Archive for September, 2006

Opportunity knocks

We’re down to the wire for the company’s annual fundraiser awards dinner event. This Thursday, where a few employees see it as time to party, it is actually hell in the making for our department. Not so much the underlings, but Demi-Boss and Lady-Boss are damned near going insane over the past week.

For some reasons, this year feels more stressful with 2 people heading up the charge than with just Demi-Boss last year. Then again, the former CEO wasn’t this involved with the show.

The madness spilled down to me yesterday as I stayed late and helped them with making notes of all the adjustments needed for the tribute video–and there was a lot–and matching those up with a bunch more of images.

It is just odd how my unplanned stay at work sort of worked out to be a pleasantly surprised evening.

First of all, I learned about the schedule of the Metro 460 Disneyland bus. Pretty much if I miss my Express at 5, I can catch this one every 20 minutes up to 7 p.m. The catch is that Brandon has to come get me at a Metro hub where the 105 and the 605 meet.

But let me tell you, it is a hell of a lot better than hitching a ride on the Freakazoid Express aka Blue Line. Less people and limited stops, like the 701 bus. Perfect!

Hmmm…now this get me thinking about taking the 460 into town on the day that I’m late. Oooh…the first Eureka moment of the day!

So, Brandon was there waiting for me when I arrived. Since I have been craving pizza all week, Brandon suggested we visited our old friends Raffi and wife Russia at the Deli News in Long Beach.

Brandon and Shane have been coming to the Deli News for pizzas and Italian foods since they were very young. 16 years ago, actually. Raffi told us they just celebrated their 16th anniversary in April.

Anyhoo. When we got there, we found Raffi and Russia looking at the empty space next to them. This is the first time in my 7 years of coming here that I’ve seen them away from the counter!

“So, are you guys looking to expand?” Brandon launched the question.

“Hell, no. Are you crazy?”

From that point on, we continued to chat for another hour, catching up on things and talking to them about Shane’s new shop etc. I got a beer and waited for our to-go pizza which we ended up eating there instead.

While we chat, we learned that Raffi was hospitalized a while back for anxiety attack that came out of nowhere. After all 16 years of craziness, he said, now that I’m comfortable with the money and the work and the improvements we just put in, I got a fucking anxiety attack? You just never know when your mind decided to crap out on you, I guess.

It was a good thing we came to see him. We wouldn’t have known! Besides, I needed some pizza and beer therapy anyway.

See? It all worked out in the end. I learned about the new alternative to getting to and from work. I got to have pizza and beer. And we got to catch up with old friends.

Opportunity out of chaos. A great end to a long week.

And now, we wait for USC to kick Washington State’s butt at 4 p.m. Go, Moody and Booty!

Sawaddee Suwarnnabhumi!

Touch down…into chaos

Thailand’s brand spanking new airport opened to “75% satisfaction”. Folks lost their luggages and the main computer system crashed. (Hey, Sam - isn’t that what you get paid to get ready at SWB? Are you sleeping on the job?? Hehee.)

Snaffus are to be expected. But man, 3 hours of lost luggage? That’s just sad.

With all the snaffus and boasting of being the mother of all airports with the largest single building and tallest control tower in the world , you must admire the 44 years of graft generations of government got off of this piece of work.

With that said, good job people. At least we open.

My cousin Nicky posted some cool pictures. You can have a look. The Nation has an indepth coverage on the Suwarnnabhumi (In correct Thai pronunciation: su-wan-na-POOM) Airport here.

Buzz…doesn’t kill

3 TIVO’ed shows and 2 glasses of wine later, here I am!

I’m buzzed. Hi.

But even if I’m nice and alcoholized, I must stay true to my blogger duty and induct 2 new people to my blogroll.

First, my “cousin” Nicky. Nicky is Aunty Tim’s youngest son and Aunty Tim is a friend of the family. Hence, the honorary Asian relative title.

