Yes, keep blalblabla all the way. Cambodians, khmers or whatever you want are still the same. The citizen of Cambodia is a status of ones who are given rights to a country. It doesn't matter what words you use, it is the same. People dinstinguish these words because they want to disntinguish themselves from a certaiin things. That is understandable. However, they cannot try to persuade people to believe what it's not believeable. Stop the nonsense. You won't be able to go any where. Start a better substances.
On Jan 10, 9:13 am, Neak Kampuchea <[email protected]> wrote: > Eh, good mornig Kangaroo. > So your English is different from mine. It's OK! > > On Jan 10, 3:40 am, kangaroo <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > Look, Cambodia (Kampuchea) is the official name of the country, its > > > inhabitants should be called Cambodian, (Kampuchea or Chun-Kampuchea) > > > which is none relevance to “Khmer citizen” or in others words none > > > sense. > > This is where you are wrong. > > Look on this below. You should say that I'am right!> A citizen of Cambodia is > a status given to people by the government of > > Cambodia. > > It doesn't matter whether they are Khmer, Cambodians or whatever. > > Yes, the status given by the goverment of Cambodia to a person of what > ever his/he race, must be maned Cambodian for relevance to the > country's name "Cambodia". This is the must. > But if you still think I'm wrong, except to you. > Please be no more arguments, as English is more organized and updated > than others nation around the world. If one speaks English with Khmer > or Chinese or Vietnamese thinking, the meaning is becoming confused. > Did you hear foreign students coming to get graduation in th US are > complaining hard understanding English, beause they speak or write > English with their thinking of their own language direct stranslation, > years before they could be able to catch up real English meang.> Those words > don't mean a thing when we talk about citizenship. > > A Cambodian citizen can renoun their own citizenship at anytime. It > > means that sometimes a Cambodian may not be a citizen of Cambodia. So > > don't get fixed with those words. > > Yes, you can denounce your citizenship anytime you want, but you never > be able to change your race or hybrid background. Khmer is a race and > Khmer citizen is none relevance and none sense to the country's name > Cambodia, but Khmer inhabitant of Cambodia is Cambodian citizen except > Khmer inhabitant of Vietnam and Khmer inhatitant of Thailand. > Do you see English is more clearer isn't? > From Neak Kampuchea. -- 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

