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Search Result for “incomplete oath”

Showing 1 - 10 of 155

OPINION

Thin buyer guide

Oped, Postbag, Published on 11/02/2026

» Re: "Choosing the right air purifier for Thailand's rising air pollution", (Life, Feb 8).

OPINION

Time to legalise

Postbag, Published on 03/02/2026

» Re: "Sex workers get pre-election boost", (BP, Feb 1). 

OPINION

Middle powers can do their bit

News, Moreno Bertoldi & Marco Buti, Published on 02/02/2026

» Amid escalating geopolitical tensions, the world is increasingly caught between the United States -- an extractive superpower -- and China, a "dependency superpower" whose global influence rests on making other countries reliant on its exports. In the absence of meaningful resistance, both are likely to remain on this course, leaving middle powers to comply with their demands or face retaliation.

OPINION

When Buddhism falls silent during war

News, Sanitsuda Ekachai, Published on 27/12/2025

» The Buddha once stopped a water war between relatives by asking a simple question: What is more valuable: water or human life?

OPINION

Border conflict tests big powers' resolve

News, Kavi Chongkittavorn, Published on 23/12/2025

» Few would have imagined that the current Thailand-Cambodia conflict could generate such deep strategic anxiety, if not outright uncertainty, across Southeast Asia and beyond. From a Thai perspective, the tensions have revealed something far more consequential than just another bilateral border dispute. It is no longer a tit-for-tat affair.

OPINION

The battle over truth, reputation

News, Thasanai Chaiyakwaeng, Published on 17/12/2025

» In today's hyper-connected world, information travels at lightning speed -- often outpacing the truth. This rush to premature judgement, fuelled by viral posts and incomplete narratives, can devastate reputations overnight. Individuals, corporations, and even government agencies have found themselves tried in the court of public opinion long before any judicial verdict.

OPINION

Rising heat needs urgent response

Oped, Armida Salsiah Alisjahbana, Published on 24/11/2025

» 2024 was the hottest on record globally. In Asia and the Pacific, Bangladesh was the worst-hit country, with about 33 million people affected by lower crop yields that destabilised food systems, along with extensive school closures and many cases of heatstroke and related diseases. Children, the elderly and low-wage earners in poor and densely populated urban areas suffered the most, as they generally had less access to cooling systems or to water supplies and adequate healthcare. India, too, was badly affected, with around 700 heat-related deaths mostly in informal settlements.

OPINION

Rein in online stars

News, Editorial, Published on 22/11/2025

» When citizens resort to legal action against social media influencers for misinformation, dangerous stunts, or inappropriate behaviour, it is time to discuss curbing such behaviour online.

OPINION

How a bad Trump edit became a global controversy

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 14/11/2025

» I have spent thousands of hours sitting alongside video editors working on productions quite similar to the Panorama documentary that has landed the British Broadcasting Corporation with the threat of a billion-dollar libel suit by Donald Trump. I think I know what happened.

OPINION

Adam Smith and the moral economy we have lost

Oped, Antara Haldar, Published on 12/11/2025

» With the 250th anniversary of The Wealth of Nations approaching next year, the world is gearing up to honour Adam Smith. But which Smith should be recognised? The hard-nosed "founding father" of modern economics, or the philosopher who wrote The Theory of Moral Sentiments? Scholars have wrestled with this question, a riddle known as "Das Adam Smith Problem", for centuries, because it concerns not just dualities within Smith's thought, but also our own uneasy relationship with morality and markets.