VIDEO — Jews v Cops: Ultra-Orthodox protest against plan to draft them into IDF
RT
Feb 9, 2014
Israeli police used water cannon on ultra-Orthodox Jewish protesters on Thursday in the southern city of Ashdod, following demonstrations against plans to enlist them in the military. Police also claimed that highways were being blocked across the country as part of the protest. In Ashdod, demonstrators hurled stones at police, injuring two. While in Jerusalem around 400 ultra-Orthodox Jews tried to block the entrance to the city. The trouble follows a Supreme Court ruling this week ordering funding halted to ultra-Orthodox seminaries whose students dodge the draft.
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Russia threatening to intervene militarily in Ukraine
StratRisks
Feb 7, 2014
See also: The Kremlin: This leaked tape shows the US is backing Ukraine’s opposition

A senior Kremlin aide accused the United States on Thursday of arming Ukrainian “rebels” and, urging the Kiev government to put down what he called an attempted coup, warned Russia could intervene to maintain the security of its ex-Soviet neighbor.
Sergei Glazyev, an adviser to President Vladimir Putin with responsibility for relations with Ukraine, told a newspaper that U.S. “interference” breached the 1994 treaty under which Washington and Moscow jointly guaranteed Ukraine’s security and sovereignty after Kiev gave up its Soviet-era nuclear arsenal.
His characteristically confrontational comments, on the eve of an expected meeting between Putin and Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich at the opening of the Sochi Winter Olympics, could add to tensions with Washington, and within Ukraine.
Asked by Kommersant-Ukraine daily whether Russia might “actively intervene” if the country’s crisis deepened, Glazyev recalled the Budapest Memorandum of 1994: “Under the document, Russia and the USA are guarantors of the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine and … are obliged to intervene when conflict situations of this nature arise.
“And what the Americans are getting up to now, unilaterally and crudely interfering in Ukraine’s internal affairs, is a clear breach of that treaty. The agreement is for collective guarantees and collective action.”
He did not specify what action Russia might take.
[…CONTINUE READING THIS ARTICLE]
[h/t: MediaMonarchy]
VIDEO — ‘F**k the EU’: US State Dept. official in phone chat on Ukraine posted online
RT
Feb 6, 2014
A scandal is brewing as Washington’s real stance on Ukraine may have leaked on the web. An alleged phone conversation between US Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland and the US ambassador to Ukraine has appeared on Youtube. (http://youtu.be/MSxaa-67yGM) “F**k the EU,” Victoria Nuland allegedly said in a recent phone call with US ambassador to Kiev Geoffrey Pyatt, as the two were discussing a deal to end the crisis in Ukraine.
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related RT videos:
Thailand: The People Have Spoken – No Confidence in Regime or System
by Tony Cartalucci
Land Destroyer
With a regime and system rendered illegitimate with a sweeping boycott of sham elections – Thailand must find alternatives to patching itself together beyond the broken ballot box.
February 5, 2014 (ATN) – Thailand’s February 2, 2014 elections produced the worst ever voter turnout in Thai history with a humiliating 46% coming out to cast their ballots. Of this paltry number, many chose to deface their ballots or cast “no vote” in protest of both the process and the regime overseeing it.
The elections were highly controversial, with all major opposition parties boycotting them and the only major party on the ballot being openly run by an accused mass murderer, convicted criminal, and fugitive, Thaksin Shinawatra, who is currently hiding abroad from a two year jail sentence, multiple arrest warrants, and a long list of pending legal cases.
The elections were carried out with heavy backing from the West, despite the obvious illegitimacy of the process and the nature of the regime. While the West claims it was merely defending the “democratic process,” a look into the relationship between dictator Thaksin Shinawatra and the corporate-financier interests of Wall Street and London tell another, more likely story of imposing upon Thailand a proxy regime serving Western, not Thai interests.
Graph: Thailand’s Election Commission reported the abysmal voter turnout in 2014, compared with 2011, showing a resounding loss of confidence in both the ruling regime and the “democratic process” it has highjacked to grant itself otherwise nonexistent credibility and legitimacy. The turnouts only tell part of the story, since many who did vote, did so simply to deface their ballots or check “no vote” in an alternative form of protest against the regime. (Graphic via The Nation).