Nicky takes amazing photos and he finally finds his place on the web on Xanga. It doesn’t get updated often (well, not as often as I’d like to see anyway) but when he updates it, it’s massive cool. Nicky travels a lot with and without his family. Recently, he and his internationally ranked badminton player sister went through east Asia on a tour. Tons of cool pictures and stories! So, this one for you my darling Nicky! :)

Lastly, a fellow Thai expat living in the US, Pond of Indiapolis by way of Chiang Mai and Bangkok, Thailand. We on Thai-Blogs.com and found out that we had a lot more in common than we thought. Same age. Same point of view on many topics. She has just crossed over from the evil MSN Livespace-a-doodat to Blogspot. Good for you Pondering!

That is it for the evening, friends.

Daddy knows best

Me: You know, I’m so tired of explaining to Americans about the coup.

Dad: They’re just jealous.

Me: What? Why?

Dad: When Thais are desperate for a change in the government, we resort to the coup. When Americans are desperate for a change in their presidency, and since they can’t have a coup, they just kill him off.

Me: Dad!?

Dad: Look at what they did to JFK! And Lincoln. And almost did it to Reagan too. *Chuckles*

Me: *Sigh* Okay I’m hanging up now.

Oh, just a touch!

Just a wee little bit of Thai politics. Wee little bit!

New York Times - A Banned Book Challenges Saintly Image of Thai King

I am personally half way through this big ol’ book myself. (And no, I haven’t gone back to it much. Kind of burned out on it right now. Perhaps I should return it to my Demi-boss…)

Here’s the content of that article:

A Banned Book Challenges Saintly Image of Thai King

By JANE PERLEZ

JAKARTA, Indonesia, Sept. 24 — When soldiers and tanks rolled onto the streets of Bangkok last week and the king appeared on television with the generals, it was not the first time Thailand’s wildly popular monarch had given his blessing to a military takeover.

A new and comprehensive history of the Thai modern monarchy, written by an American journalist, Paul M. Handley, and banned in Thailand, argues that in his 60-year reign King Bhumibol Adulyadej has generally exercised a preference for order over democracy.

In doing so, Mr. Handley said, the king has put the preservation of the institution of the monarchy ahead of a democratic Thailand.

The book, “The King Never Smiles,” presents a direct counterpoint to years of methodical royal image-making that projects a king beyond politics, a man of peace, good works and Buddhist humility. It also runs counter to how most Thais see their king, as a man of mystique and charisma but also as a bastion of Thailand’s moves to modernity.

The book’s publisher, Yale University Press, said it came under heavy pressure from the Thai government not to publish it.

The director of Yale University Press, John Donatich, said the pressure included a visit to New Haven by a delegation of Thai officials, including the cabinet secretary general, Bowornsak Uwanno, and the Thai ambassador to the United States, Virasakdi Futrakul.

Mr. Donatich said he ruled out canceling publication of the book, and copies are now on sale in Asian capitals and the United States. But he did agree, he said, to their request that publication be delayed until July, a month after the June 9 celebrations in Bangkok of King Bhumibol’s 60th anniversary on the throne and his 80th birthday.

“We didn’t want to be accused of exploiting the event,” Mr. Donatich said.

The televised coverage of the gala provided an unusual look at the court’s unyielding protocol that emphasizes a godly king above ordinary mortals. In one live segment, white-liveried attachés could be seen running ahead of the king to open an elevator door, and then lying prostrate on the floor as the king and his wife passed by.

Mr. Handley, who worked for 13 years as a journalist in Thailand, does not argue with the king’s unequalled status among the people or his dedication to rural development projects. He writes that King Bhumibol’s prestige has “survived unscathed by the virtue of his sheer longevity and his personality — earnest, hardworking, gentle, with an impeccably simple lifestyle.”

But his book does note that the king sided with a brutal army takeover in 1976, and in 1992 waited three days before stopping a four-star general from ordering troops to fire on demonstrators.

Much of what Mr. Handley writes is not new, and most of the facts are not in dispute, reviewers and Thai historians say. It is the book’s interpretation of the facts that can be disputed, said Thitinan Pongsudhirak, the director of the Institute of Security and International Studies at Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok.

He disagreed, he said, with the argument that the trouble with Thailand’s democracy lay with the king.

“That Thai democracy is weak because of the king — I don’t think so,” Mr. Thitinan said. In fact, he said, the king had approved the 1997 Constitution, the most democratic so far, and that was abolished last week

That Constitution worked well, he said, until Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, ousted last Tuesday, was acquitted of asset concealment by the constitutional court in 2001, a decision the king had nothing to do with.

