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Thai Court Approves Arrest Warrant Against Thaksin On Terrorism Charge


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Anyway, what does are line like 'One down one to go' imply?

It certainly implies that Thaksin has some justice coming to him.

Not being serving military, it is unlikely to be military justice,

and not being on a field of battle and having 'specifically declared war' on the army,

it doesn't imply the same end as Seh Daeng got.

Not that we have any actual idea who took out Seh Daeng now do we?

Seh Deang was shot, murdered while given an interview to a reporter. probably by a sniper who hid somewhere in the dark.

no-one found guilty for it, so we don't know who it was, but you don't hesitate to call it 'justice'.

you must have a very distorted understanding of what 'justice' actually means.

A terrorist who dared snipers to shoot him gets a bullet in his head. That is justice.

mazeltov has no problem putting words I never said in my mouth. S.O.P.

I never called Sea Deang's end justice. He just loves to twist my words.

Sad avocation at best. Distorted sense or right and wrong. som nom nah.

A military action was already started,

and he was the publicly announced military commander of the insurgent side.

He made his bed, and then dared them to take him out. A perfect set up for someone.

But ALSO, he was an utterly unrepentant egoist and loose cannon,

with incriminating info in his head about his own side,

a mouth that was incriminating his boss daily and enough of a following

and high profile, to be useful as a martyr for the Red side.

So there are several quite valid logics for his demise

for BOTH sides to take him out ;

Revenge and safety

or

silence/safety, a martyr symbol

Or still yet another side, wanting revolution started,

the government lost, but themselves prevailing.

Certainly taking out SD right after the Hospital rampage,

was highly symbolic and set in motion the end game

in no uncertain terms, and someone lit this fuse.

justice –noun

1.the quality of being just;

righteousness, equitableness, or moral rightness: to uphold the justice of a cause.

2. rightfulness or lawfulness, as of a claim or title; justness of ground or reason: to complain with justice.

3. the moral principle determining just conduct.

4. conformity to this principle, as manifested in conduct; just conduct, dealing, or treatment.

5. the administering of deserved punishment or reward.

6. the maintenance or administration of what is just by law, as by judicial or other proceedings: a court of justice.

7. judgment of persons or causes by judicial process: to administer justice in a community.

8. a judicial officer; a judge or magistrate.

9. (initial capital letterthinsp.png) Also called Justice Department. the Department of Justice.

From some perspectives after April 10th, justice was served on Sea Deang

via 5. but ignoring 7. Though we as yet don't know if a military tribunal

quietly was held and military justice determined to go forward if he was found

on field of battle, still a soldier, to be a continued threat to army troupes.

There is little compunction to shoot actively dangerous mutineers in most armies....

The army was moving in at the time, even if the battle wasn't joined yet.

I won't begin to address the world of soldiers coming up

against each other in an obvious shooting fight.

Believing that the opposing military commander, S.D.,

had unleashed war weapons,without more than cryptic warning,

and killed two of their commanders from stealth, a month earlier.

And then dared people thinking like this not to take a shot at him.

Only fools and horse.

But our rules of order as civilians go by the boards in most cases.

Her signed up as a soldier the rest of us not. We can expect more

measured responses, as can Thaksin... he hopes.

I also won't, and did not, say Thaksin should be taken out the same way.

(I have said give 15 tons of kosher chicken wings to the Mosad and problem solved)

But I will say as above Thaksin certainly has blood on his hands

and justice coming to him,whatever that may be remains to be seen.

More people got killed from Toyota cars having bad accelerators.

More people got killed yesterday in Kingston Jamaica moving in on drug lords,

than happened clearing out Rajprasong that day.

The 80 total is for several days, of Reds roving out to attack static army positions.

Yet the army is the reds target to blame, and to spin, and to blame some more.

We expected this. And it is not justice either it is politics by other means, at it's lowest...

Edited by LivinginKata
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mazeltov' post '2010-05-26 08:46:36']

Anyway, what does are line like 'One down one to go' imply?

