Thailand Regime Election Propaganda: Fake “Respect My Vote” Protest Abuse
Image: The regime believes the Thai people, and more importantly, international audiences are as ignorant as they are gullible. Recent propaganda campaigns featuring “white” balloons, candles, shirts, and ribbons are being passed off as a groundswell of support by “the people” in favor of up coming elections. In reality, these campaigns of “support” are being engineered by the regime itself, by it’s own “red shirt” enforcers and TV networks. ….
Despite the regime’s own propaganda network, Asia Update TV, creating and leading the movement with presenters even trading in their red shirts for white – more sophisticated pro-regime propaganda attempted to perpetuate the myth that these were ordinary people.
It is now incontrovertibly exposed that these “white shirt” protesters are merely the regime’s “red shirts” in one last desperate, disingenuous attempt to marshal support in the face of a growing tide of genuine and immense dissent.
In a video posted on YouTube of one protest, a woman in the crowd can be seen carrying a placard reading as follows:
IF YOU WANT TO KILL CORRUPTION, END THAKSINOCRACY, IT MUST BE DONE IN THE NEXT ELECTION.
After murmurs of dissatisfaction in the mob begin to spread regarding her sign, a man wearing ordinary clothes but sporting a red wrist band approaches her and explains to her the sign will not be tolerated. He particularly points out that the term “End Thaksinocracy” is unacceptable. He and another woman then stirs up the mob to begin verbally abusing her and demanding her to leave. One group of angry men begin to physically charge her shouting “GET OUT!”
Later, the woman can be seen, her sign missing and reduced to tears while police attempt to keep back regime supporters. Careful inspection of the protesters reveals many to be wearing red wrist bands, red ribbons, and even red shirts themselves under regular or white attire. In other words, the same intolerance of differing opinions, violence, and intimidation that have become the hallmarks of Thaksin Shianwatra’s red shirts were there – because it was a red shirt protest.
The unfortunate woman most likely thought, like many others who may have been bolstering the numbers of similar rallies, that this was truly a “pro-democracy” demonstration, and did not suspect it was created for and by the regime of Thaksin Shinawatra itself.
The degree of deceit and intellectual dishonesty, not only of the regime and its propagandists, but those attempting to promote the “Respect My Vote” campaign as anything but insulting, poorly disguised regime propaganda illustrates exactly why anti-regime protesters have spent months occupying Bangkok’s streets, and why anti-regime rallies have drawn hundreds of thousands, dwarfing even the largest pro-Thaksin rallies years ago at the height of his popularity.
The “Respect My Vote” campaign, just like the white-clad protesters perpetuating it, upon closer examination, literally have red showing underneath. Elections overseen by a regime openly run by a convicted criminal hiding abroad as a fugitive are not legitimate, nor is any regime that results from these sham elections.
The Current Government and Upcoming Elections are Both Incontrovertibly Illegitimate
While Thailand is technically under the premiership of Thaksin’s sister, Yingluck Shinawatra, by his party’s own admission, Thaksin is still literally running the country. The election campaign slogan for the last general election in 2011 was literally, “Thaksin Thinks, Puea Thai Does,” Puea Thai being his political party. Forbes would report in their article, “Thaksin in Exile: Advising Sister, Digging for Gold,” that:
Regarding his behind-the-scenes role in the party and policy, he is not shy: “I am the one who thinks. Like our slogan during the campaign, Thaksin thinks, Pheu Thai acts.”
The New York Times admitted in an early 2013 article titled, “In Thailand, Power Comes With Help From Skype,” that:
For the past year and a half, by the party’s own admission, the most important political decisions in this country of 65 million people have been made from abroad, by a former prime minister who has been in self-imposed exile since 2008 to escape corruption charges.
The country’s most famous fugitive,Thaksin Shinawatra, circles the globe in his private jet, chatting with ministers over his dozen cellphones, texting over various social media platforms and reading government documents e-mailed to him from civil servants, party officials say.
The NYT piece would also report:
“He’s the one who formulates the Pheu Thai policies,” said Noppadon Pattama, a senior official in Mr. Thaksin’s party who also serves as his personal lawyer. “Almost all the policies put forward during the last election came from him.”