Nicely said but not in practice; it has never been. A good yuon = a
dead yuon
On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 12:32 PM, thisbugone <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Blaming Yuons will not solve our country problems. Just like
blaming Bush right now will not solve Obama's problems. We need
to look beyond on blaming others. As an outsider, I am hoping our
country, Cambodia, can get along with other countries cause this
will benefit all sides.
On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 6:45 AM, Bopha Angkor <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Did yuons ever think about all the horrors and sufferings that
yuons can causes to other people before planning genocide
against those millions innocent people to rob their land and
natural resources?
Did yuons ever think about sharing some love or compassion to
those people while planning the killing against these people?
Did yuons ever have some human feeling or compassion toward
their victims while planning and led such horrors against them
? I think NOT. If not yuons wont repeat it over and over over
centuries against these people and always did anything in its
hands to get always from responsibility.
But naturally, yuons cry to be victims of racism, yuons cry
for loves, yuon cry for compassion, for justice while people
dressed yuons to face their horrors. Of course I know that
Cambodia is not 100% control by yuons. But it is not the
question here.
I beg, your kind of people can understand what humanity means?
Or what can be love and compassion or emotion? So you leave it
out ok, because each time your kind of people vomit it out,
it’s rather an insult and a noble word invented by humanity.
No, I don’t need to be fan of Rainsy or anyone to see to aware
of horrors that yuons did against to much life. It’s just
enough to be a human with some conscience and humanity.
Human is different from animal because human can feel, human
can think and project oneself to the future with some poetic,
beauty and dignity for oneself as well for other, not just
live of instinct like animal in which killing to live and
reproduce its specie.
Enough say
----- Original Message -----
*From:* thisbugone <mailto:[email protected]>
*To:* [email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>
*Sent:* Thursday, January 21, 2010 12:03 AM
*Subject:* Re: "KHMER RICHE"
Calm down. Why play the blaming game at other country?
Yuons are human beings too. Are you human? Show some
love. The country of Cambodia is not just controlled by
Vietnam but by other countries too. China? Cambodia is
one of the poorest countries in the world. We need help
from other countries and that includes Vietnam. This is
part of life and part of politics.
Glad to hear you being honest but what do you know about
yuons? Yes, they are humans too. You must be a died-hard
Sam Rainsy fan to believe this. Calm down...
On Wed, Jan 20, 2010 at 6:42 AM, Bopha Angkor
<[email protected] <mailto:[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]>
[mailto:[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>] On Behalf
Of kangaroo
Sent: Sunday, January 17, 2010 6:37 PM
To: Cambodia Discussion (CAMDISC) - www.cambodia.org
<http://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] <mailto:[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] <mailto:[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,
> doll-like and self-obsessed, she could be the
Paris Hilton of
> Cambodia. She imports party shoes from
Singapore, brands them "Sophy
> & Sina" (Sina is her sister-in-law), hen
displays them in her own
> multistory boutique. It has six staff, no
customers and a slogan:
> "It's all aboutme." Sophy's name is spelled out
in sparkling stones
> on the back of her car, a Merc so pimped up that
I have to ask her what
make it is. "It's a Sophy!" she replies.
> We meet at her hair salon, where she is prepping
a model for a
> fashion shoot for a magazine she is starting up
with her brother
> Sopheary, 28, and their cousin Noh Sar, 26,. All
three were educated
> abroad and prefer to speak English together.
Sopheary, who studied
> in New York state, seems both amused and
slightly embarrassed by his
> wealth and privilege. "What can you do?" he
asks. "Your parents give
> you all these things. You can't say no. If
someone gives you cake, you
eat it."
> Talk to Sopheary and his friends, and Cambodia's
tragic history
> seems very far away. The genocidal Khmer Rouge
blew up banks and
> outlawed money before being driven from power in
1979. Later came
> the 1991 Paris Accords, and the plunder of
Cambodia's rich natural
> resources-forests, fisheries, land -began in
earnest. Cambodia's
> official economy largely depend on garment,
exports, but there is a
> much larger shadow economy in which only the
ruthless and the
> well-connected survived and prosper. "If you're
doing business, you
> have to know someone high up, so he has your
back," says Victor.
> The closer you get to Hun Sen, Cambodia's
autocratic Prime Minister,
> the better connected you are. Hun Sen staged a
bloody coup d'etat in
> 1997 and has kept an iron grip on power ever
since. Opponents have
> been silenced while loyalists have grown rich.
This includes
> ministers, a handful of tycoons and generals.
Cambodians are often
> driven from their land by soldiers or military
police. Formerly a
> French possession, Cambodia has been colonized
all over again, this time
by its own greedy elite.
> But the Khmer Riche have a problem. "None of
them can answer a
> simple
> question: where does all your money come from?"
says a Western
> journalist in Phnom Penh. Ask Cambodian
ministers how they got so
> rich on a meager government salary, and they
will reply, "My wife is
good at business."
> When I ask Noh Sar, whose father is a senior
customs official, why
> he is so wealthy, he gives me a slight
variation: "My mother works a
lot."
> Victor's mother is also good at business,
according to "Country for
Sale,"
> an investigation into the elite published by the
London-based
> corruption watchdog Global Witness in February
2009. "She is a key
> player in RCAF [Royal Cambodian Armed Forces]
patronage politics,
> holding a fearsome reputation among her
husband's subordinates on
> account of her frequent demands for money," says
the report. "RCAF
> sources have told Global Witness that military
officers sometimes
> bribe [her] in order to increase the chances of
her "close connections"
to a major timber smuggler.
> It is only in the past few years that the
children of Cambodian's
> elite have grown confident enough to show off
their family's wealth.
> "If you want people to respect you in Cambodia,
you must have a good
> car, good diamonds, a good cell phone," explains
Ouch Vichet, 28,
> better known as Richard. "It's an
I'm-richer-than-you competition."
> Richard is quite a
> competitor: he drives a $US150,000 Cadillac
Escalade and wears a
> $US2,500 Hermes watch and a $US13,000 2.5-carat
diamond ring. He
> doesn't have a bodyguard, although some friends
keep them as status
symbols.
> "Crazy money": (above) Ouch "Richard" Vichet is
surprisingly candid
> about his
...
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