Of the election turnout, Thai PBS reported in their article, “EC says latest voter turnout is 46.79%,” that:
The Election Commission (EC) today released the latest voter turnout for February 2 general election at 46.79%, with turnout of “vote-no” standing at 16.57%.
The turnout was counted from 68 provinces, excluding nine southern provinces where voting could not be held, and some constituencies of Rayong and Bangkok.
Of the 68 provinces where voting was held, EC said there are a total of 43,024,042 eligible voters.
It said 20,129,976 voters or 46.79%, cast their votes. Of all the ballots they casted, 71.38% was valid, and 12.05% was void.
It said of all the valid ballots, 16.57% voters casted “vote-no”.
With over half of all eligible voters choosing to not even vote, and with so many defacing their ballots or choosing the “no vote” option, the ruling regime of Thaksin Shinawatra has clearly lost millions of votes since 2011. It should be noted that turnout percentages are determined based on polling stations uninterrupted by protests – though areas where voting was disrupted are expected to produce results even less favorable for the regime if and when voting occurs.
It is clear that the regime has lost the confidence and support of the vast majority of the Thai population and is now without a mandate to rule the country. Furthermore, Thais appear to have lost confidence in the so-called “democratic process” the regime has hijacked in order to create the illusion of a mandate and legitimacy.
Despite this, the regime’s Western backers continue to promote the myth that merely because “elections” took place, whatever government is formed afterward possesses unquestionable legitimacy. And with this “legitimacy,” Thaksin Shinawatra and his political party are attempting to arrest an opposition that clearly commanded the majority of Thai opinion on February 2.
In Bangkok Post’s article, “Arrest warrants for PDRC leaders, CMPO to suspend transactions,” it reported:
The Criminal Court on Wednesday approved the Department of Special Investigation’s (DSI) request for arrest warrants for 19 leading members of the People’s Democratic Reform Committee (PDRC) for alleged violation of the emergency decree.
To compound the regime’s authoritarian posture, it should be noted that the emergency decree was announced in response to a terror campaign the regime itself openly carried out against the opposition. It included almost nightly drive-by shootings at rally sites and opposition leaders’ homes, as well as brazen broad daylight grenade attacks that left one dead and scores seriously maimed.
While the regime and the West will continue framing the elections as a renewed mandate for Thaksin Shinawatra’s illegal, illegitimate administration of Thailand, and the opposition as ostentatiously opposing the will of the rural “majority,” the reality is that this rural majority joined the opposition on February 2 in boycotting the polls and are literally joining the protesters in Bangkok in response to the regime’s collapsed rice-buying scheme.
Waiting for the Inevitable
The illusion of Thaksin Shinawatra’s popularity has been shattered and the barriers of fear imposed upon the Thai people by his “red shirt” enforcers have crumbled into ruins. With wrecking-ball abandon, his regime has gutted Thailand’s rice industry, skewed the economy, shaken confidence both domestically and abroad, and is still awaiting the fallout from other disastrous vote-buying schemes that are in the process of collapsing.
What the protesters have been unable to do themselves, the regime itself will accomplish in the final stages of its grip on power.
However, people need not wait to begin picking up the pieces the regime’s corrupt, incompetent ministries have left after their ruinous decade in power. While a new government will inevitably replace the Shinawatra regime, the lessons of the past decade should inform the Thai people that the answers to their solutions lay not at the ballot box, but in their own hands. While Thailand’s education system, agricultural industry, banking system, infrastructure, and other essential services provided by the government cannot be easily replaced, they can be augmented by local activism, local institutions, and local collaboration to make up for shortcomings that may or may never be addressed adequately.
Protesters who have been meeting and organizing to attend mass rallies, supporting the alternative media in their efforts to counter the regime and its Western backers’ propaganda, and volunteering at the rallies themselves can begin expanding their activities toward tangible solutions and enumerated, specific principles of reform.
It All Begins With Education and Ends With Real Activism
The “fee tablet PC” scam by the government was a bad idea even if it was implemented efficiently. The problem with the Thai education system was never a lack of tablet PCs, but a lack of resources to match qualified teachers and practical curriculum to appropriately sized classes.