It certainly implies that Thaksin has some justice coming to him.

Not being serving military, it is unlikely to be military justice,

and not being on a field of battle and having 'specifically declared war' on the army,

it doesn't imply the same end as Seh Daeng got.

Not that we have any actual idea who took out Seh Daeng now do we?

Seh Deang was shot, murdered while given an interview to a reporter. probably by a sniper who hid somewhere in the dark.

no-one found guilty for it, so we don't know who it was, but you don't hesitate to call it 'justice'.

you must have a very distorted understanding of what 'justice' actually means.

A terrorist who dared snipers to shoot him gets a bullet in his head. That is justice.

Sae daeng is dead. Sae daeng was shot. Sae Daeng was killed. At this moment in time there has been no legal finding that Sae Daeng was "murdered". He was part of an illegal uprising that declared war on the country (literally) and he was a traitor. If the military did it. It wasn't nec. murder. If the government ordered it then it likely wasn't murder. (Killing an enemy commander in occupied territory is unlikely to be considered murder.) If the reds did it ...... then it was one terrorist murdering another?

Another word applies too;

Mutineer.

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so i asked what is wrong with Samak

I'l give you one reason. Whilst serving as PM he lied in court. Did you not know that? One assumes not or why ask the question?

And under his watch as head of PPP the Red Shirts were first let of the chain

to attack PAD at their roadside emplacement, to allow for a S.O.E. that the army rejected,

since it was an obvious PPP put up sham of a riot. Samak was at the top then Sept 2nd 2008.

This is before Gov. House too. And wis a notable date as things went very, very bad from that point on.

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More people got killed from Toyota cars having bad accelerators.

More people got killed yesterday in Kingston Jamaica moving in on drug lords,

than happened clearing out Rajprasong that day.

The 80 total is for several days, of Reds roving out to attack static army positions.

Yet the army is the reds target to blame, and to spin, and to blame some more.

We expected this. And it is not justice either it is politics by other means, at it's lowest...

you could also argue that no-one lives for ever.

What a bizarre logic and of course the lowest way to excuse and justify the deadly results of Abhisit's way of justice.

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More people got killed from Toyota cars having bad accelerators.

More people got killed yesterday in Kingston Jamaica moving in on drug lords,

than happened clearing out Rajprasong that day.

The 80 total is for several days, of Reds roving out to attack static army positions.

Yet the army is the reds target to blame, and to spin, and to blame some more.

We expected this. And it is not justice either it is politics by other means, at it's lowest...

you could also argue that no-one lives for ever.

What a bizarre logic and of course the lowest way to excuse and justify the deadly results of Abhisit's way of justice.

A guy hijacked a bus with a knife in Melbourne the other day. Police shot him. I don't see people calling for PM Rudd to step down or be tried for murder.

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Seh Deang was shot, murdered while given an interview to a reporter. probably by a sniper who hid somewhere in the dark.

no-one found guilty for it, so we don't know who it was, but you don't hesitate to call it 'justice'.

you must have a very distorted understanding of what 'justice' actually means.

A terrorist who dared snipers to shoot him gets a bullet in his head. That is justice.

Sae daeng is dead. Sae daeng was shot. Sae Daeng was killed. At this moment in time there has been no legal finding that Sae Daeng was "murdered". He was part of an illegal uprising that declared war on the country (literally) and he was a traitor. If the military did it. It wasn't nec. murder. If the government ordered it then it likely wasn't murder. (Killing an enemy commander in occupied territory is unlikely to be considered murder.) If the reds did it ...... then it was one terrorist murdering another?

Another word applies too;

Mutineer.

On many news sites the word was 'renegade' which is probably more correct than mutineer.

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More people got killed from Toyota cars having bad accelerators.

More people got killed yesterday in Kingston Jamaica moving in on drug lords,

than happened clearing out Rajprasong that day.

The 80 total is for several days, of Reds roving out to attack static army positions.

