tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7162482350304935910.post586068098930813370..comments2023-09-27T15:40:56.529+07:00Comments on Thailand Jumped the Shark: The Ethnic Component of the Crisis That Nobody Wants to TouchUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger6125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7162482350304935910.post-85573519960034872602009-05-06T11:19:00.000+07:002009-05-06T11:19:00.000+07:00Fonzi and Paris
read this article by Chang Noi :
...Fonzi and Paris<br /><br />read this article by Chang Noi :<br /><br />"Muddle class"<br />http://www.nationmultimedia.com/search/read.php?newsid=30045686<br /><br /><I>"Most of the top officials and professionals came from an old elite of noble lineages and long-settled Chinese families... <br /><br /><B>The overwhelming majority of this new Bangkok middle class were descendants of the Chinese migrants</B> who had arrived in Siam between the 1870s and the 1940s. After the Chinese revolution of 1948, these families were stranded in Thailand and intent on making a success in their new home. They spearheaded the surge of the urban economy and enjoyed its benefits... They intermarried with Thais and with foreigners, but <B>the overwhelming mass of families in the new middle class could trace some Chinese heritage</B>.<br /><br />In the middle of the great boom of 1986-96 there was a cultural transition: this <B>Chinese heritage became a focus of legitimate pride</B>. Television dramas celebrated the role of the Chinese immigrants that had been left out of the history books. Chinese language teaching boomed. How-to books re-educated those who had forgotten their heritage. The celebration of Chinese New Year became showier. The pan-Asian and Eurasian faces faded from the fashion spreads and television screens, replaced by porcelain dolls. ... <br /><br /><B>The systematic neglect of the rural economy ensured a supply of cheap food and cheap labour.</B>The political priority for the middle class is to maintain the economic growth that underlies rising prosperity. Increasingly, the middle class feels that requires political stability, <B>however that is achieved</B> ...<br /><br />The Bangkok middle class has the added insecurity of being so new and economically vulnerable. It would rather not have to choose between prosperity and democracy. <B>It hopes to muddle through with "managed democracy" as a gift from the generals. The muddle class.</B>"</I>Vichai N is naturally outraged by this :)<br />but what to do - these are the FACTS ! ;)Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7162482350304935910.post-89014100079806168182009-04-20T09:53:00.000+07:002009-04-20T09:53:00.000+07:00Vichai N,
The idea that the wealthier Thais of C...Vichai N, <br /><br />The idea that the wealthier Thais of Chinese descent are in no way racist is unbelievable. Your violent reaction to the idea shows you have no willingness to dig deeper into the realities of your own country.<br /><br />Vichai, do you not wonder why popular Thai culture is dominated by people that do not look like 90% of the population? Why fair skin is some how better looking than dark skin? Why darker skinned Thai models can find employment abroad, but not in Thailand? Racism exists in every country and the first step to eradicate it is to open honest dialogue on it.Bangkokhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11360971279449968826noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7162482350304935910.post-45204054470194180782009-04-20T09:44:00.000+07:002009-04-20T09:44:00.000+07:00Fiji in reverse?Fiji in reverse?hobbyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04251478382712113226noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7162482350304935910.post-8038134530196001702009-04-20T09:19:00.000+07:002009-04-20T09:19:00.000+07:00Matty-
Not all Chinese Thais are racist. Many are...Matty-<br /><br />Not all Chinese Thais are racist. Many are very progressive and fight for human rights.<br /><br />Historically, when the Chinese first emigrated to Thailand, they were very poor and got the shaft.<br /><br />So take it easy. Just pointing out a component of the crisis that I thought needed to be said.<br /><br />You can still puke on my opinions though, as your right.Fonzihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01216772526349523372noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7162482350304935910.post-51378784750451999682009-04-20T09:13:00.000+07:002009-04-20T09:13:00.000+07:00Fonzi and Paris - Are you both sure you are not un...Fonzi and Paris - Are you both sure you are not under the influence (of some drugs) and still coherent?<br /><br />Jeeez . . . now it is Chinese-Thais being racists on their fellow Thais Isaan . . .<br /><br />I puke at your opinions both.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7162482350304935910.post-18890192913161600002009-04-20T08:25:00.000+07:002009-04-20T08:25:00.000+07:00Mixed Chinese-Thai residents in BKK do not hide th...Mixed Chinese-Thai residents in BKK do not hide the fact that they are racist. Ask one and he or she is likely to tell you that the people of Isaan are lazy, stupid, etc.<br /><br />This is how Team Yellow was able to draw so many people to their rallies as the idea of Isaan becoming the major political voice in the country drives them crazy. Isaan people are supposed to be nothing more than servants that lower their heads when they walk by their boss.<br /><br />The PAD rallies were quite open about their belief that the Chinese Thais were the ones to save the country. Lots of t-shirts were printed with that exact message.<br /><br />So yes, it's more about race and class than ideology or "corruption". The Thai middle class using corruption as a reason to protest is one of the better ironies.Bangkokhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11360971279449968826noreply@blogger.com