The Yale press agreed to consider some factual errors that the Thais said were of concern. In the end, Mr. Donatich said, the Thais submitted only three or four minor corrections, like the correct title of a royal daughter’s thesis. “He did his homework,” Mr. Donatich said of the author.

A portion of a document from the Thai cabinet that appeared on a Thai Web site and appearing, by all accounts, to be authentic, listed the ways the Thais tried to prevent publication, and if it went ahead, how to block the book’s distribution in Thailand.

According to the document, the government contacted the American law firm LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene and MacRae, which told it that publication would be impossible to stop on constitutional grounds. Such efforts would generate unwanted publicity, the lawyers advised.

The document said the authorities had banned the book in Thailand on the grounds that it was a threat to stability. It said Thai officials had contacted the Yale University president, Richard Levin, and had sought the help of former President George H. W. Bush, an alumnus of Yale.

For fans of royals as royals, Mr. Handley offers up plenty of what might be classified as high-class dish, like a recounting of the mystery surrounding the death of the king’s elder brother, Ananda, who was found in 1946 in his bed with a bullet through his head six months after being crowned king. (The official version at the time was that Ananda had accidentally killed himself.)

King Bhumibol was born in the United States, grew up in Switzerland and married the lithe, pretty Princess Sirikit, a favorite of the 1960’s jet set, who by the 1980’s had weathered into a much more fulsome version of a queen with her own court favorites, expensive tastes and pet charities.

The book describes their only son, Vajiralongkorn, as a willful man prone to violence, fast cars and dubious business deals. It may well be, Mr. Handley suggests, that the king’s favorite daughter, Princess Sirindhorn, who is a dutiful royal with wide-ranging interests in rural development and architecture, will be his successor.

“Bhumibol’s most fundamental failing is the Achilles’ heel of every monarchy: he has been unable to guarantee an orderly succession to a wise, selfless, and munificent king like himself,” the book concludes.

Simple joy


092506_0643a.jpg
Originally uploaded by theoakmonster.

Happiness is…

…having a bus stop that actually has a bench in it!

I didn’t take the bus on Friday so I don’t know if this new stop is old news or not. But first thing that caught my eyes was the bench. And then I realized there is a new green metal trashcan and that the entire bus stop is brand spanking new!

Holy shit! This city actually upgrades their bus stop!? I [heart] Los Alamitos! It did take them a while but they actuall got to it. Wow.

A long long time ago, we had a bench here at my bus stop. We came in one morning to see the bench quite literally ripped off by its legs, sitting side way on the ground, surrounded by caution tape.

The next morning, the carcass of the bench was gone. And the you could see the remenance of the bolds in the cement where they filled in. So we had no bench since then.

I don’t usually sit down but it was nice to have a cleaner place to park my backpack and other things I may be hauling into town that day. (Content of my city backpack will be discussed in another blog for another time.)

So, yes. My life right now is just that exciting.

Well, USC game over the weekend really got my blood going though. 20-3 we did beat the Arizona Wildcats but those 20 points were truly hard earned.

That Emmanuel Moody kid, what a fucking amazing freshman athelete! Now, he just has to learn how to glue the ball to his arm like Reggie did and he’s just going to grow up to be one hell of a player!

Oh yes. My Trojans winning their games. Another simple joy in life. ;-)

Listen to your mother (and grandmother)

Well, enough about the Coup. We’re closing in on picking an interim PM, so I’m not worried any more. We’re back on the usual recovery path. And I’m moving on.

Besides, I’m losing readership over here talking politics–foreign politics for most of you–all the time. The OakMonster’s Den is not supposed to be serious, is the main complaint.

So, here. Have a completely irrelevant post. ;-)

I bought a jar of Nivea Creme yesterday. This blue jar has been a Phromyothi’s household item ever since I remembered. My mom used the creme to treat her dry palms and soles, a genetic trait that recently surfaced for me.