Yet the army is the reds target to blame, and to spin, and to blame some more.

We expected this. And it is not justice either it is politics by other means, at it's lowest...

you could also argue that no-one lives for ever.

What a bizarre logic and of course the lowest way to excuse and justify the deadly results of Abhisit's way of justice.

Well then lets just use some Thai logic.

Like the farang in a car accident,

'Farang it is your fault,

if you weren't in our country the accident would never have happened.'

So to Red Shirts.

" If you didn't ILLEGALLY take over a large section of Bangkok commercial district,

and, search, harrass and ruin the lives of 100's of thousands of people,

then you would not have forced the government to remove you,

and your friends would not have been killed or injured."

Chicken or the egg.

If they didn't try to do what they did,

there was no reason for them to get hurt.

And that goes for those in the Wat too.

Guys in front of the Wat were firing at soldiers.

No wonder some shots went in there.

Plus what a perfect way to implicate the army

by having snipers above targeting those in the wat,

which the army designated a safe haven.

Until the forensics comes in, there is no evidence that say the army

tried intentionally to kill those in the wat.

Edited by animatic
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[

quote name=gl9999' post='3643913' date='2010-05-26 14:11:34]

mazeltov' post=2010-05-26

Seh Deang was shot, murdered while given an interview to a reporter. probably by a sniper who hid somewhere in the dark.

no-one found guilty for it, so we don't know who it was, but you don't hesitate to call it 'justice'.

you must have a very distorted understanding of what 'justice' actually means.

A terrorist who dared snipers to shoot him gets a bullet in his head. That is justice.

Sae daeng is dead. Sae daeng was shot. Sae Daeng was killed. At this moment in time there has been no legal finding that Sae Daeng was "murdered". He was part of an illegal uprising that declared war on the country (literally) and he was a traitor. If the military did it. It wasn't nec. murder. If the government ordered it then it likely wasn't murder. (Killing an enemy commander in occupied territory is unlikely to be considered murder.) If the reds did it ...... then it was one terrorist murdering another?

Another word applies too;

Mutineer.

On many news sites the word was 'renegade' which is probably more correct than mutineer.

That applies too,

but he was seen with and controling other currently serving army personnel,

and they were actively as a group going against Army command and against orders.

That is a mutiny for sure.

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SO

we know there was a heartless sniper at the intersection that brave medic was at.

But none of it says it was a government or army sniper.

Since April 10th it was clear somebody had no compunctions to take out

anyone that could run the body count up, and embarrass the government with it.

Politics by other means.

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[

quote name=gl9999' post='3643913' date='2010-05-26 14:11:34]

mazeltov' post=2010-05-26

Seh Deang was shot, murdered while given an interview to a reporter. probably by a sniper who hid somewhere in the dark.

no-one found guilty for it, so we don't know who it was, but you don't hesitate to call it 'justice'.

you must have a very distorted understanding of what 'justice' actually means.

A terrorist who dared snipers to shoot him gets a bullet in his head. That is justice.

Sae daeng is dead. Sae daeng was shot. Sae Daeng was killed. At this moment in time there has been no legal finding that Sae Daeng was "murdered". He was part of an illegal uprising that declared war on the country (literally) and he was a traitor. If the military did it. It wasn't nec. murder. If the government ordered it then it likely wasn't murder. (Killing an enemy commander in occupied territory is unlikely to be considered murder.) If the reds did it ...... then it was one terrorist murdering another?

Another word applies too;

Mutineer.

On many news sites the word was 'renegade' which is probably more correct than mutineer.

That applies too,

but he was seen with and controling other currently serving army personnel,

and they were actively as a group going against Army command and against orders.

