minister all directly elected by the people or, like in the past, the Head of State asks the head of the winning party to form a government?

 

It's not difficult to grasp.

In a prime ministerial system you vote for a party. The party chooses it's leader and the cabinet is chosen from parliamentarians to propose laws which are put to parliament. No majority effectively means no government as the parliament can likely get a no confidence vote.

In a Presedential system you vote for a person who chooses his own people outside parliament to put forward laws  to parliament (or rule by decree on the margins of constitutionality in the current US situation). A president who can't get laws approved can't be voted out of office by the parliament. He is the head of state for the allotted length of time.

A military government rules with no democratic principles at all. 

Please pay attention at the back of the class.

Posted

Unfortunately a large number of Thai's are illiterate and need to be seriously led, so by just dangling a carrot, they can be swayed to vote for whoever dangles that carrot, they unfortunately don,t really have any ideas themselves, so they look towards their Peers, Peers some of whom are even more illiterate than they are, or so god damned corrupt, like many of the wealthy, I'm afraid its cat eat cat culture

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Posted
2 hours ago, Hunz Kittisak said:

They want to remove a democratically elected PM and government by whatever means possible even a coup. How democratic is that 

she was not elected by the people

 neither was the guy before her

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Posted
3 hours ago, Hunz Kittisak said:

They want to remove a democratically elected PM and government by whatever means possible even a coup. How democratic is that 

This government and the P.M. are not the democratically elected peoples choice. 

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Posted
2 hours ago, wwest5829 said:

I am confused, being from a country without a Prime Minister. Are countries with Prime Minister all directly elected by the people or, like in the past, the Head of State asks the head of the winning party to form a government?

The latter is nearer the truth.

The party holding the majority vote gets into power and forms a government.

That majority/coalition party then self elect their leader/PM.

 

Posted

 I believe coalition governments (containing minority parties) are normal and exist in many countries. In the US the popular vote doesn't win a presidential election. There are many systems.

No point calling for a coup as soldiers aren't trained to lead a democratic country, don't know finance and economics. They only know how to demand obedience. While in power they try to make as much money or watches as possible. 

People can demand another election but are without the power to force it without bloody violence. Not the best approach.

Posted
3 hours ago, hotchilli said:

Elected by whom..... not the people.

But the Peoples Party did NOT have a majority of the seats, so they could NOT form a government, and no other party wanted to join a coalition with them. Don;t you have ANY idea of how democracy works?

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Posted
1 hour ago, John Drake said:

Prayuth was better.

Prayuth was far worse. He stoke the entire country at gun point.

 

That is NOT democracy. 

Posted
4 hours ago, Hunz Kittisak said:

They want to remove a democratically elected PM and government by whatever means possible even a coup. How democratic is that 

Democratically elected PM? I must have been sleeping, missed that one.

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Posted
24 minutes ago, billd766 said:

But the Peoples Party did NOT have a majority of the seats, so they could NOT form a government, and no other party wanted to join a coalition with them. Don;t you have ANY idea of how democracy works?

Do you? And are you implying thailand is a democracy?

Posted

Fine with me, have a military coup and watch the economy and currency collapse. However, there is only one person who can authorise a coup.

Posted
2 hours ago, Seagull Sam said:

 

It's not difficult to grasp.

In a prime ministerial system you vote for a party. The party chooses it's leader and the cabinet is chosen from parliamentarians to propose laws which are put to parliament. No majority effectively means no government as the parliament can likely get a no confidence vote.

In a Presedential system you vote for a person who chooses his own people outside parliament to put forward laws  to parliament (or rule by decree on the margins of constitutionality in the current US situation). A president who can't get laws approved can't be voted out of office by the parliament. He is the head of state for the allotted length of time.

A military government rules with no democratic principles at all. 

Please pay attention at the back of the class.

Thank you for taking the time to explain to those who keep saying the current PM isn’t ’democratically elected’. 
The PP fanboys need to understand that 

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