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THAILAND

Losers

News, Alan Dawson, Published on 14/01/2018

» Voldemort's sister

THAILAND

Winners

News, Alan Dawson, Published on 14/01/2018

» The Watchman

OPINION

Tip of the iceberg

News, Alan Dawson, Published on 14/01/2018

» Myanmar's government and entirely out-of-touch military soiled themselves again, over the Rohingya issue of course.

OPINION

Rough road ahead

News, Alan Dawson, Published on 21/01/2018

» The general prime minister, aka the politician who used to be a soldier, is strolling into a battleground and exhibits no sign he is aware of it.

OPINION

A ripping yarn, but not the Pentagon Papers

News, Alan Dawson, Published on 26/01/2018

» The Post, opening for this weekend's cinema trade, is an unfortunate movie in the spirit of All the President's Men that lionises but lies about what happened during seminal moments in recent US history.

OPINION

The victim card

News, Alan Dawson, Published on 28/01/2018

» If you are a patriot working tirelessly and selflessly to try to save your country from the lower classes but some people think you are responsible for the actions of your friends and mentors, you may be a victim.

OPINION

Decline and fall

News, Alan Dawson, Published on 04/02/2018

» It now becomes pretty predictable, until the moment of push comes to shove-them-out. The form of the actual end game remains unknown but the beginning has ended, and the end has begun.

OPINION

Too connected to fail?

Alan Dawson, Published on 11/02/2018

» Sia Prem and three friends went out hunting for a new, black leopard throw rug and all we got was this disgusting news story.

OPINION

What, we worry?

News, Alan Dawson, Published on 18/02/2018

» Last week filled out the cast of the least-awaited drama in Thai TV news history, The Untouchables: Bred Men Walking, starring the Watchman, the FAT man and the Catman.

OPINION

A bad week

News, Alan Dawson, Published on 25/02/2018

» Bad week for the military regime. The antediluvians in green absorbed punishment from foreigners galore. Worse, at home, protesters judged to be disloyal Thais went on the streets. And after three years, eight months and some days, the courts put on their steel-toed boots and confronted the regime's rules.