That is a mutiny for sure.

outspoken against police corruption, a critic of the unconstitutional and actually illegal 2006 coup, after the 2007 election continuously warning the military of staging another coup and during the protest warning the army to used armed force and violence against civilians, thais, the red shirts.

call him mutineer because he didn't support a military dictatorship, but he is a true folk here for many thais. and there is not question that he was very loyal to the king and not an enemy of the people. a very intelligent and well educated man with a spleen for a big show and his own kind of humour. many farangs seems to not understand him because they don't understand Thailand and its specific cultural and political issues at all.

the 70/30 yellow ultra right wing extremist didn't like this soldier of the people and spreading lots of unproven rumours, propaganda, lies and disinformation about him. gullible farangs, thaksin haters fell for it and repeating that trash with more fabrication and exaggeration added.

anyway, there are a few members, who are definitely not in favour of the red cause and who are able to communicate with their Thai partners about such more complex issues. They wrote a couple of comments that Seh Daeng doesn't fits the black and white picture the usual suspects and simpletons paint here.

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Well then lets just use some Thai logic.

Like the farang in a car accident,

'Farang it is your fault,

if you weren't in our country the accident would never have happened.'

Not true, BS.

And that isn't Thai logic, that is nothing more than a grumpy farang expat myth some so called experts on Thailand will tell you in a drunken state of mind in a beer bar.

low style argument.

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BANGKOK — Thailand's Parliament angrily debated the government's handling of protests and violence and the ongoing curfew Wednesday, as thousands of citizens joined Buddhist monks in a mass prayer for peace.

Opposition lawmakers kept Parliament from focusing on next year's budget as they hurled insults and accusations at the government of Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, calling him insincere and questioning his decision to put the capital and other areas under a nighttime curfew.

"The curfew has caused many problems for many people. Many people make their living at night. But now these businesses have to lose their incomes because of this," said Surapong Tovichakchaikul, an opposition member from Chiang Mai, a northern city where support is strong for the Red Shirt protesters who led the demonstrations in Bangkok.

The curfew in the capital and 23 provinces is to remain in effect through Friday.

"Up until now, almost 100 people have died. Can you continue reading the budget and balance sheets like that? Do you have any feelings?" Surapong said.

The opposition has threatened to seek impeachment or censure of Abhisit and his top ministers, and debate over those moves is expected to take place next week.

On Tuesday, Thai authorities issued an arrest warrant for ousted Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra on charges of terrorism, alleging he was a key force behind the deadly street protests.

Thaksin, who lives in self-imposed exile but is widely supported among the Red Shirts, responded that the government should be ashamed of itself for its handling of the crisis that ended with a military crackdown last week. At least 88 people died in the crackdown and protest-related violence over two months.

Thaksin's lawyers on Wednesday requested the arrest warrant be revoked, and the court that issued it is considering the request.

The charges underscore the emotional rift between those who support Thaksin — mostly the rural poor and urban underclass — and the conservative establishment and many in the middle class who agreed with the 2006 military coup that ousted him.

The protesters who were bidding to bring down the Oxford-educated Abhisit accuse him of being elitist and coming to power through back-room deals and military meddling.

Thaksin fled abroad ahead of a corruption conviction. Previous attempts to extradite him have failed.

At dawn Wednesday, thousands of residents prayed for peace at sites across Bangkok where people were killed and high-rise buildings torched in the worst political violence in the country's modern history.

The chants of 1,000 Buddhist monks mingled with the prayers of Muslim imams, Christian priests and the Hindu faithful at 10 areas, including the charred hulk of one of Asia's largest shopping malls.

"We are reciting a very powerful prayer to summon the Lord to help our country. Things are quiet now, but there is fear still within us because none of us know what can happen in the future," said Sumitr Khorana, a Hindu community leader, reflecting a general anxiety that Thailand's turmoil is far from over.

In a sign that another dispute continues to be a flash point, two bombs hidden in motorcycles exploded Wednesday in a Muslim area of Thailand's south, killing two people and wounding 51, police said. A separate shooting left one more person dead.

Police said the motorcycles were parked outside a Mazda car showroom in the province of Yala. The first explosion shattered showroom windows and damaged the exterior of the building. Ten minutes later, another bomb went off as police officers were fencing off the crime scene.

