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We're stuck if we fail to get a key thing right: Thai editorial


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Posted

Interesting. Good points made, but until the "majority" of Thai's want corruption and graft to end, little is going to change.

Might be a good campaign promise for the Dems however, a promise of complete transparency and severe punishments for those that partake. They've got to rewrite ALL the "laws" in Thailand first however to remove those loopholes and grey areas.

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Posted

Interesting. Good points made, but until the "majority" of Thai's want corruption and graft to end, little is going to change.

Might be a good campaign promise for the Dems however, a promise of complete transparency and severe punishments for those that partake. They've got to rewrite ALL the "laws" in Thailand first however to remove those loopholes and grey areas.

They also need to rewrite (or eliminate) the libel/defamation laws, that way we can name and shame, plus the press could do REAL investigative reporting.

I like the China solution to top level corruption... the death penalty. After the first bigwig was caught, tried, convicted AND executed, corruption, in Thailand, would come to a screeching halt.

Yup, you're right. I nominate Thaksin as the first to be made an example of.

Posted

The country is on the brink of collapse according to headline news. This editor is still carping about corruption reversal. What a stunning example of head in the sand journalism and editorial by this Thai newspaper.

Posted

Interesting. Good points made, but until the "majority" of Thai's want corruption and graft to end, little is going to change.

Might be a good campaign promise for the Dems however, a promise of complete transparency and severe punishments for those that partake. They've got to rewrite ALL the "laws" in Thailand first however to remove those loopholes and grey areas.

They also need to rewrite (or eliminate) the libel/defamation laws, that way we can name and shame, plus the press could do REAL investigative reporting.

I like the China solution to top level corruption... the death penalty. After the first bigwig was caught, tried, convicted AND executed, corruption, in Thailand, would come to a screeching halt.

Yup, you're right. I nominate Thaksin as the first to be made an example of.

When someone dies, either naturally or by execution, the memory of them fades with each passing day until it is forgotten. However, imprisonment for life would be an ongoing warning, refreshed by the imagery of the culprit wasting away behind lock and key. The punishment must fit the crime, while at the same serving as a deterrent to those that would commit the same offense.

Posted

Maybe Thailand should have severe penalties for corrupt officials like they do in China. Politicians here might think twice about dipping their grubby hands in the till then.

On the other hand, they would probably just flee the scene as they do now.

Posted

In the English speaking West we have had the basis of justice codified for over 700 years, and the brilliant part of it is, that it is not complicated.

Men and women, children and even some animals know the difference between Right and Wrong.

This is applied in Countries like Great Britain, America, Canada, Australia and came from the greatest gift to

mankind's search for democratic principles, in the Magna Carta.

The principals put down by lawyers in a court of law in front of a jury, who can decide not only the guilt of a party but

lesser known, the appropriateness of the penalty.

It is my humble opinion, that this and not the freedom to vote, has been the greatest gift to civilisation of the law

and real democracy.

Through the courts, applying this method we can change laws ourselves. Rarely used admittedly, but the resources are there.

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