THE US PRESIDENT WHO CALLS FOR INDEPENDENCE OF CAMBODIA 1979-1988.
Celebrate Ronald Reagan's 100th Birthday

Feb. 6, 2011, will mark the 100th birthday of one of America's greatest 
presidents. 
 
 

10 UN RESOLUTIONS,(1979-1988) VOTED BY 116 UN MEMBER COUNTRIES ,CALL VIETNAM
TO CEASE HER OCCUPATION OF CAMBODIA & REMOVE ALL HER TROOPS FROM THE COUNTRY, 
ARE NOT RESPECTED.

SUCH AS ONE of THESE :
Nov. 14, 1979 The UN General Assembly adopts a resolution A/RES/34/22
calling for the immediate withdrawal of all foreign troops from Cambodia.
The vote is 91-21 with 29 abstentions.

America calls Vietnam to restore Cambodia Independence .
President Reagan's address to the 43d Session of the United Nations General
Assembly in New York, New York,September 26, 1988.
"Mr. Secretary-General, there are new hopes for Cambodia, a nation whose 
freedom and independence we seek just as avidly as we sought the freedom and 
independence of Afghanistan. We urge the rapid removal of all Vietnamese
troops ...."

As of today,Cambodia is still occupied by the Vietnamese troops despite the
call from the US president to Vietnam to cease her occupation of Cambodia
since 1988.

Cambodia needs Independence from Vietnam and the Vietnamese invaders.
 
BURY
 
 
Newsmax magazine will commemorate this special occasion with a special edition, 
Reagan 100. 
The Reagan 100 edition will be among the most important and memorable in 
Newsmax's history. 
The edition is set to include: 

The "unveiling" of a new portrait of President Reagan by a celebrated portrait 
artist 
A cover story written by award-winning historian Douglas Brinkley exclusively 
for Newsmax 
An exclusive interview with former USSR President Mikhail Gorbachev, revealing 
new details of the relationship that changed the world 
The "real" Reagan by Martin and Annelise Anderson, the best-selling authors 
whose revelations from Reagan's papers convinced even liberal historians they 
were wrong about Reagan 
A special visit to the Reagan Ranch, hosted by Michael Reagan 
An exclusive take on Reagan by Newt Gingrich, Sarah Palin, Jeb Bush, and many 
others 
And much, much more. 
Reagan shared his vision of the greatness of America while guiding the nation 
to unprecedented prosperity and renewed vigor. 
When he assumed the presidency in 1981, America's economy ebbed with 12 percent 
inflation and 8 million unemployed. 
Abroad, America's adversary, the Soviet Union, was expanding its influence. Its 
nuclear capability surpassed those of the United States and previous nuclear 
arms treaties were failures. 
President Reagan's goals were simple: to reduce the size of the federal 
government, lower taxes, stabilize the economy, restore the belief of the 
American people in their government — and win the Cold War. 
When President Reagan left office in 1989, these goals had been achieved. 
And his legacy has endured, including igniting a wave of democratic movements 
across the world that has changed the course of history. 
Join Newsmax in celebrating the life of a remarkable man, one of us, who rose 
to the most powerful job on the planet, and helped to make our country freer, 
stronger, and at peace. 
The Reagan 100 edition is sure to be a collector's item — and will be cherished 
by Reagan fans and those who want to share his legacy with their friends, 
family, and the next generation. 
 

 


Date: Mon, 7 Feb 2011 10:50:20 -0800
Subject: Bangkok Post: The plague of fanaticism
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]






---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Supharidh Hy <[email protected]>
Date: Mon, Feb 7, 2011 at 9:39 AM
Subject: Bangkok Post: The plague of fanaticism
To: 