Police and soldiers were among the injured, officials said. They did not have further details.

Muslim insurgents have previously targeted government workers in their separatist war in the region. More than 4,000 people have been killed since fighting erupted in 2004.

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BANGKOK — Thailand's Parliament angrily debated the government's handling of protests and violence and the ongoing curfew Wednesday, as thousands of citizens joined Buddhist monks in a mass prayer for peace.

Opposition lawmakers kept Parliament from focusing on next year's budget as they hurled insults and accusations at the government of Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, calling him insincere and questioning his decision to put the capital and other areas under a nighttime curfew.

"The curfew has caused many problems for many people. Many people make their living at night. But now these businesses have to lose their incomes because of this," said Surapong Tovichakchaikul, an opposition member from Chiang Mai, a northern city where support is strong for the Red Shirt protesters who led the demonstrations in Bangkok.

The curfew in the capital and 23 provinces is to remain in effect through Friday.

"Up until now, almost 100 people have died. Can you continue reading the budget and balance sheets like that? Do you have any feelings?" Surapong said.

The opposition has threatened to seek impeachment or censure of Abhisit and his top ministers, and debate over those moves is expected to take place next week.

On Tuesday, Thai authorities issued an arrest warrant for ousted Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra on charges of terrorism, alleging he was a key force behind the deadly street protests.

Thaksin, who lives in self-imposed exile but is widely supported among the Red Shirts, responded that the government should be ashamed of itself for its handling of the crisis that ended with a military crackdown last week. At least 88 people died in the crackdown and protest-related violence over two months.

Thaksin's lawyers on Wednesday requested the arrest warrant be revoked, and the court that issued it is considering the request.

The charges underscore the emotional rift between those who support Thaksin — mostly the rural poor and urban underclass — and the conservative establishment and many in the middle class who agreed with the 2006 military coup that ousted him.

The protesters who were bidding to bring down the Oxford-educated Abhisit accuse him of being elitist and coming to power through back-room deals and military meddling.

Thaksin fled abroad ahead of a corruption conviction. Previous attempts to extradite him have failed.

At dawn Wednesday, thousands of residents prayed for peace at sites across Bangkok where people were killed and high-rise buildings torched in the worst political violence in the country's modern history.

The chants of 1,000 Buddhist monks mingled with the prayers of Muslim imams, Christian priests and the Hindu faithful at 10 areas, including the charred hulk of one of Asia's largest shopping malls.

"We are reciting a very powerful prayer to summon the Lord to help our country. Things are quiet now, but there is fear still within us because none of us know what can happen in the future," said Sumitr Khorana, a Hindu community leader, reflecting a general anxiety that Thailand's turmoil is far from over.

In a sign that another dispute continues to be a flash point, two bombs hidden in motorcycles exploded Wednesday in a Muslim area of Thailand's south, killing two people and wounding 51, police said. A separate shooting left one more person dead.

Police said the motorcycles were parked outside a Mazda car showroom in the province of Yala. The first explosion shattered showroom windows and damaged the exterior of the building. Ten minutes later, another bomb went off as police officers were fencing off the crime scene.

Police and soldiers were among the injured, officials said. They did not have further details.

Muslim insurgents have previously targeted government workers in their separatist war in the region. More than 4,000 people have been killed since fighting erupted in 2004.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Meltdown well under way.

The rich Elite are even split accorrding to reports.

If I were a paid for propaganda poster of thecurrent government, I would be worried that I could serve jail time.

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Well then lets just use some Thai logic.

Like the farang in a car accident,

'Farang it is your fault,

if you weren't in our country the accident would never have happened.'

Not true, BS.

And that isn't Thai logic, that is nothing more than a grumpy farang expat myth some so called experts on Thailand will tell you in a drunken state of mind in a beer bar.

low style argument.

What do you know, your not even here.

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Ballpoint's point that you completely ignored concerned your current location and your hijacking of the thread. If these are points you are unable to or unwilling to respond to, better to not quote him i would suggest.