Buying a jar of Nivea also got me looking at a bottle of 4711 Eau de Cologne I bought from home a few years ago as well. That is another household item from the time of Princess Grandmother. It’s her scent, other than the rose soap she used. She used the Cologne to freshen up. The scent is so mild and refreshing. My mom would splash it in a sink of water to wipe us down when we had a fever. It’s fresh scent makes you feel better than just getting wiped down with plain water. In certain 5-star restaurants, they’d dabble a bit of that into the cold or hot towels they bring to you before your meal. 4711 citrusy fresh scent has become a comfort scent. So has the smell of Nivea creme.

With those 2 items together in my current life, I feel the presense of Princess Grandmother and my mom. I suddenly realize their influences in my life with all these little things.

Another inspiration was also from when I was buying the jar of Nivea. I saw this lady who looked probably my age. She is pretty, but then she has these lines on her throat, I call it throat wrinkles. The ugly lines just took away the glorious pretty face. That reminded me of another beauty tips from my mom.

Hence, this blog entry.

I’m sure you have looked back in your life and found that certain things your parents made you do or drilled into your head as a kid actually works out in the long run. I rolled my eyes at my mom for all the beauty regimen and tips and tricks she would tell me. I didn’t care. I ain’t pretty so beauty is not going to work for me. Now I’m actually reaping the benefits of all I was taught.

Put it this way, I still get carded when I order drinks or buy booze at grocery store. Last year, I asked for a Lotto ticket at a 7-11 and the lady asked if I was 18.

So, what is this family secrets of extending the youthful look? Here are a few tricks that work for my mom AND my princess grandmother.

1. No uncessary make up.

From K-12, Thai schools don’t allow you to put on any make up. So, I guess us Thai girls should count ourselves lucky for not starting in on putting harsh chemicals on our faces in early age like Americans and othe western countries.

Princess Grandmother said young skin should be left alone because it’s the best skin you’ll ever have. If you take care of it well now, you won’t need to struggle with it when you’re older.

That is also why she doesn’t believe in foundation. She said she didn’t use foundation until well into her 40s when she actually had lines to hide. All her life, she used only loose powder, Johnson & Johnson’s baby powder to be exact.

Your face is delicate and you don’t really want to do anything to it if it is not necessary. Only use make up when needed, she said. Coming over to visit grandmother definitely doesn’t require make up, I remembered she smiled at me when I showed up at her door one evening after I played with the old lipsticks, shadows, and blush my mom gave me..

I follow that to the tee. I never like make up to begin with, a habit from not wearing any during my school years and a hatred developed from having worn so much stage make up in my life time. I went through American high school and college with no make up. Hell, I still don’t wear any to work nowadays. My only addition as of late is the Neutrogena mineral powder. It just smooths things out.

2. Moisturize.

Princess Grandmother’s fountain of youth was composed off a bar of Johnson & Johnson’s baby bar soap, Oil of Olay, and Pond’s Cold Cream. She washed with baby soap and moisturized with Oil of Olay. Cold cream was used to remove make up and as her night cream.

When I started to have a “beauty regimen” around 13 or so, I followed grandmother. But as I grew, my skin began to change, and the soap became too drying and the Oil of Olay became too oily. It seems every few years I have to change products all over again. But I will not skip moisterizing if I could help it.

3. Don’t neglect your throat.

This one is from my mom. She watched me moisturizing my face one time and she pointed out that I didn’t put any face cream on my throat. My throat? Why?

Mom started pointing out young celebrities on TV. They were young, I mean, early 30s maximum. “Look at her throat,” she said. “See the lines on her throat?” Indeed I did. These beautiful ladies had these ugly lines on their throats. Throat wrinkles. Who would’ve thought!

“Most people didn’t think about that either, even me” mom said. “So now that you know about it, you can prevent it.” And here I am, making sure I use facial scrub on my throat and moisturize it along with my face.

4. Sunscreen.

I don’t go out wihtout sunscreen. Period. My daily body lotion has SPF 15 and for my face I use Clinique City Block SPF 25.

This one I can thank my mom who is ultra sensitive to the sun. Mom has the Chinese fair skin and sensitive as hell. She’s allergic to chlorine, as in the amount you have in a swimming pool would turn her red. She’s highly sensitive to the sun so she either burns or gets discoloration and freckles.

