Working together with your neighbor countries is the most effective way to bridge peace. The case for Cambodia, we need to work closely with Thai, Lao, and Vietnam. Of course these countries need to reach out to us as well. Not all solutions will be handled diplomatic way but that would be the first step.
Presently, we are not in good term with Thai. But sooner or later, each country needs to compromise. Vietnam is not stupid. Cambodia is not stupid. Both governments are getting along. Enough said. On Wed, Jan 20, 2010 at 11:12 AM, kangaroo <[email protected]> wrote: > If Cambodian people ant to live free, they must have the will to live > free. That will should translate into policies for their country. > Today, Cambodians don't have that. They are still fighting each other > for power so they can suppress no one but their own people in their > own country. > > My friend, > Whether you agree or not, Cambodia today is working along side > Vietnam. That is the policy of Cambodia. That is the policy of the > Cambodian government today. We hear alot of opposition voice coming > from the overseas. What happened to the people inside the country. > Now, don't come out and tell us that the whole ocuntry is afraid of > Hun Sen. Perhaps, part of Cambodia today like CPP and Hun Sen > government. Perhaps, Cambodia is doing better than it had ever been > for a very long time. Perhaps opposition parties have nothing to offer > except to oppose anything of CPP and Hun Sen government. > Cambodian people can restore anything they want if they have the will > to do it. Today, they choose to live the way it is. Don't come and > tell us that those Cambodians are stupid and don't understand. Don't > try to downgrade the Cambodian people. > Don't try to test the intelligence fo the Cambodian people. > > > On Jan 20, 9:58 am, "Bopha Angkor" <[email protected]> wrote: > > If Cambodian people want to live free with some dignity, they must stand > to > > fight against yuon domination, yuon genocidal and expansionist policy in > > Cambodia as animal culture that ravaged Cambodia and Cambodian people > and > > restore our human orders and civilisation > > > > > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > > From: "kangaroo" <[email protected]> > > To: "Cambodia Discussion (CAMDISC) -www.cambodia.org" > > > > <[email protected]> > > Sent: Wednesday, January 20, 2010 6:21 PM > > Subject: Re: "KHMER RICHE" > > > > Have you put your words into your own mouth? > > Read it. > > No one does BUT........ > > Keep blaming on Vietnamese for Cambodian illnesses. > > Vietnamese doesn't need Cambodians help. Their polical establishment > > has been rooted for a very long time. If you have learned about > > Cambodian history, you would know that Cambodians are the ones who > > always run to Vietnam for help. > > Your beloved king Sihanouk did it. > > Your fellowed Khmer Rouge did it. > > Your current administration did it. > > You can find it on and on. > > On the other hand, you see Vietnamese invaded Cambodia. You see > > Vietnamese taking advantage of the situation while the Cambodians are > > killing each other for power. > > That's what we are talking about. > > Cambodians can't even get along for the sake of their own country. > > Actually, Cambodians kill each other for power. How can others like > > Vietnam does anything better for Cambodia? > > If Cambodians can't even help themselves, how can others help? > > > > On Jan 20, 8:42 am, "Bopha Angkor" <[email protected]> wrote: > > > No one blame yuons for everything. But for some reasons, often yuons > feel > > > offense and run fool, insulted itself, because its crime being > revealed. > > > That's about it. What to say more, even the worse yuon killing machines > > > like > > > Duch and his comrades still have some sense of responsibility and some > > > human > > > feeling but YUONS, NEVER. I just being honest in my view. People are > tired > > > and feel horror to see this animal reign and its savage culture that > > > ravaged > > > Cambodian and people since decades and prison Cambodian people in its > > > pilotless power. This animal reign must end if Cambodian people want to > > > live > > > free with some dignity. > > > > > To be honest, the ones who always play race card and claimed to be > racial > > > victims are yuons while itself led animosity and worse genocide against > > > millions people. Champs people have almost exterminated