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Thai editorial: We need to start loving one another again


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EDITORIAL
We need to start loving one another again

The Nation

Political propaganda has been so potent it has turned thai against Thai

BANGKOK: -- Politics, more often than not, brings out the worst in us. More so in Thailand, which has not had political peace for about a decade. That is to say what happened before the 2006 coup - street protests and the tumultuous share-concealment saga - was democratically "normal."


The current state of affairs is sad, because national harmony had always been the country's strong suit. Political volatility was usually spoken of in total separation from how Thais really felt toward one another. We might have stormy politics, but the bottom line was Thais always loved Thais.

The "reform" promised by the National Council for Peace and Order must end the circle of cut-throat politics. When the stakes are big, everyone wants to win - and to hang on. And by trying to win and hang on, our politicians have resorted to the only tactic they know: they try to make Thais love them and hate their enemies' guts.

While many things have failed in Thailand over the years, political propaganda has worked wonders. Thais have been bitterly divided. Many have come to love their politicians to the point of killing or dying for them.

It's not going to be easy for those advocating reform. Bringing back "peace" is one thing; making Thais love and understand one another again is quite another.

Mistrust, fear and prejudice have been deep-rooted over the past few years. Much of the negative forces have been suppressed thanks to the military bunkers on the streets, but the current "peace" is fragile at best and deceptive at worst.

It doesn't mean we mustn't try, though. The characteristic harmony presented itself during the flood disaster almost three years ago but disappeared just as fast. Somewhere inside the national psyche exists love, understanding and sympathy. Those positive qualities have only been blurred by propaganda and extremism. Thais were made to look straight at their TV screens and assume what they saw was life's true meaning.

They were made to forget to look at both sides. They were made to distance themselves from relatives who held different ideological beliefs. They were made to "unfriend" people supporting "the other side".

Politics is like this everywhere, one may argue. That is true, but Thais this year were in danger of being totally consumed by it. Many people - those in the West in particular - have questioned the NCPO's motives, but the truth is this: the threat of national strife deteriorating into something worse is real.

The reform process will be rocky. Proposed measures favoured by one side will be condemned by the other. Then a post-reform election - its prelude or aftermath - can easily reopen old wounds. Propaganda machines can work in full swing again, if politics remains all about making people love you and hate your enemies.

How can we make politics stop being a game of gaining love and spewing hatred? It goes back to the "stake" issue. When winning an election means not just "working for the country", but also "getting what the country has to offer", everyone wants to win at all costs.

The "losers" won't let go and neither will the "winners". The cut-throat nature of politics brings out the worst in everyone.

Can the reform stop that and make politics bring out the best in us? NCPO leader Prayuth Chan-ocha has not said "Yes" directly, but he has implied several times that if that hadn't been his objective, the coup wouldn't have had a point.

Many people remain unconvinced, obviously, and it's up to him to prove them right or wrong.

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/opinion/We-need-to-start-loving-one-another-again-30239026.html

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-- The Nation 2014-07-21

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so force it on them with a military coup, martial law, censorship, closing thousands of websites, forcing people to exile, sending soldiers and cops to intimidate public. There won't be democracy, just eternal love and happiness

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The Nation's editorials don't seem to have improved since the coup (neither do their political cartoons from the talentless steffart). It's not about "loving each other" it's about respecting that others with alternative viewpoints might win an election and have the political maturity to accept that. To date, the powers behind this coup (and the protests in the streets over the last year) seem unable to make that jump.

Sure, clean up the processes, but until Thailand grows up politically it won't heal.

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sick.gif.pagespeed.ce.tVTSNn-2vr.png ...what bull , the laws need to be enforced, anyone who thinks it will not go back to the corruption and 2 sides before the coup is a fool ...in fact it will be much worse

Seems the future can be read by some. As for calling others, "fools"...
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Thais only love money they hate everything else especially hate it when they discover they have put a cross in the wrong box on Election Day and discover their party was only second.

Thank you for taking a poll of all 66+ million Thais. That's quite a feat.
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Ask any Thai which is more important...Love or Money? I've done this numerous times down the year's and not one of them has ever said the former; oh no, it's always the latter.

I have a Thai friend who's favourite music track is Abba's Money money money. He knows none of their other numbers.

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This narrative, popularised by the conservatives, assumes a halcyon, fairy tale past where all Thais loved each other- it is widely believed by otherwise intelligent people. Never mind that the past is full of intra Thai wars, enslavement and exploitation of each other and a justice system best described as whimsical. And, of course, the evil people were the foreigners.

For everyone the good old days are a result of filtering out the bad and remembering the good times, nothing wrong with that at the individual level.

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Bangkok is on top, they look down on everyone, chiangmai looks down on isaan and the south, isaan looks down on the south too.

The south, has a big voice and cause it'd democrat, isaan has a voice because they are red.

Isn't this basically it? What an amazingly united country. The fact that people have been patronised forever is one of the reasons for the schism today. Stop patronising and start serving and maybe Thais will learn to appreciate their govt a little.

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