Showing 11 - 20 of 72
News, Published on 23/06/2020
» Re: "Outbreak no reason to delay polls", (Opinion, June 22).
News, Postbag, Published on 10/06/2020
» Re: "Sugar care aid heads to cabinet", (BP, June 5).
News, Postbag, Published on 23/04/2020
» Re: "Seven soldiers on Monday confessed to having tortured two men to force them to admit to drug trafficking. One of the two men died", (BP, April 21). The military’s role is to be a fence, protecting us from external aggressors. Soldiers have no expertise in fighting domestic crime, whether it be drug trafficking or, say, riots or political protests - that what we have police for.
News, Postbag, Published on 22/01/2020
» "The Edutainment Continues", (Life, Jan 21), reveals something strange about the human condition; that one of the two most important experiences in life are taboo topics for social discourse and education. Everybody arrives here through sex, and everyone will die. These two factors are the only true common denominators about existence shared by all.
News, Postbag, Published on 19/10/2019
» Historically, fear of communist regimes has been used by politicians to keep them alive, strive and win elections. In the USA, politicians always create a hostile enemy and introduce a powerful fear factor to get elected. For most of the last century, the USA treated China, the Soviet Union, Cuba and Sandinistas as a threat to democracy and the whole world. First, it was Soviets, later China, and in this new century, al-Qaeda and the Islamic State became the new threat. And now they have a new enemy -- immigrants from across the border from Mexico and South America. A whole generation of Americans grew up dreaming about communists taking away their freedom and democracy. Sadly, even today a big lobby of Cuban immigrants in Florida keeps those fears alive.
News, Published on 29/12/2018
» Re: "Who trusts the NACC?", (Editorial, Dec 27).
News, Published on 28/07/2018
» Comparatively speaking, the conscripts/servants issue in the Thai armed forces is only adding to the military junta's declining image. Its continued existence only benefits a few thousand "generals", not the majority of the Thai armed forces or the country at large. In short, they are driving a car in reverse gear. It is clearly a conflict of interest, an important principle which should be tackled and utilised in the military junta's "reform policy".
News, Published on 21/07/2018
» Thailand's military conscripts being used as "servants" at the generals' homes could be inscribed in the Guinness Book of World Records (Editorial, July 19).
Oped, Postbag, Published on 21/06/2018
» I was appalled with the execution of a convict (BP, June 18). I don’t defend in any way what he did and if he murdered my child I would want to kill him. But that is the human instinct. When the state coldly determines someone’s death it is entirely different.
News, Postbag, Published on 23/05/2018
» Re: "Peace, but poor miss out", (BP, May 21).