A real solution could include a Thai-version of OpenCourseWare where curriculum is available for free on the Internet in a centralized repository including both free .PDF textbooks and video lectures on YouTube, along with resources to help educators and potential educators impart the curriculum upon students. This can be done in parallel with the existing education system and offered in after-school programs. It can be lucrative and beneficial to both educators and students within their village or district.
Concepts like “hackerspaces” and “DIYbio labs” can give high school and university students practical hands-on experience to augment their theoretical studies across the street from their classrooms. These local institutions can also serve as SME kickstarters, while the technological and human resources they are able to pool can be applied directly to local problems by the local people themselves. (see more on “How to Start a Hackerspace“)
This can include anything from improving or augmenting local IT infrastructure, to developing cheap and easy-to-replicate technology to assist farmers in both increasing their efficiency and diversifying their economic activity. Local institutions like hackerspaces that combine education, technological research and development, and a venue for meeting and organizing for a wide variety of pragmatic purposes, can also serve as a nexus for disaster response – another area in which the current regime has consistently and tragically failed.
An example of a political movement turned pragmatic was Occupy Wall Street, which in the face of Hurricane Sandy, became “Occupy Sandy.” It turned its political networks into pragmatic disaster relief networks, and illustrated their political struggle with Wall Street and the proxy regime it controls in Washington, could be outmatched by its pragmatic response to that regime’s failure in the face of adversity.
The Occupy Sandy movement proved that the US government’s failure was not because the odds were insurmountable, but because the government simply did not care. The lesson is that the only people who care about us, are ourselves, our friends and family, and our community. To solve our own problems, we must find the solutions within and among ourselves.
The “Occupy Bangkok” campaign can easily be flipped, just as Occupy Wall Street was in New York City, to begin addressing the many problems left by Shinawatra regime through pragmatic means. Before the regime crumbles, and while people are in “activist mode,” groups can begin forming around a simple table with notebooks or computers to begin sharing knowledge and exploring models that can be both profitable in monetary and social terms. These could include:
Hackerspaces: A space – perhaps a shophouse – with tables for people to gather and collaborate on practical projects such as IT, hardware, robotics, electronics, fabrication, woodworking, etc. Most hackerspaces fund themselves through a combination of monthly dues from memberships and through classes organized to teach skills or discuss concepts. The space is very flexible, and can even be used for local meetings, after-school tutoring, and social events.
Farmers’ Markets: With the disastrous rice-buying scam collapsed in corruption, scandal, and bankruptcy, farmers across the country are left with empty hands and a wrecked rice industry. Should these farmers possess the skills to produce organic fruits, vegetables, and livestock, and should urbanites both in provincial cities and in the capital create markets for them, an additional source of sustainable revenue can be offered while deeply entrenching a healthier, local agricultural industry across the nation.
For example, organic farmers’ markets could be created across Bangkok, who independently or cooperatively promote their locations, operating hours, and the farmers they network with. Tours to the farms producing the food can also become a part of the new economy, with new media writing about the health benefits of organic farming versus industrial big-agri.
An industry of the people, by the people, for the people is the only true way to achieve real, sustainable, and meaningful “wealth distribution.” The technology and resources already exist to make this a reality – a reality already unfolding among dissatisfied Americans seeking an exit out from under the Fortune 500’s corporate-financier monopolies. The legal and regulatory barriers these monopolies are using to stem the exodus of consumers into producers do not exist in practice in Thailand.
For Thais, the only barrier may be a lack of understanding that the solution is right before us. Understanding it, however, allows us to take the current momentum of the political surge against Thaksin Shinawatra and the corrupt system he represents, both in Thailand and globally, and turning it into a pragmatic and lasting movement that will finally allow us to make good on the promises perpetually made and broken by self-serving politicians.
Poll: Nearly 70% Of Ukrainians Fear Threat Of Civil War
Stop NATO…Opposition to global militarism
Feb 6, 2014
1) State Department’s Nuland meets with Svoboda chief, other opposition leaders in Kiev
2) European Union’s Ashton meets with the same
3) Polish prime minister holds video conference with them as well
4) As U.S. vice president sticks his nose in
5) Ukrainian Foreign Ministry urges West to desist from spreading disinformation
6) Poll: 60% of Ukrainians oppose violent seizure of government buildings, 69% fear civil war
7) Man seriously injured by bomb at trade union headquarters
1)
Interfax-Ukraine
February 6, 2014
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Nuland, Ukrainian opposition leaders discusses situation in Ukraine
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland and Ukrainian opposition leaders Arseniy Yatseniuk of the Batkivschyna faction, Vitaliy Klitschko of the UDAR party and Oleh Tiahnybok of the Freedom party have discussed resolving the social and political crisis in Ukraine.
