| NOTES FROM THE UNDERGROUND |
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RUBLES TURNING INTO RUBBLE, AGAIN "The terrifying scene in Russia causes dismay at every level... Most analysts agree on this much, that you have a revolutionary situation." - William F. Buckley, Jr. in the New York Post. As the current situation in Russia deteriorates, Evergreen looks back at Russian revolutionary posters from 1917-1929 (#46 / Apr. 1967). For more information on these and other posters, click here. |
| "Mount Your Horses, Workers and Peasants! The Russian Cavalry Is the Guarantee of Victory." 1919 |
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Aleksander Kerensky was the premiere of the interim government between the Czarist regime and the beginning of the establishment of the Soviet Union. He refered to that period alternately in two books he authored as the "Prelude to Bolshevism" and "The Catastrophe". |
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| "Bloody Sunday!" 1925? |
DEJA VU - THAI TREATMENT OF HILL TRIBE PEOPLES VIS-A-VIS U.S. TREATMENT OF NATIVE AMERICANSThe Thai government is once again moving against the Hmong people at Wat Tham Krabok. A commentary on the Op-Ed page of the Bangkok Post states that "A community crackdown like the one under way at the temple would never be tolerated anywhere else in Thailand. Police and authorities must get the crooks, for sure. But they should look in the children's eyes too - they deserve at least some education." The piece went on to call the government campaign a "brainwashing". According to Peter Rosset, Executive Director for Food First, "The Hmong 'hill people' in the mountains of Northern Thailand seem to constantly be targeted by negative policies and imagery. In the 1960s U.S. funded anti-drug programs and the Thai military forced some of them to stop growing opium and helped them start intensive farming of commercial crops on low fertility mountan slopes, where they sank ever deeper into poverty. Others lost their land and moved into national park areas where they practice tradional shifting cultivation in an ecologically balanced way.
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THAILAND'S ECONOMIC FALLBACK POSITION |
"Narrator: If life can be chosen, who would want to stand here. But since we are here, all we ask for is understanding... and a chance to live the hope that one day we can walk away. We are life, we are part of society. We have to struggle for a better life. There are many roads leading to it, and the one we are walking on is called Patpong.Music: Part-time Lover -From the Patpong musical presented by Empower, 1987" The above quote is taken from Cleo Odzer's Patpong Sisters: An American Woman's View of the Bangkok Sex World (Foxrock/Arcade, 1994). You can order it now from Amazon.com by clicking HERE. |
A study out of San Francisco reports that prostitutes in five countries including Thailand claimed that two-thirds of the working women suffered from shell shock, a syndrome also known as post-traumatic stress disorder. The psychological reaction, which is usually studied in combat soldiers after battle, includes symptoms such as depression, anxiety, irritability, insomnia, flashbacks and nightmares. The study found that psychological trauma is intrinsic to the act of prostitution.Photos by Barney Rosset |