When we were kids, all 3 of us were essentially “black”, having spent half the day on the tennis courts and the other half either in the pool or on the soccer field. Once I quit the sports and my “darkness” begins to fade, mom started in on getting me a vial of high quality facial sun treatment.

Sure, partly it was a plan to get my skin to be fairer. The fairer the better back home. But there’s a benefit there too. “You know how those farangs look so wrinkly?” she asked one day. “Because they like to be in the sun a lot. You don’t want to sun to speed up your face, do you?”

Point taken once again, mommy. I still would bask in the sun which drives mom crazy when we were out and about together. “Get in the shade!”, she’d call out. I’m not THAT strict about being in the sun as long as I have my SPF. :)

5. Think young

This one is purly from Princess Grandmother. You’re as young as you think. Never ever let go of the inner child. As long as you can think and act as if you’re 7 year old, you will always look younger than you are.

Grandmother may not have acted like she was 7, but she wasn’t going to let her age stop her. She was still as active as her body would allowed. That youthful thoughts radiate through your skin, she said. Other people sense your youthfulness and that takes years off of you.

Princess Grandmother would be so proud of me in that category. I don’t have an inner child, but an inner adult that comes out to take responsibilities as needed.

Most of the time I am this [holds up 7 fingers] many!

The Making of a Coup

Yep. Still going on about the Coup. Probably for a while, but I promise I’ll post something more traditionally OakMonster very soon.

After all, USC takes on Arizona this Saturday. Do you think I can withstand not talking about USC football?

And here’s the story from the trench of why we had a coup and, as silly as it sounds, why I support it.

THE NATION OVERDRIVE - 9.22.06
Sonthi outsmarted Thaksin at the eleventh hour

Had Council for Democratic Reform under Constitutional Monarchy (CDRM) leader General Sonthi Boonyaratglin not moved as fast as he did to stage a coup on Tuesday, Thaksin Shinawatra would have launched his own coup a day later. Don’t be fooled by Thaksin’s claim that he stands for democracy. As the political crisis developed to the point of no return concerning whether Thaksin should stay or be booted out, General Sonthi had no choice but to swallow his words about the days of military coups being over. He had been very reluctant to resort to a coup, as he was known not to have any political ambitions. Moreover, he was not known to be an enemy of Thaksin. Although General Sonthi has a good relationship with both Privy Council President General Prem Tinsulanonda and Privy Council member General Surayuth Chulanont, he came to power partly due to a political compromise struck with Thaksin.

However, an intelligence report reached General Sonthi’s camp stating that there would be bloodshed on Wednesday. The People’s Alliance for Democracy had planned to hold a political rally that day at the Royal Plaza in order to force Thaksin out of politics. Had that rally taken place, there would have been clashes between the People’s Alliance for Democracy and Thaksin’s supporters and blood would have been spilt on Rajdamnoen Avenue. If only Thaksin had promised that he would take a break from politics and allow a period of political reforms to take place, the PAD and other branches of the anti-Thaksin movement would have declared victory. All political confrontations would have subsided. Thaksin could have run for office once the Constitution was amended, and he would have been returned to the premier’s post, probably in the latter part of next year.

However, Thaksin never considered taking a break from power. Again, don’t be fooled by his “taking a break” story - the idea never crossed his mind.

The General Sonthi camp learned that during the PAD rally, Yongyuth Tiyapairat and Newin Chidchob were planning to rally their supporters to create an ugly scene at the Royal Plaza. During the ensuing commotion, there would be human casualties. Thaksin would then have stepped in and declared a state of emergency, placing the country under martial law.

Now you can understand why he had time to prepare his state of emergency statement and read it at 9.20pm on Channel 9 from his New York hotel room. You can also understand why Yongyuth and Newin are now at the top of this country’s most-wanted list and have surrendered themselves to the CDRM for interrogation.

Once the situation was under his complete control, Thaksin had planned to fly back yesterday in order to declare victory over anti-democratic elements in society. He had a military reshuffle list in hand that would have further consolidated his control over the military. With that accomplished, everything would have been easy. Virtually all institutions in the country would have been under his directive.

