Thailand: The Politics of Blood - for iPod/iPhone

9

In Thailand, the international media is the battleground for political ideas. Protests have become increasingly dramatic and well organised. In October 2008, Red-shirts, in their thousands, donated their own blood and poured it on the walls and under the gates of Government House while Yellow-shirted protesters staged a sit - in at Bangkok airport stranding thousands of tourists and bringing Thailand’s political turmoil to television screens around the world. But behind the arresting symbolism of these protests, issues of democracy, welfare, education and human rights are at stake, in a political crisis that is not going to go away.

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  • BearLemley
    Media gone wrong
    This story doesn't seem to fit the events of the recent protests. Media continues to take the side of the underdog along with half of the facts just to make a story worth reporting. This story follows that line of thinking. Having been in Bangkok for these events I can say that the red shirts were not involved in innocent protests. They completely fooled the media to their cause. Although this is not difficult to do, it may have disastrous results for Thailand in the future. This conflict would have been squashed with a much more brutal effect from most any other government.
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