Ballpoint wasn't talking to me anyway and i wasn't talking with you. so what is the problem?

in case you don't know, the harassment in my right of information doesn't mean that the internet not offers certain workarounds.

why don't focus on the provided content instead of starting pointless guesswork about my current location or kind of internet connection? does that change anything of what was written?

don't like the message, shoot the messenger tactic. low style arguments.

Edited by mazeltov
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BANGKOK — Thailand's Parliament angrily debated the government's handling of protests and violence and the ongoing curfew Wednesday, as thousands of citizens joined Buddhist monks in a mass prayer for peace.

Opposition lawmakers kept Parliament from focusing on next year's budget as they hurled insults and accusations at the government of Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, calling him insincere and questioning his decision to put the capital and other areas under a nighttime curfew.

"The curfew has caused many problems for many people. Many people make their living at night. But now these businesses have to lose their incomes because of this," said Surapong Tovichakchaikul, an opposition member from Chiang Mai, a northern city where support is strong for the Red Shirt protesters who led the demonstrations in Bangkok.

The curfew in the capital and 23 provinces is to remain in effect through Friday.

"Up until now, almost 100 people have died. Can you continue reading the budget and balance sheets like that? Do you have any feelings?" Surapong said.

The opposition has threatened to seek impeachment or censure of Abhisit and his top ministers, and debate over those moves is expected to take place next week.

On Tuesday, Thai authorities issued an arrest warrant for ousted Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra on charges of terrorism, alleging he was a key force behind the deadly street protests.

Thaksin, who lives in self-imposed exile but is widely supported among the Red Shirts, responded that the government should be ashamed of itself for its handling of the crisis that ended with a military crackdown last week. At least 88 people died in the crackdown and protest-related violence over two months.

Thaksin's lawyers on Wednesday requested the arrest warrant be revoked, and the court that issued it is considering the request.

The charges underscore the emotional rift between those who support Thaksin — mostly the rural poor and urban underclass — and the conservative establishment and many in the middle class who agreed with the 2006 military coup that ousted him.

The protesters who were bidding to bring down the Oxford-educated Abhisit accuse him of being elitist and coming to power through back-room deals and military meddling.

Thaksin fled abroad ahead of a corruption conviction. Previous attempts to extradite him have failed.

At dawn Wednesday, thousands of residents prayed for peace at sites across Bangkok where people were killed and high-rise buildings torched in the worst political violence in the country's modern history.

The chants of 1,000 Buddhist monks mingled with the prayers of Muslim imams, Christian priests and the Hindu faithful at 10 areas, including the charred hulk of one of Asia's largest shopping malls.

"We are reciting a very powerful prayer to summon the Lord to help our country. Things are quiet now, but there is fear still within us because none of us know what can happen in the future," said Sumitr Khorana, a Hindu community leader, reflecting a general anxiety that Thailand's turmoil is far from over.

In a sign that another dispute continues to be a flash point, two bombs hidden in motorcycles exploded Wednesday in a Muslim area of Thailand's south, killing two people and wounding 51, police said. A separate shooting left one more person dead.

Police said the motorcycles were parked outside a Mazda car showroom in the province of Yala. The first explosion shattered showroom windows and damaged the exterior of the building. Ten minutes later, another bomb went off as police officers were fencing off the crime scene.

Police and soldiers were among the injured, officials said. They did not have further details.

Muslim insurgents have previously targeted government workers in their separatist war in the region. More than 4,000 people have been killed since fighting erupted in 2004.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Meltdown well under way.

The rich Elite are even split accorrding to reports.

If I were a paid for propaganda poster of thecurrent government, I would be worried that I could serve jail time.

If you were a paid for propaganda poster of say, Robert Ansterdam, would you get the same rate if you had to respond to your own post? That's a little bit like churning an account isn't it. Where are your ethics?

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Kidney failure caused by his brain ceasing to send proper processing messages.