From his New York hotel, Thaksin was preparing to deliver an address at the UN Assembly. The room instead turned out to be the headquarters from which he attempted to launch a counter-coup and negotiate a political settlement. In New York, he planned to recruit top-notch American political consultants to advise him on his political campaign for the next election, which would have been pushed back from October 15 to some time in November.

Thaksin’s talk of taking a break from politics was simply lip service. He told the Thai public he would decide whether to take a break from politics only after his Thai Rak Thai went to the Election Commission to register as candidates. This means Thaksin would have liked His Majesty the King to endorse a new election date before he made his decision.

Members of the Thai elite and the PAD, however, would not allow this to happen. If Thaksin were to run in the next election, he would have won. With 12 million votes or so, he would have claimed a democratic majority and he also would have stayed on as prime minister. After that he could rewrite Thai history by turning Thailand into his own regime.

General Sonthi had to act fast to head off Thaksin’s coup. He staged a military coup on Tuesday, a day before the bloodshed was set to take place. He and Thaksin did have a telephone conversation on Tuesday evening, with Thaksin trying to buy time and negotiate a settlement.

He told General Sonthi that if he kept his cool, Thaksin would take a break from politics. He asked Sonthi to wait until he returned from New York so that the two could talk things out and said that he would reschedule his return flight to Bangkok to Wednesday, instead of yesterday as he had planned.

General Sonthi was polite, but told him that he had no choice, that he had to stage the coup.

In the meantime, Thaksin was checking on his military allies, who had control of Bangkok, for the most part. He remained certain that in a military power play, he could still emerge the victor. Maj-General Prin Suwannathat, commander of the First Infantry Brigade, is a close ally of Thaksin and he holds the most powerful military post in Bangkok. The commanders of the Air Force and the Navy are also good friends of Thaksin.

General Sonthi had the support of Lt-General Saphrang Kalayanamit of the Third Army, who had been outspoken in his anti-Thaksin remarks. The Third Army is in charge of all military operations in the North. Another key ally of Gen Sonthi is Lt-General Anupong Phaochinda of the First Infantry Division in Bangkok. Maj-General Sanit Prommas, the commander of the Second Cavalry Brigade, also came to play an important role in the power play to seize the capital.

Troops from Prachin Buri and Lop Buri were also mobilised to the capital to assist in the coup, the decisive outcome of which was ironically the victory of thaharn ban nok (upcountry military).

As it turned out, all of Thaksin’s military allies, most notably Maj-General Prin, had been marked out - they could not move. General Ruengroj Mahasaranont, the supreme commander and a Thaksin ally, was to look after Bangkok once Thaksin had declared martial law. He too was subdued. Chidchai Vanasatidya and Prommin Lertsuridej were unable to launch any sort of counter effort.

Thaksin’s wife Khunying Pojaman Shinawatra was supposed to take a 12am flight to Singapore on Tuesday night. She quickly changed her flight to 9pm. Well, Gen Sonthi had to let her off the hook.

Twenty-five minutes later, knowing that his wife was safely on an aircraft bound for Singapore, Thaksin read out his state of emergency address from his New York hotel room, effectively sacking General Sonthi .

But an hour later, General Sonthi declared a counter-coup to overthrow the Thaksin regime and tear up the Constitution.

The rest is history.

Thanong Khanthong

Still Coup’ing

Dr. Suthichai Yoon, one of Thailand’s most respected journalists–and my personal favorite–says it best.

THE NATION - 09.21.06
THAI TALK

‘Yellow ribbon coup’ was a very high price to pay

Call it a “reluctant coup” or a “yellow ribbon revolt”, Tuesday’s assumption of power by military leaders was still a prohibitively high price for the country to pay to remove an entrenched political tyrant. You can of course try to stretch the point and argue that Thaksin Shinawatra did ask for it. In fact, his arrogance and autocratic proclivity might have served as the last straw, prompting the top brass to opt for the “really inevitable last resort”.

While the use of unconstitutional means to topple a democratically elected government can never be justified, some insiders have suggested that Army Chief General Sonthi Boonyaratglin’s decision to topple Thaksin through a military takeover was in fact a pre-emptive strike - or a “counter coup” to stave off an even more ignoble “self-coup” planned by Thaksin to establish himself, once and for all, as an all-powerful despot.