The parties have discussed the situation in Ukraine during a meeting held in Kyiv on Thursday and have said that it was necessary to resolve the social and political crisis in the country peacefully, the Batkivschyna press office said in a statement.
“The participants of the meeting have discussed the prospects of amending the Ukrainian Constitution as well,” the document said.
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2)
UNIAN
February 5, 2014
Opposition leaders hold meeting with Ashton
Chairman of the Political Council of the Batkivshchyna All-Ukrainian Union and the Batkivshchyna faction Arseniy Yatsenyuk together with opposition partners – leader of the UDAR faction Vitaliy Klitschko and leader of the Svoboda All-Ukrainian Union Oleh Tyagnybok held a meeting with High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Catherine Ashton late in the evening yesterday.
The press service of the Batkivshchyna disclosed this to UNIAN.
“Before the meeting of Catherine Ashton with President Yanukovych opposition leaders informed the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy about the situation in Ukraine, in particular, about the negotiation process concerning settlement of the social-political crisis”, – it is said in the report.
The parties agreed to continue communication with Ashton after her meeting with President Victor Yanukovych.
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3)
UNIAN
February 5, 2014
Prime Minister of Poland to hold video-conference with leaders of Ukrainian opposition
Head of the Polish government Donald Tusk will hold a video-conference with three leaders of the Ukrainian opposition in the evening today. He plans to share opinion concerning overcoming of the political crisis in Ukraine with them.
Prime Minister of Poland to hold video-conference with leaders of Ukrainian opposition / ReutersAccording to an UNIAN correspondent in Poland, Tusk said this at press conference in Warsaw.
Tusk noted that he is about to inform leader of the Batkivshchyna faction Arseniy Yatsenyuk, leader of the UDAR party Vitaliy Klitschko and leader of the Svoboda Oleh Tyagnybok about the results of his negotiations with the leaders of the European Union, with whom his spoke concerning the situation in Ukraine last week.
The Prime Minister said that the settlement of the political crisis in Ukraine is the most important task today, because the further confrontation will complicate rendering an assistance to this country.
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4)
UNIAN
February 5, 2014
Biden calls Yanukovych to accept international aid for overcoming of political crisis
Vice President of the United States Joe Biden called President of Ukraine Victor Yanukovych to accept international aid for overcoming of political crisis.
Biden calls Yanukovych to accept international aid for overcoming of political crisis/REUTERSBiden said this in a telephone talk with Yanukovych on Tuesday, Radio Svoboda reports.
Such dialogues have taken place several times during the political crisis.
According to the White House, the Vice President of the United States also called Yanukovych to withdraw special squad soldiers from the streets, to release detained people and to bring to book all the people guilty in attacks on journalists and protesters.
At the same time High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Catherine Ashton will visit Kyiv today and she is about to meet with Yanukovych and leaders of the opposition.
Source: http://www.radiosvoboda.org/content/article/25253468.html
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5)
National Radio Company of Ukraine
February 5, 2014
Kozhara urges Western politicians not to spread unverified information
Ukraine’s Foreign Ministry has called on foreign politicians not to make irresponsible statements and not to spread inaccurate information so as not to complicate the political situation in Ukraine.
Foreign Minister Leonid Kozhara said that allegations by Member of the European Parliament Rebecca Harms that a number of high-ranking Ukrainian officials have foreign passports are untrue. “The Ukrainian politicians, who were mentioned in the statement, have no passports other than Ukrainian,” Kozhara said. He described Harms’s allegations as unacceptable and based on unfounded presumptions.
“I am calling on all foreign policymakers to avoid hasty statements and carefully verify information before making it public,” Kozhara said. As reported, Harms said that a number of Ukrainian officials, including head of President’s administration Andriy Kliuyev, ex-premier Mykola Azarov and acting premier Arbuzov, have Austrian citizenship. All of them have already denied these allegations. Harms later explained that her words had been misinterpreted, when she in fact said these Ukrainian politicians may have Austrian passports. The Austrian Embassy in Ukraine has also officially denied the rumours. Under the Austrian law, foreign investors have the right to obtain a residence permit, which can later be exchanged for Austrian citizenship, if they invest five million euros in the country.