The plague of fanaticism


Published: 6/02/2011 at 12:00 AM 
What I write for the Sunday column usually hits me around 2am Saturday morning, 
while standing in some god-forsaken nightclub, starring down at the bottom of a 
whisky bottle, trying to find the meaning to life. Whisky bottles are 
bottomless, I tell you, but that's neither here nor there.
Friday night in a taxi (drinking and driving is unhealthy), the driver was 
raving about the border clash that led to one dead Cambodian soldier, one dead 
Thai villager, five captured Thai rangers (despite initial reports, four were 
captured and later released) and several people injured.
''We should destroy them,'' he moaned. ''We are bigger and stronger, we can 
wipe them out,'' he groaned. ''They shot at us first,'' he blasted.
His sentiments undoubtedly reflect those of many Thais, shocked and angry, and, 
most importantly, ready to go to war.
All of this over a stone tablet, a flag and a pagoda on 4.6 square kilometres 
of dirt? Of course not, that would be silly. On the contrary, the cause is 
something far more existential, far closer to the soul.
All of this, because of what happened when a few old men, like People's 
Alliance for Democracy leader Maj Gen Chamlong Srimuang, Thai Patriot Network 
leader Chaiwat Sinsuwong and Santi Asoke sect leader Samana Photirak and their 
Cambodian counterparts woke up one morning.
They woke up, looked in the mirror and were stupefied by the horrific reality 
of their benign existences, of the political irrelevance staring back at them. 
Shocked silly, they had to immediately find a justification for their existence 
on this Earth _ a reason for living, a motivation to breathe, a reminder that 
they are not just taking up space and wasting oxygen.
That reason is a stone tablet, a flag and a pagoda on 4.6 square kilometres of 
dirt.
Men have fought wars over some pretty stupid issues through the 7,000 years of 
human (ahem) civilisation. One that is most common in its absurd stupidity is a 
war where young men are sent to die and innocent civilians are blown to bits to 
serve the vanity of a few old men made insecure because they can no longer 
control their bowel movements and have to wear diapers. (The irony is, they 
soil themselves, yet they run the world. But then again, look at the world, it 
sort of makes sense.)
Fingers are pointing. You shot first! No, you shot first! Like juveniles 
quarrelling in a backyard. You started it! No, you started it! Like those 
bickering children in the playground. This was mine first! No, this was mine 
first! Like those tattletale little punks running to adults. He's lying! No, 
he's lying! (Yes, I know, referring to the United Nations as ''adults'' is a 
bad metaphor.)
The irrational, illogical and uncritical zeal for a cause, the extreme and 
blind obsession over a stone tablet, a flag and a pagoda on 4.6 
square-kilometre of dirt _ it's not nationalism, it's fanaticism. It's stupid. 
Like Winston Churchill once said, ''A fanatic is one who can't change his mind 
and won't change the subject.''
Is it possible that Maj Gen Chamlong, Chaiwat and Santi Asoke's Samana Photirak 
and their Cambodian counterparts might wake up tomorrow, look in the mirror and 
see other causes worth fighting for? Like poverty? Corruption? Social 
injustice? Plus a host of other real problems plaguing Thailand and Cambodia?
No. It's 4.6 square kilometre of dirt, and there is not even oil underneath it. 
That would be a reason worth sending young men to die and blowing innocent 
civilians to bits. Shall we then invade Cambodia to bring freedom and democracy 
to its people? Would you chuckle a little if Newin Chidchob pointed at Thaksin 
Shinawatra and screamed, ''You're corrupt!''?
Fanaticism is a continuous cycle of mounting stupidity. Two years ago, it was 
about an old ruin called Preah Vihear. Last year, it was about 4.6 square 
kilometres. Two weeks ago it was about a stone tablet on that 4.6 square 
kilometres. This past week it was about a flag and a pagoda on that same land. 
Yesterday, it was about the shooting, the deaths and injuries to soldiers and 
civilians on both sides.
Today, as you're reading this, more reasons are surely arising for Thais and 
Cambodians to kill each other. And tomorrow? Even more reasons.
What happens five years from now, if the fanaticism of those old men, who are 
too insecure and egotistical to just retire and tend to a garden, or actually 
help the country by building schools or homeless shelters, isn't checked and 
curtailed? Millions of innocents, both Thais and Cambodians, will suffer.
Because fanaticism is an airborne disease, foaming at the mouth, it catches on 
quick. Yesterday, bickering over 4.6 square kilometres may seem silly. But 
tomorrow, the deaths of fellow countrymen would demand that most foul, that 
most base and that most destructive of human impulses: vengeance, a driving 
force of fanaticism.
Look around the world. People aren't blowing each other up because of some 
thousand-year-old ancient feud. No, they blow each other up because yesterday 
their brother, cousin, friend, or that dude who just happen to have their same 
skin colour, same passport or same religion, was blown up _ and that demands 
what? Vengeance!
Fanaticism lies, dormant or alive, in the heart of every man. But in Thailand, 
we _ for the most part _ haven't gone so far as to strap C4 explosives to our 
behinds for greater glory, not just yet. However, there is a burgeoning, a 
blossoming of fanaticism. Look for clues, in both the red and the yellow camps.
A year ago, if you asked a red shirt why he marched, his answer would be for 
democracy, for a general election, for justice for Thaksin Shinawatra. Ask him 
today, and his answer would be because of the May 19 crackdown and his comrades 
killed on that day.
In 2006, if you asked a yellow shirt why he marched, his answer would be for 
the Royal Institution and to fight corruption. Ask him today, and his answer 
would be 4.6 square kilometres of dirt and ''they shot us first!'' And, oh 
yeah, ''Because Abhisit sucks!''
Two things both camps have in common. The first is the irrational, illogical 
and uncritical zeal for a cause, an extreme and blind obsession. The second is 
rich old men who have the talent for stirring speeches and the willingness to 
send the young against bullets (rubber or live) in order to justify their 
benign existence and to boost their political relevance.
And rest assured, none of them can change their minds, nor will they change the 
subject. Although I do hope they can prove me wrong.
Beware of fanaticism. It's a disease that has killed more than the plague. Nip 
it in the bud.
After the taxi driver calmed down a bit, I said, ''Sure, we can beat them in 
war.'' Because, heaven forbid, if I express any doubts over the might of the 
Thai armed forces against Cambodia, the driver might have kicked me out of his 
cab. Stranded on the tollway at midnight, on a journey to find the meaning of 
life at the bottom of a whisky bottle - no, we cannot have that.
So I said, ''Sure, we can beat them. But at what price? Is one life of 
somebody's son, brother, husband or father worth 4.6 sq km of dirt? The life of 
a daughter, a sister, a wife or a mother? Soldiers or civilians? Is one human 
life worth 4.6 sq km of dirt?
''It will be a guerrilla war. There will be terrorist tactics. Is your home 
worth getting blown up over 4.6 sq km of dirt? Living in fear and paranoia each 
and every day?''
I'm not a pacifist. There are reasons to fight, but 4.6 square kilometres of 
dirt is not one of them.
So at 2am, standing in some godforsaken club, starring down at the bottom of a 
bottle, looking for life's meaning, what I saw instead was fanaticism and its 
meaninglessness.
But I also saw hope. Because, you see, the taxi driver was able to see reason, 
and he said he only had a sixth grade education. Surely, the rest of us could 
too. Surely, the Thai government and military and their Cambodian counterparts 
won't let the fanatics dhmanipulate the situation any further.
The question would then become, not who shot first, not who was here first, and 
not who this stretch of dirt belongs to. But who is willing to extend his hand 
first, and make peace.
http://www.bangkokpost.com/opinion/opinion/220087/the-plague-of-fanaticism
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