Chantorn, he may have taken a bad path after the passing of his beloved wife,

who seems to have been his grounding, but not being convicted of his latest actions,

and the process of his being removed from the army incomplete, he still was a Thai General,

with a long record of service to his country.

As the song in the movie 'White Christmas' said:

"What do you do with a general, when he's no longer being a general."

OK.

So if Thaksin is shot dead now, perhaps the same new agency would report Thaksin death as "Breathing failure". Also, Thaksin may have taken a bad path after his beloved wife divorce him.

And since Thaksin have been grounding, but not being convicted of his latest actions, and the process of his being convicted of terrorist incomplete, he still was a ex-prime Minister, with a long record of service to his country, and the ONLY PM who completed a term, he should also receive a Royal funeral? :):D :D

Cant wait.

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Well then lets just use some Thai logic.

Like the farang in a car accident,

'Farang it is your fault,

if you weren't in our country the accident would never have happened.'

Not true, BS.

And that isn't Thai logic, that is nothing more than a grumpy farang expat myth some so called experts on Thailand will tell you in a drunken state of mind in a beer bar.

low style argument.

PS I specifically know someone this happened to. He paid.

And you removed, cherry picked out, the rest of the

quite cogent argument you had no responce for.

Same same, nothing but bile and deflection.

Hagnail von Toasti you ain't got it by a mile.

Permanent_Dispepsia

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Kidney failure caused by his brain ceasing to send proper processing messages.

Chantorn, he may have taken a bad path after the passing of his beloved wife,

who seems to have been his grounding, but not being convicted of his latest actions,

and the process of his being removed from the army incomplete, he still was a Thai General,

with a long record of service to his country.

As the song in the movie 'White Christmas' said:

"What do you do with a general, when he's no longer being a general."

OK.

So if Thaksin is shot dead now, perhaps the same new agency would report Thaksin death as "Breathing failure". Also, Thaksin may have taken a bad path after his beloved wife divorce him.

And since Thaksin have been grounding, but not being convicted of his latest actions, and the process of his being convicted of terrorist incomplete, he still was a ex-prime Minister, with a long record of service to his country, and the ONLY PM who completed a term, he should also receive a Royal funeral? :):D:D

Cant wait.

Chantorn, probably so, convict him and that's another story,

but betchya a lot of people won't come.

And quite a few will drink to his demise.

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"The curfew has caused many problems for many people. Many people make their living at night. But now these businesses have to lose their incomes because of this," said Surapong Tovichakchaikul, an opposition member from Chiang Mai, a northern city where support is strong for the Red Shirt protesters who led the demonstrations in Bangkok.

Classic scatter gun approach from the reds.

Cause mayhem that results in the necessity for a curfew then have audacity to criticise the government for imposing the curfew :)

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Thaksin just gave a phone interview to Australian ABC Lateline program. See it here. Not many surprises, I am peaceful, dam_n the iron fisted government, poor civilians slaughtered by jackbooted government thugs blah blah.

Most cheeky, he acknowledges that the burning of Central World was planned in advance, but of course, not by the red shirts. Government set up you know.

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Well then lets just use some Thai logic.

Like the farang in a car accident,

'Farang it is your fault,

if you weren't in our country the accident would never have happened.'

Not true, BS.

And that isn't Thai logic, that is nothing more than a grumpy farang expat myth some so called experts on Thailand will tell you in a drunken state of mind in a beer bar.

low style argument.

PS I specifically know someone this happened to. He paid.

And you removed, cherry picked out, the rest of the

quite cogent argument you had no responce for.

Same same, nothing but bile and deflection.

Hagnail von Toasti you ain't got it by a mile.

Permanent_Dispepsia

Don't forget Rumfoord.

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Same same, nothing but bile and deflection.

Hagnail von Toasti you ain't got it by a mile.

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Same ol' copypasta, eh?

Could you explain?

You know... copypasta... isn't that a word everybody uses? :)

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