Thaksin’s red shirts depriving Thais in need

There is a point protest cease being protests and start harming the community by harming people. Thaksin’s red shirt have clearly passed that point and are now it the process of denying people any and all assistance from the government.

There is a point at witch things turn to absurdity, and red shirts blocking humanitarian relief supples from the government most certainly qualifies as over the top. It is hard not to get angry and this type of mindless behavior.

Even the local government in the northern city of Chiang Mai has indicated that the red shirts are hurting tourism in the area and ultimately the income of people living there. As a result they have told the red shirts to stand down, but that seems to have fallen on deaf ears.

Ultimately this will have a negative result on the red shirts that is already showing in places in the area they call home. People are starting to turn against them but not necessarily becoming pro government. Once people connect that this pro Thaksin bunch is hurting their income either directly or indirectly, their will be a sudden and perhaps unpleasant reality check for the red shirts as they start to get what they are dishing out.

The red shirts are acting in such a way they could fairly easily be called a mindless cult following. Unfortunately for them they are following a memory of a past Thaksin, and not the reality of today’s Thaksin. Thaksin is not the same man he was before the Coup. He was corrupt and greedy then but down rite dangerous now and no doubt will permanently eliminate people who he sees as his enemies. That list includes senior statesmen well into their 80’s. The red shirts will no doubt become the core of this blood hungry part of Thaksin’s control over Thailand.

The Thais living in northeast Thailand must quickly connect on what is going on and move to stop it. Unfortunately it may be a case of blind sheep amongst wolves as the red shirts are not shy about using violence to achieve their goals.

Quoting the Nation;

Boonjong cuts short trip

Protesters hurl shoes, yell at minister in Sakhon Nakhon

Deputy Interior Minister Boonjong Wongtrairat yesterday took one look at the red-shirt rally waiting for him and cut short his official visit to Sakhon Nakhon’s Akat Amnuay district.

Boonjong arrived by helicopter to hand out 1,000 blankets to 94 villagers suffering from the cold wave.

As soon as he stepped down, more than 300 anti-government protesters ran up to him, shouting at him to leave while condemning the Abhisit government for lacking legitimacy.

MP Jumpol Bunyai rushed Boonjong into a van to drop him off at the district hall 300 metres away. The red shirts tried to break the cordon formed by more than 300 police and security officers. They threw shoes and yelled at Boonjong.

When Boonjong reached district hall, he told the local officials to call off the blanket presentation ceremony as it was interrupted by noise from the protesters’ loudspeakers. It looked like the red shirts were trying to break into the building where the ceremony was to be held.

He told the village chiefs to give the blankets to villagers and left 10 minutes after he arrived.

Meanwhile Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva denied reports that he had donned a bullet-proof vest while performing official business on Saturday, saying he wore only a T-shirt and singlet.

He insisted that if reporters had asked him, he would have proven that he was not using body armour.

“The report was funny. I wore a very thin shirt. Maybe I have put on weight,” he said.

Acting government spokesman Panithan Wattanayakorn said Abhisit did not wear soft protective clothing even though there had been reports of a possible assassination attempt. His security guards also insisted he did not wear such a thing.

Panithan said the Cabinet tomorrow would consider lifting the Internal Security Act after the Internal Security Operations Command evaluates the situation and gives its recommendation.

The government could not rule out the possibility that the red shirts would seize the opportunity to stage their mass rally if the security law was revoked, he said.

The Democratic Alliance Against Dictatorship had deferred their planned protest because the leaders were split on whether to call it before December 5, since it was close to His Majesty the King’s birthday.

The DAAD leaders have been trying to hold a top-level meeting. If they finally become united, they would likely agree to go ahead with staging their mass rally against the government, he added.


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