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6)
ForUm
February 6, 2014
Poll: Majority of Ukrainians against seizure of administrative buildings
About 60% of Ukrainian citizens are against the seizure of administrative buildings, founder of the group of companies «R&B Group» Yevhen Kopatko told ForUm correspondent.
“60% of Ukrainians do not support seizure of the government buildings, 82% of them do not support it in the east and 25% in the west of Ukraine,” he said.
Kopatko released a poll data concerning the mood of Ukrainians in all regional centers of the country. “48 % of Ukrainians are experiencing anxiety, among them 47% in the east, 46% in the west; 35 % of Ukrainians feel hope; 19% – confusion, 16% – enthusiasm, 16% – fear, 10% – hopelessness,” the sociologist noted.
He stressed that out of six categories, 92% are negative characteristics and 52% are positive ones.
In addition, according to the sociologist, only 20% of Ukrainians are not afraid of the threat of civil war. 38% say that such a threat exists. 31% believe that the probability is high.
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7)
ForUm
February 6, 2014
Explosion in House of Trade Unions, one injured
A man was wounded in the House of Trade Unions in the center of Kyiv, Kyiv Interior Ministry Department informs.
At 12.20, a doctor called the police and informed that a man in serious condition had been delivered to the clinical hospital № 17.
“The victim was diagnosed eye damage and hand injury. The wounded man is unconscious. Age and place of residence of the man has not been established,” statement says.
According to the doctor, the victim was in the House of Trade Unions on the fifth floor, opened a box, and then there was an explosion, which resulted in injuries.
The investigative team of the Shevchenkyvskyi district police department is now in the House of Trade Unions. Activists do not allow law enforcement officers to the scene.
The second group of Shevchenkyvskyi district police department was sent to the hospital.
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[related video: Art of Meddling: US’s Nulad visits Ukraine again, with ‘regime change’ aims?]
IMF Sponsored “Democracy” in The Ukraine
by Michel Chossudovsky
Global Research
Jan 31, 2014
There is an ongoing and deliberate attempt by foreign powers to spearhead the destabilization of Ukraine including its state structure.
There is a long history of colored revolutions in Ukraine going back to the 1990s.
The protest movement in Kiev bears a marked resemblance to the “Orange Revolution” of 2004 which was supported covertly by Washington. The 2004 “Orange Revolution” led to the ousting of the pro-Russian Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovich, spearheading into power the Western proxy government of President Viktor Yushchenko and Prime Minister Julia Tymoshenko.
Once more Viktor Yanukovitch is the target of a carefully staged “pro-EU protest movement”. The latter was launched following president Yanukovitch’s decision to cancel the “association agreement” with the EU.
The mechanisms of interference are in some regards different to those of 2004. The protests are supported directly by Brussels and Berlin (with EU officials actively involved) rather than by Washington:
“The right-wing parties leading the protests in coordination with EU officials and politicians had called for a “million man march.” Ultimately, some 250,000 to 300,000 people gathered on Maïdan (Independence) Square. It was the largest protest in Kiev since the 2004 “color revolution” organized by US and European imperialism—the so-called Orange Revolution that ousted the pro-Russian Yanukovich and brought the pro-Western tandem of President Viktor Yushchenko and Prime Minister Julia Tymoshenko to power.
Evgenia Tymoshenko, the daughter of former prime minister and billionaire natural gas magnate Julia Tymoshenko, whom Yanukovich has jailed, read a message from her mother calling for Yanukovich’s “immediate” ouster. (See Alex Lantier, December 8, 2013)
The following article first published in November 2004, focuses on the October-November 2004 “Orange Revolution” directed against then prime minister Viktor Yanukovich, while also providing details on the insidious role of the IMF and the World Bank in imposing the neoliberal economic policy agenda on behalf of the “Washington Consensus”.
Michel Chossudovsky, December 2013
IMF Sponsored “Democracy” in The Ukraine
by
Michel Chossudovsky
November 2004
Opposition candidate Viktor Yushchenko in the Ukrainian presidential elections is firmly backed by the Washington Consensus.
