Bangkok’s Colourful Street Life To Come To An EndNO MORE STREET VENDORS IN BANGKOK!
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20 replies to this topic
#1Posted 2004-03-16 18:16:20
Bangkok’s colourful street life to come to an end
BANGKOK: -- The end of an era for Bangkok’s street vendors is set to come as early as the end of this month, when, in the interests of civic order, vendors will be banned from selling their goods in all but specially designated points in the capital. Announcing the move yesterday, Mr. Thanakorn Khunawuthi, director of the Office of Municipal Affairs, said that from 31 March, street vendors would be forbidden from displaying and selling their wares in any area other than the designated zones. The move follows a moratorium on street trading in five special zones announced on 2 March, which bans street vendors from selling their goods near bus stops and footbridges. The Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (BMA) says that the measure seems to have been implemented successfully. Mr. Thanakorn conceded however that some areas were still experiencing problems, most notably Minburi, where street vendors were resisting the moves. Although he said that the BMA would consider requests to designate areas as trading zones, he also warned that district chiefs would have to take responsibility for any continuing problems. Local residents have often opposed the ban on trading, complaining that they no longer have anywhere to purchase food. --TNA 2004-03-12 #2Posted 2004-03-17 12:20:06 Quote Local residents have often opposed the ban on trading, complaining that they no longer have anywhere to purchase food. some of the best food is from the carts, they will just move to side streets as supply and demand will not stop them. #3Posted 2004-03-17 22:48:46
Yeah that's the right way to go. These people have no other income than what they make from street-vending. A lot of them even sleep in the street next to their carts. Let's ban the poor. Let's cover the slum dwellings with signboards. Let's shut them up with a 30 Baht medical checkup. Let's win the war on the poor. Thailand has no chicken flu, no drugs, and now no poor. HELLO! These people are making a decent living for themselves instead of running around prostituting themselves, stealing or taking ya ba.
As for designated zones? Why must everything be zoned now? Just another way for the men in brown to earn some under-table money. What's wrong with Thai politicians anyways? They get merrit points from the CEO if they keep recommending his own ideas to him? Go kiss ass somewhere else, I say! Soon there will be nowhere to eat, nowhere to entertain yourself, nowhere to go, nowhere to hang out, no tourists, and I predict no jobs. Starving office workers as far as the eye can reach. I also predict the line of Thais at the foreign embassies will start stretching all the way onto the (vendorless) streets and around the corner. And this idea surely would make the crime rate drop! Good thinking Dear Loser! But I guess we can just impose a curfew on the poor. Now that they don't have a vending cart to go home to, that would really make sense... What a F***King stupid idea. ASIC #4Posted 2004-03-17 22:50:32
Another futile attempt to impose silly restrictions. Some of the best food in Thailand comes from these vendors and its very inexpensive!
#5Posted 2004-03-18 00:04:45
Man, I've heard so much about the food from those carts. And i have been meaning to try some oneday...that sucks
#6Posted 2004-03-18 02:11:18 Quote Yeah that's the right way to go. These people have no other income than what they make from street-vending. A lot of them even sleep in the street next to their carts. Let's ban the poor. Let's cover the slum dwellings with signboards. Let's shut them up with a 30 Baht medical checkup. Let's win the war on the poor. Thailand has no chicken flu, no drugs, and now no poor. HELLO! These people are making a decent living for themselves instead of running around prostituting themselves, stealing or taking ya ba. As for designated zones? Why must everything be zoned now? Just another way for the men in brown to earn some under-table money. What's wrong with Thai politicians anyways? They get merrit points from the CEO if they keep recommending his own ideas to him? Go kiss ass somewhere else, I say! Soon there will be nowhere to eat, nowhere to entertain yourself, nowhere to go, nowhere to hang out, no tourists, and I predict no jobs. Starving office workers as far as the eye can reach. I also predict the line of Thais at the foreign embassies will start stretching all the way onto the (vendorless) streets and around the corner. And this idea surely would make the crime rate drop! Good thinking Dear Loser! But I guess we can just impose a curfew on the poor. Now that they don't have a vending cart to go home to, that would really make sense... What a F***King stupid idea. I Agree 100% .................. Toxin strikes again What Thailand needs real bad is an Antidote ! Or a governmental enema as it sure is full of it. #7Posted 2004-03-18 10:50:18 george, on Tue 2004-03-16, 11:16:20, said: Bangkok’s colourful street life to come to an end BANGKOK: -- The end of an era for Bangkok’s street vendors is set to come as early as the end of this month, when, in the interests of civic order, vendors will be banned from selling their goods in all but specially designated points in the capital. #8Posted 2004-07-08 09:54:04
Absolutely ASIC you have said it all.......