by yuons in the > > > worse inhuman ways then Khmer krom as well Laos and Khmer people in > > > Cambodia > > > have been exterminated by yuons in different ways. > > > > > Yuons need to look into its crime and assume its act as others if yuons > > > still considered itself as part of human race. > > > > > -----Original Message----- > > > From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On > Behalf > > > > > Of kangaroo > > > Sent: Sunday, January 17, 2010 6:37 PM > > > To: Cambodia Discussion (CAMDISC) -www.cambodia.org > > > Subject: Re: "KHMER RICHE" > > > > > Keep blaming everything on Vietnamese. > > > I guess Cambodians have no false. Sam Rainsy preach the hate toward > > > Vietnamese. He thought that the race card would lead him to be on the > top. > > > He thought wrong. > > > Sam Rainsy race card backfired. He would never win. CPP has been > marching > > > forward with the majority of Cambodians for a very long time. > > > What do you think that Cambodians would rethink about Sam Rainsy? > > > Sam Rainsy is dead. > > > > > On Jan 14, 3:35 pm, "Bopha Angkor" <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > Called these vietcong pets as Khmer elites is an insult for Khmer as > > > > those who are victims of yuons(hanoi) and yuon crimes over decades, > if > > > > not centuries. Khmers never chose these yuon tools to be their > > > > leaders but YUONS DID and maintain its tools in power to destroy > Khmer > > > > and serve yuon interest through divert political maneuvers. People > > > > may say, the Khmer rouge, this generation and last one, are so bad, > > > > so barbarous, so savage, so inhuman and more.. Of course they are, it > > > > is so evident but to understand people have to look to the animosity, > > > > the violence and savagery in the culture, in the heart and in the > > > > brain of those who influenced and conditioned these killing machines > > > > to use them against Khmer people in order to exterminate Khmer people > > > > to free land and resources for those who plan the killing against > > > > Khmer. As well, to understand these people (yuon tools) as to > > > > understand the current rules and culture in Cambodia, you have to > > > > understand the culture and nature of those who dominate and influence > > > Cambodia and these people over centuries specially these last decades. > > > > > > Of course Khmer have a responsibility in this crime. Their crime is > > > > their inability to manage their effort against this reign of animal > as > > > > to > > > end it. > > > > Yet many of our noble elders have sacrificed their life to fight > > > > against this animal reign but they fell. And we fail again during > > > > Khmer Republic revolt. But as long as one Khmer still alive he will > > > > continue to fight against this animal reign because its aspect, its > > > > nature is so opposite to our system of valor as human kind. > > > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > > > > > > On Jan 11, 4:18 am, "Sam Rainsy Party of North America" > > > > <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > >http://www.camnews.org/2009/12/31/khmer-riche/ > > > > > > > "KHMER RICHE" > > > > > Written by Andrew Marshall > > > > > Good Weekend Magazine for the Sydney Morning Herald Sunday 12/12/09 > > > > > > > They live in one of the poorest countries on earth, yet they drive > > > > > flash cars, dwell in mansions and scorn their impoverished > brethren. > > > > > Andrew Marshall meets the rich sons and daughters of Cambodia > elite. > > > > > > > The huge Phnom Penh mansion owned by Victor's parents, General Meas > > > > > Sophea. (Good Weekend Magazine) > > > > > > > "I'm going to drive a little fast now. Is that Okay?" There is one > > > > > place in Cambodia where you can hold a cold beer in one hand and a > > > > > warm Kalashnikov in the other, and Victor is driving me there. > We're > > > > > powering along Phnom Penh's airport road with Oasis on his Merc's > > > > > sound system and enough guns in the boot to sink a Somali pirate > > > > > boat. Victor is rich and life is sweet. His father is commander of > > > > > the Cambodian infantry. He has a place reserved for him at L'Ecole > > > > > Speciale Militaire de Saint-Cyr, France's answer to Duntroon. And, > > > > > in his passenger seat, there is a thin, silent man with a Chinese > > > handgun: his bodyguard. > > > > > > > "His name is Klar," says Victor. "It means