General Sonthi’s assurances that the top brass have no intention whatsoever to hold on to political power - and his public pledge to “return the power to the people as soon as possible” - might have allayed some of the fears inherent any time the military intervenes in national politics. However, he will have to move fast and convincingly, particularly in determining how to embark on genuine political reforms, to offset the negative impact brought about by the putsch.

Of equal, if not greater, importance is how he can turn this crisis of confidence into an opportunity for real national reconciliation. Whether he likes it or not, Thaksin will always be remembered for his dubious record of having brought Thai society to its most divided point in history, centred on the wild ambitions of just one power-hungry politician.

Paradoxically perhaps, the political havoc Thaksin wreaked through his claims on electoral democracy will have to be healed by Sonthi’s extra-constitutional modus operandi. If the Army chief is able to use these “extraordinary means” to solve an “extraordinary crisis” in order to reunify the country and help Thai society put its deep divisions in the past, he might be able to claim, however controversially, that the ends justified the means.

Quite apart from the debate over the pros and cons of this coup, however, this latest political episode underscores a deep-rooted flaw of this country. The fact that this change of government was effected through force shows that, whatever we say about having matured politically, we are basically still an extremely fragile society.

In fact, we are so vulnerable that any politician with sufficient money and clout, plus a shrewd marketing strategy, is capable of whipping a large segment of the population into a frenzy, confusing electoral manipulation with grassroots democracy. Worse, once a corrupt and powerful leader is entrenched, none of the existing constitutional mechanisms are capable of dealing with him.

Military intervention in a democratic system is always a “bad habit” that may stick if we once again allow ourselves the illusion that this will be the last time this dose of strong medicine is required to cure a serious disease.

Even if the first declaration from coup leaders sounded uncharacteristically apologetic (”Forgive us for the inconvenience caused”), once a political precedent of such proportion is set, it invariably stays. True democracy means never allowing coup leaders the excuse to stage their next exercise, even if they say they are sorry for their previous one.

In other words, if we can’t devise an effective system to get rid of a despot through constitutional means, that means we haven’t really graduated beyond the basics of democracy.

Coup coup doobeedooo…

I’m lightening up the mood here.

Thailand has coups. It’s almost a fact of life.

Prime Minister abuses power. Government is corrupted. People protest to no avail. The military steps in, essentially to wipe the slate clean. A new constitution is drafted, essentially a forced reform. Temporary PM and government is installed. About a year later everything goes back to normal. About 10 years after that, a Prime Minister would come along and abuse his power.

Rinse and Repeat.

Once in a while you run into a Suchinda where the power went to his head and wouldn’t return democracy to the people. Then we have the bloody uprising and clash of the people and the military. But that happened once in my life time.

Foreign countries are speaking out that they want to see Thailand return to democracy, that they’d like to see the political problems solved democratically.

But how can we solve it democratically when people who are running the election are all corrupted and controlled by the Spongebob Squarehead (aka Thaksin)?

In a sense, the democracy we had wasn’t really a democracy after all but dictatorship disguised under the facade of democracy.

Hence. The coup. So, go military.

I have a few lighter comments on the coup from the Peanut Gallery.

The Inconvenient Coup

I gave Brandon a run down about the coup and how TV stations were cut off.

Brandon: Oh, in that case the coup won’t last that long.

Me: What? Why not?

Brandon: Doesn’t Academy Fantasia come on on Wednesday night? They can NOT possibly cancel the broadcast of Academy Fantasia!

Yes, AF is crack. It’s a combination of American Idol and Big Brother. You watch these performers live together, go to training, and once a week there’s a concert and elmination show. There’s a channel that dedicated to the live footage of the house and follow them to classes and activities through out the day.

But so much for using AF as a cause to stop a coup. Season 3 already wrapped up. AND the concert is actually on a Saturday. ;-)

The Convenient Coup

Me: So, the office is closed today. Are you doing anything, dad?

Dad: I’ll be in the office still. We still have stuff to do. Your brother is going golfing I think.

Me: Golfing? The day after the coup?

Dad: Yep.

Me: Isn’t there a Martial Law thing imposed? You know, you can’t have a group gathering?

Dad: Well, you can’t have a party of 5 or larger. A golf party has only four.

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