Danny's Weblog
Letters
This section is for my letters to newspapers and magazines which *didn't*
get printed.
I've often checked a newspaper to see if my wonderful incisive, witty and
elegant letter got printed, only to find a mishmash of routine,
pedestrian cliches by a parade of oafs. Now you have a chance to see the
kind of letters which the newspapers *do not dare to print*!
I have decided to predate these letters to the date when I actually
sent them, rather than the date when I post them on the site. I am
too lazy to post all my letters at once, but eventually there will be
letters to the following:
Bangkok Post
The Nation (Thailand)
International Herald Tribune
and any others I can't think of right now.
To: editor email at nationgroup.com (The Nation)
Date: Thu, 30 Oct 2003 11:28:46 -0500 (EST)
Re "sex workers must be allowed..." – I am in agreement with all of the
points raised by Rojanaphruk. I would only add that it would be amusing to
try to legalize the *customers* of prostitutes instead of the prostitutes
themselves. I envisage sex tourists needing to get a special visa and
needing to carry an STD test report; and raids on brothels where sex
tourists get carted off to jail instead of the prostitutes. Bwahahaha!
However, I was also struck by the article about the new Thai movie "Sanim
Soie". I don't know whether the movie and the article about it are
valid as history, but it sounds like many of the evils of prostitution
today date back to the changes in the law made in that period.
Apparently bigamy had just been made illegal. Bigamy is probably a bad
deal for poor men who can't find a mate because rich men have taken up
the entire supply, but for women it's a pretty good deal: they continue
to have legal rights and a home, not to mention companionship and
someone to share the chores. In the absence of bigamy, what do poor
women do? At best they can steal a husband from an older woman.
Likewise, it seems most prostitutes until that period welcomed men
into their own homes. This allowed them to be independent of pimps
and brothel owners, unlike today: now men get a rakeoff from the girls
to handle bribery and marketing.
Oddly enough, this connects to your article about the children's
book dealing with the plight of elephants in Thailand (p18A,
"colorful Elephant Tale"). Now the law prevents elephants from
being dragged along Bangkok's dirty, dangerous streets – except,
of course, it doesn't.
Here's a proposal: instead of blowing billions of baht on flimsy,
tacky Apec celebrations that have no relevance to Thai customs,
why not establish a safe area somewhere in Bangkok where elephants
*can* be paraded for everyone's enjoyment safely? Elephants are the
symbol of Thailand and beloved all over the world. Some money and
effort could create a safe pedestrian area – let's call it
"Elephant Avenue" – that would allow foreign and Thai tourists to
meet a happy, safe elephant as part of an ordinary day. I've
heard a Thai say "Chaang, Chaang!" with absolute delight from
just a glimpse of an elephant. Why not allow that in Bangkok?
To: editor email at nationgroup.com (The Nation)
Date: Wed, 1 Oct 2003 12:11:38 -0400 (EDT)
I think most sex workers would much prefer *decriminalization*
to legalization: that is, rather than having to undergo regulation
by the government – probably involving registration, monitoring,
fees etc – the existing laws are simply repealed.
If you have to have legalization, why not apply it to the client
instead of the sex worker? Men would have to go down to the
police station and register with the police as a sex buyer. This
would be marked on their ID cards. Any man found having sex with
a sex worker who had not registered with the police would be
put on TV and heavily fined. Hospitals would provide regular
testing and would put a date on the card which police could
also check.
Tourists wanting to have sex while in the kingdom could get a
special stamp in their passports by providing an extra fee when
they get their visa.
...Bwahahaha!
To: editor email at nationgroup.com
Date: Sat, 2 Aug 2003 00:47:41 -0400 (EDT)
In his op-ed article, Mike Gonzalez of the Wall Street Journal
attacks the BBC as Orwellian.
For some reason he omits the suggestion I have seen elsewhere that
Orwell actually based the operations of 1984's "Ministry of Truth"
on his experience of working for the BBC during WW2.
But it's funny: right now it's the backers of the war in Iraq who
seem to me to be creating the situation of 1984: the giant power
blocs, the ceaseless wars, helpless captives paraded before the
citzenry and then sent to disappear in ghastly prison camps, the
meaningless shifting of alliances, the permanent loss of civil
liberties...
Gonzalez simply proceeds from the assumption that the war was
justifiable, and uses that proposition to bolster the point that
the BBC was tendentious. Most of the world thought that there was
inadequate basis for an invasion even before the WMD claims
lost all credibility; for him to continue to take that
proposition as a given simply makes his argument ridiculous.
Note to the editor: I have an excellent dissection of the twisted
history of the US position on Iraq on my website. It's not my
own text; I copied it from a Usenet discussion. I quote the
link below; if you use the material please don't print the link
to my website, for privacy reasons.
www.panix.com
[http://www.panix.com/~dannyw/weblog/2003/07/22#iraq1
]
I hope this information was useful. There may be a great deal more
information on this site that is relevant to what you need.
Take
a look at the "site map" display at left; you
can click on a topic to see many recent items on that topic.
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