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Red-Shirt Leaders Reunite, But Times Have Changed


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#1 Lite Beer

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Posted Today, 06:37

EDITORIAL
Red-shirt leaders reunite, but times have changed
The Nation May 27, 2012 1:00 am

BANGKOK:-- What will be the message to red shirts when Jatuporn, Natthawut, Veera host live political show on June 2?

On June 2 at the Thunder Dome, Muangthong Thani, a major political show will return to the stage. The "Truth Today" programme will come back with its three leading stars - Jatuporn Prompan, Natthawut Saikua and Veera Musikapong. It will be the first such event to be held under a pro-Thaksin government, and this has sparked all kind of speculation.

The upcoming event was announced after Thaksin Shinawatra on May 19 virtually urged the red shirts to be less aggressive in order to facilitate reconciliation. His statement created widespread discontent among the extremists within the red shirt movement. With Jatuporn, Natthawut and Veera known as Thaksin's front-line soldiers, it is believed that the renewed show must be some kind of damage control rather than an attempt to undermine the big boss.

Then there was the controversial issue of reduced compensation for "political victims". The announcement that the promised Bt7.5 million would be cut down to just over Bt400,000 must have upset many. Again, if there are any red shirt leaders who could calm an uproar down, they must be those who fought along side other protesters during the 2010 political turbulence.

The three men have gone on separate paths. Natthawut has joined the Yingluck Cabinet, whereas Jatuporn's parliamentary star has waned after being recently disqualified as an MP. Veera has been promoting a "red shirt noodle" franchise and hosting some lesser red shirt TV programmes.

Thai politics is now quite different from three years ago, when whatever the three said was greeted with roars of chest-thumping acceptance. Today, the "enemies" are less powerful and the Thaksin camp is governing the country, making decisions on such things as compensation or amnesty.

Three years ago, Veera, Jatuporn and Natthawut could blame anything on "the other side", and that was always accepted without question. Certainly, they cannot do the same now. Natthawut will likely be asked why he has been rewarded with a Cabinet post while many red shirts were still shackled with legal trouble. Jatuporn's road in conventional politics has been bumpier than Natthawut's, but the beloved red-shirt leader would also have a lot to answer for if he is to be given a ministerial position. Veera used to draw loud cheers with his satires of Thaksin's enemies, but it's highly doubtful he will whip up red shirt frenzy on June 2 by lambasting Abhisit Vejjajiva or Prem Tinsulanonda.

The June 2 event could be just a show of force. Coming after Thaksin has begged for peaceful behaviour, however, it may raise some questions. If the idea is to have Veera, Jatuporn and Natthawut help calm things down, the three will have to walk a tightrope. Resentment against Thaksin's last video-link speech is an unheard of phenomenon as far as his relationship with the red shirts goes.

The trio used to guide or manipulate red-shirt sentiment thanks to their charisma and sharp tongues. Whether they can still do that on June 2 is a question mark. Three years ago, Thaksin, Veera, Natthawut, Jatuporn and the red shirts were one. Now, they are anything but. It is Thaksin himself who has changed the script all of a sudden. Fight for me, he told the red shirts before, during and in the immediate aftermath of their uprising. It was the message Veera, Natthawut and Jatuporn conveyed time and again at their protest site back in 2010. On May 19, Thaksin virtually told the red shirts he would not be able to return home if they continued to fight their enemies.

What will the trio tell the red shirts now? That Thaksin still needs their help? That he no longer needs their help? Either way, it's a potentially explosive message to convey.


-- The Nation 2012-05-27



#2 ratcatcher

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Posted Today, 07:20

What will be the message to red shirts when Jatuporn, Natthawut, Veera host live political show on June 2?

.....................................Attached File  thunderdome.jpg   19.36K   2 downloads

Answer.......................We don't need another hero"!

#3 LuckyLew

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Posted Today, 08:53

"Red-shirt leaders reunite, but times have changed"

Yes times have changed .... no longer funded by their dear leader.
They were marched into battle, battle won ... troups abandoned
I hope the three mentioned above got their pay before being fired.
Someone new is gonna have to foot the bill for these parades and
other great fun events they organize. Who is gonna pay for
weenies and marshmellows next time they have a bon fire in Bkk?

#4 OzMick

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Posted Today, 09:11

"......those who fought along side other protesters........"

I remember the speeches. "We will fight to (your) death. We are not afraid (for you) to die!"
And when the first soldier got near the stage, everybody's hands go in the air.
The sad fact is the sheeple who followed them thought only the heroism part of what they were saying was lies, when the complete fabric was made out of whole cloth.

#5 Thaddeus

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Posted Today, 09:18

Quote

Again, if there are any red shirt leaders who could calm an uproar down, they must be those who fought along side other protesters during the 2010 political turbulence.

And there are how many of them?

#6 whybother

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Posted Today, 09:19

View PostThaddeus, on Today, 09:18 , said:

Quote

Again, if there are any red shirt leaders who could calm an uproar down, they must be those who fought along side other protesters during the 2010 political turbulence.

And there are how many of them?

Maybe they're expecting a ghost.

#7 CHANGOVER

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Posted 56 minutes ago

Yep ''the time's they are a changing'', so they'll ''be blowin' in the wind''

#8 AleG

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Posted 25 minutes ago

"MP. Veera has been promoting a "red shirt noodle" franchise and hosting some lesser red shirt TV programmes."

W.T.F Posted Image

That's MP Veera, so how about... I don't know, crazy idea, working for the country instead.

#9 geriatrickid

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Posted 18 minutes ago

The disunity crisis is wishful thinking on the part of the Nation. Nothing like a crisis to make things exciting.
The differences  that are present now, were there all along. The UDD was a coalition of many divergent groups, all united in common purpose against the coup backers. Yes, time has passed and people are less angry today than they were when the Military's designated  government, the Democrats were running the government. If the UDD figureheads are able to calm the waters, good for them. The more things are calm, the better we  all are.

#10 smedly

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Posted A minute ago

I'd like to know how a single political group are allowed to have airtime on national TV without opposition, I can understand this sort of thing taking place at election times but it is controlled and all sides get an equal airing - Looks like thaksin is attempting to patch things up



 


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