He is not only supported by the IMF and the international financial community, he also has the endorsement of The National Endowment for Democracy (NED) , Freedom House and the Open Society Institute , which played a behind the scenes role last year in helping “topple Georgia’s president Eduard Shevardnadze by putting financial muscle and organizational metal behind his opponents.” (New Statesman, 29 November 2004).
The NED has four affiliate institutes: The International Republican Institute (IRI) , the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs (NDI), the Center for International Private Enterprise (CIPE) , and the American Center for International Labor Solidarity (ACILS). These organizations are said to be “uniquely qualified to provide technical assistance to aspiring democrats worldwide.” See IRI, http://www.iri.org/history.asp )
In the Ukraine, the NED and its constituent organizations fund Yushchenko’s party Nasha Ukraina (Our Ukraine), it also finances the Kiev Press Club. In turn, Freedom House, together with The Independent Republican Institute (IRI) are involved in assessing the “fairness of elections and their results”. IRI has staff present in “poll watching” in 9 oblasts (districts), and local staff in all 25 oblasts:
“There are professional outside election monitors from bodies such as the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe, but the Ukrainian poll, like its predecessors, also featured thousands of local election monitors trained and paid by western groups. … They also organised exit polls. On Sunday night those polls gave Mr Yushchenko an 11-point lead and set the agenda for much of what has followed.” (Ian Traynor 26 November 2004, the Guardian, http://globalresearch.ca/articles/TRA411A.html )
Needless to say these various foundations are committed to “Freedom of the Press”. Their activities consist not only in organizing exit polls and feeding disinformation into the Western news chain, they are also involved in the creation and funding of “pro-Western”, “pro-reform” student groups, capable of organizing mass displays of civil disobedience. (For details, see Traynor, op cit) In the Ukraine, the Pora Youth movement (“Its Time”) funded by the Soros Open Society Institute is part of that process with more than 10,000 activists. Supported by the Freedom of Choice Coalition of Ukrainian NGOs , Pora is modeled on Serbia’s Otpor and Georgia’s Kmara.
Thailand: Thaksin Regime Turns on its Own Supporters
by Tony Cartalucci
Alt Thai News Network ATNN
Jan 29, 2014
Regime sends “red shirt” enforcers to threaten farmers and their families for protesting 6 months of unpaid subsidies – smashing the myth of “rural support.”
January 30, 2014 (ATN) – While the US, UK, and others across the West attempt to sell upcoming sham elections in Thailand as upholding “democratic values,” the regime overseeing the one-party self-mandate in a climate of regime-sanctioned terrorism, political intimidation, and a “state of emergency,” has begun turning on its own supporters – mainly farmers.
Farmers began blocking roads across the country in response to unpaid rice subsidies that are now half a year late. Thaksin Shinawatra promised 40% + over-market prices for rice as part of vote-buying populist policies that propelled his nepotist appointed sister into power in 2011. Since then, the rice-buying scheme has collapsed in scandal, corruption, and bankruptcy with government warehouses literally collapsing from the weight of rotting rice left unsold for months.
Unable to sell the rice to nations that have turned to other rice-producers over concerns of downward spiraling quality, the regime attempted to sell bonds. The sale failed to raise even half the cash necessary to pay farmers who already had promised rates slashed and delayed.
As protests began to spread across the north and northeast of Thailand, considered Thaksin Shinawatra and his regime’s stronghold, and with other farmers headed to Bangkok to join the “Occupy Bangkok” campaign, the regime has begun turning its notoriously violent “red shirt” enforcers on the farmers – most of whom, according to the BBC, AFP, Reuters, and others constituted the regime’s support base.

Image: Rice farmers in Phitsanulok province were threatened by regime “red shirts” to end their protest. Often cited by the Western media in their “class divide” narrative, it is now clear the nation’s farmers were simply used to get Thaksin Shinawtra back into power, and that the violence and intimidation usually reserved for his political opponents is now being turned on them in the wake of being cheated by his vote-buying rice subsidy scam. Rice farmers have already turned in their rice, but have not been paid for it for half a year – in other words – they were robbed. (Photo by Chinnawat Singha)