All these mindless restrictions are the stuff of Revolution!!! Beware Mr Prime Minister......... #9Posted 2004-07-08 15:42:12 britmaveric, on Wed 2004-03-17, 22:50:32, said: Another futile attempt to impose silly restrictions. Some of the best food in Thailand comes from these vendors and its very inexpensive! #10Posted 2004-07-08 17:25:53
if you dont want to eat it ,dont eat it ,i understand some people may be a bit delicate
#11Posted 2004-07-08 18:14:24
Street vendors' food is always very fresh. Each morning the buy what they need, and when they sell out, they go home for the day. Nothing is stored overnight. Most of the food sold is cooked at high temperatures (soups, stir-fries), so it is relatively safe.
I trust them a lot more than I do restaurant kitchens, where you can't see what goes on. That chicken leg you get may have been lurking in the back of their refrigerator for weeks. #12Posted 2004-07-10 03:16:21
Give me a kitchen that is regularly checked by health inspectors every time
#13Posted 2004-07-10 10:10:44 Harry Palmer, on Sat 2004-07-10, 03:16:21, said: Give me a kitchen that is regularly checked by health inspectors every time #14Posted 2004-07-10 12:52:46
the street vendors is what makes Bangkok what it is , plus i really doubt this will happen.
Wasn't the bars mean't to all close at 12 or something? exactly #15Posted 2004-07-10 15:15:02
Wow I can't believe this, I have tried the food from the street vendors and well i'm here to type this post
Chok dee #16Posted 2004-07-15 13:47:35
Harry harry please join the real world, how many "R" kitchens have you visited and I do not limit this to LOS - I do not hesitate to nominate Australia as belonging to some of the most disgusting you will run across & I mean run.
They say the proof is in the pudding, well in this case the proof is in turning on the lights when you return an hour after closing - to retrieve something you have left behind. #17Posted 2004-07-15 14:00:03 Harry Palmer, on Thu 2004-07-08, 15:42:12, said: The food is not exactly prepared & sold in hygienic conditions, is it? Anyway its a crazy idea to move them to designated areas,whatever next #18Posted 2004-07-15 14:40:47
Interesting, we only think of eating.
How about all the other nice shops selling t-shirts, leathergoods, pictures of watches During last APEC, when all the stalls in Bangkok disappeared I found out for the first time that there actually are pedestrian ways, for example between Sukh. Soi 5 and 17. #19Posted 2004-07-15 18:10:38 dr_Pat_Pong, on Sat 2004-07-10, 10:10:44, said: Harry Palmer, on Sat 2004-07-10, 03:16:21, said: Give me a kitchen that is regularly checked by health inspectors every time #20Posted 2004-07-15 18:41:25 Now I am starting to wonder if: those patrons were actually trying to send me a health warning, or was she really a lady boy called Gene, or maybe she/he played the field and two of my fellow posters are trying to send her a message by their flirting use of "Hygiene" and now "Hygene". Maybe its time to start dining by candlelight to protect my identity and also my constitution - if you can't see it surely it can't hurt you. I realise I am off the original subject a touch, but this young lass was very tall like an amazon - and: when you were toes to toes your nose was in it, when you were nose to nose your toes were in it, and when you were in it you had no one to talk too. I think she became a health inspector so be alert thailand needs lerts. Mijan24 #21Posted 2004-07-15 20:13:42
I know I don't/can't eat most of it but I still think it is so so so stupid and pathetic that Mr.T and his cronies seem hellbent on turning Thailand into a western country.
Not to mention bang out of order. |
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