Dear Kangaroo, This has been fun. I am away on assignment for a couple of week. I will be back.
Thank you for waiting. Jay On Oct 21, 12:16 pm, kangaroo <[email protected]> wrote: > On Oct 21, 10:51 am, Jayakhmer <[email protected]> wrote: > > > I am Cambodian, and I am frankly offended by your non-stop pernicious > > attacks on my people and my culture. This alone proves the level of > > you moral and ethical standard. But who I am to judge. As long as > > you can live with yourself, more power to you. > > You don't need to tell that. > > > You made silly statements all the times, granted, it is your rights. > > I simply wanted point that out to you. > > Here is what I don't understand. If it is a silly statement, why do > you keep coming back trying to defend with nonsense? > If you know it is wrong, give us the right version. > Don't try to attack one's personality like many other Cambodians have > been doing. > Perhaps you are a real Cambodian with the behavior that I have been > describing. > If that's the case, you are the example of what I've been saying. > > > Here is an example: > > > "Cambodian people think about their own righteousness..." and in the > > same breath you said, " ...Cambodian people embraces the culture of > > corruption..." > > Is it true, or not? > As far as I know, Cambodians bribe officials from the top all the way > to the very bottom of the society to get things done. Then they cry > how unfair it is. What is that? > > > If Cambodian people think about their own righteousness, how can they > > the same time embrace corruption. In addition, it only take one > > person or one think to prove that your statements are false statement. > > If they think as a nation, they would not distort one another as we > have seen in Cambodia. > Many people have come out and say that other countries in Asia have > been doing it too. > My response is that if you other countries have been bad things, it > doesn't make it good things for Cambodians to do the same thing. > > Oh! If you think it is a false statement, can you explain us why it is > a false statement. > Can you bring yourself to do that? > > > I, for one, never think that my people or my culture is perfect. We > > know we have flaw just like anybody else. And I don't embrace any > > culture of corruption and so do thousands of other Cambodians. > > You may not as an individual. > However, the society itself view it as a way to get things done fast. > You see it at the entrance to Cambodia. > You see it on the streets of Phnom Penh. > You see it at higher levels all the time. > > > See, how nonsense your statements were. Those are just two > > sentences. The burden of prove on my part is very low, I don't need > > to give you anything. Just telling you that you don't make any sense > > is enough. > > You have shown anything to prove it that it is a nonsense statement. > You are right. You don't need to give me anything. You can say or do > whatever you want. > At the same time, it is working the same for me. > > Again, it is very simple if you just come out and explain yourself why > you disagree with a certain comment or statement. People would agree > or disagree with you then. If you just come out and say that that > statement is wrong, you have offered nothing to discredit it. It > simply reinterate the statement itself as true. -- 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