tiger." > > > > > > > Victor is only 21, but when reach our destination-a firing range > run > > > > > by the Cambodian special forces-the soldier at the gate salutes. > > > > > > > Devastated by decades of civil war, Cambodia remains one of the > > > > > world's poorest nations. A third of its 13 million people live on > > > > > less than a dollar a day and about 8 out of every 100 children die > > > > > before the age of five. But Victor-real name Meas Sophearith-was > > > > > raised in a different Cambodia, where power and billions of dollars > > > > > in wealth are concentrated in the hands of a tiny elite. This elite > > > > > prefers to conceal the size and sources of their money-illegal > > > > > logging, smuggling, land-grabbing-but their children just like to > > > > > spend it. The Khmer Rouge are dead; the Khmer Riche now rule > Cambodia. > > > > > > > I first met Victor at a fancy Phnom Penh restaurant called Caf > Metro. > > > > > Outside, Porsches, Bentleys and Humvees fight for parking spaces. > > > > > The son of a powerful general, Victor has his future mapped out for > > > > > him. He went to school in Versailles, speaks French and English, > and > > > > > now studies politics at the University of Oklahoma. "My mother > > > > > wanted us to get a foreign education so we could come back and > control > > > the country," he says. > > > > > The shooting range is where Victor and his friends go to relax. > > > > > "I've grown up with guns and soldiers all around me," he says, > > > > > laying out a private arsenal on a table: two automatic assault > > > > > rifles, two Glock pistols, one sniper's rifle, one iPhone. > > > > > > > "My mother wanted us to get a foreign education so we could come > > > > > back and control the country". Meas Victor Sophearith (above) is > one > > > > > of Cambodian's privileged elite. > > > > > > > Victor and his generation are Cambodia's future. Will they use > their > > > > > education and wealth to lift their less fortunate compatriots out > of > > > > > poverty? Or will they simply continue their parents' fevered > pursuit > > > > > of money and power? Britain's Department for International > > > > > Development (DFID), which gave almost $US30 million of its > > > > > taxpayers' money to the country in the last fiscal year, offered > one > > > > > answer in June, when it announced the closure of its Cambodia > office > > > > > by > > > 2011. The official reason? > > > > > "It was felt UK aid could have a larger impact . where there are > > > > > greater numbers of poor people and fewer international donors," > said > > > > > a DFID statement. But the development agency might also have tired > > > > > of throwing money at a nation where so much poverty can be blamed > on > > > > > a grasping political elite-and their luxury-loving children. > > > > > (Australia clearly has > > > > > not: it has allocated $61.4 million in development assistance to > > > > > Cambodia for 2009-10.) > > > > > > > Depressingly, the Khmer Riche Kids sometimes seem indistinguishable > > > > > from the old colonial ruling class. They were educated > > > > > overseas-partly because their families' wealth made them targets > for > > > > > kidnapping gangs-and often speak better English than Khmer. They > > > > > carry US dollars - only poor people pay with Cambodian riel - and > > > > > live in newly built neoclassical mansions so large that the city's > > > > > old French architecture looks like Lego by comparison. And their > > > > > connection to the Cambodian masses is almost non-existent. > > > > > > > The "Paris Hilton of Cambodia", Sophy, daughter of a Deputy PM. > > > > > Sophy's extravagantly decorated car. (Good Weekend Magazine) > > > > > > > Sophy, 22, is the daughter of a Deputy Prime Minister. Rich, > > > > ... > > > > read more ยป- Hide quoted text - > > > > - Show quoted text - > > -- > You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups > "Cambodia Discussion (CAMDISC) - www.cambodia.org" group. > This is an unmoderated forum. Please refrain from using foul language. > Thank you for your understanding. Peace among us and in Cambodia. > > To post to this group, send email to [email protected] > To unsubscribe from this group, send email to > [email protected] > For more options, visit this group at > http://groups.google.com/group/camdisc > Learn more - http://www.cambodia.org >
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