What the world is up to now? Climate change is really a climate change; it does change my mood every morning, from a healthy into depressng mood. It is now June, I supposed to be in the warm sun in the morning riding my bike to school and now……
My bike is almost dead because i have not used it for already almost 5 months. I always wish that the weather is good, full of sun shine and warm bliss, so that i can ride on my bike elegantly to school. But now every morning of this June, i get up and look out of the window and say “Das Wetter ist noch scheissssssss”. I have to get up early than usual in order to take a train and then a bus to school though the school is actually just 12 minutes by bike, and that all thank to this cold and gloomy weather.
I am not a potato = I am not for sale. I am not a potato = I am not your commodity = I must not be traded off.
Those are what the 2 minute clip below wants to say. Each word in the video clip can scratch your heart. It is a photo video clip that couldn’t show actions or movement without the video effects, but it does move your thinking with its word effects. Please read each word carefully and think over.
Bangkok’s streets seem to be so colorful in these couple years. First it was full of yellow then red and now with some blue. The three colors refer to different groups of people. Recently, Thailand has faced quite a number of emergency calls from the head of the government over stormy demonstrations. There are groups that called them self, Yellow Shirts, Red Shirts, and Blue Shirts. So are they exactly?
Yellow Shirts: The group was formed in 2005 from loose coalition of opponents to Thaksin Shinawatra or the coalition was other word called Alliance for Democracy. In 2006 the alliance formed a bloodless coup that forced Thaksin from power. The Yellow-Shirted people disappeared after the intervention from teh military force until late 2007 election came that let and ally of Thaksin come to power. The yellow-shirted formed again. Their street protest took several months and they blocked the two Bangkok’s airports, crippling tourism which is the vital industry in Thailand. The group disappear once again when the Thaksin’s allies stepped down from power in late 2008.
Red Shirts: The Red Shirts group was formed in 2008, backed by Thaksin, to confront the anti-Thaksin yellow-shirts group. The Red Shirts group want the current Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva step down from the power.
Blue Shirts: The Blue Shirts group is described as pro to the current governmetn of the Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva. The Blue Shirts first appeared on the scene in March, gathering outside Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi airport to protect it from a possible seizure by anti-government Red Shirts.