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Sawadikap Thai King's IMPEACHED royal wife said to be dead on social media, suicided?? Will Dotard jump White House roof too?

taksinloong

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https://hk.news.yahoo.com/被指挑戰王后地位-社交網瘋傳泰王廢妃已死-082922875.html

被指挑戰王后地位 社交網瘋傳泰王廢妃已死

on.cc 東網


20.4k 人追蹤

2020年1月3日 下午4:29

泰王(左)早前褫奪信伊那特(右)所有頭銜。

泰王(左)早前褫奪信伊那特(右)所有頭銜。
泰王佛齊拉隆功去年高調整頓皇室紀律,褫奪34歲妾侍信伊那特所有皇室和軍事頭銜。社交網周五(3日)瘋傳信伊那特已死的消息,惟目前未能證實。
記者馬歇爾(Andrew MacGregor Marshall)在Twitter轉發消息,他寫道:「社交網流傳泰王前妾侍信伊那特已死的傳言。」馬歇爾強調,暫未能證實消息真偽。
泰國皇室去年10月21日晚突然頒令褫奪伊那特的所有頭銜,憲報指她對泰王不忠,以及挑戰泰王對王后素提達的任命,想盡一切辦法要與王后平起平坐。


https://hk.news.yahoo.com/%E8%A2%AB%E6%8C%87%E6%8C%91%E6%88%B0%E7%8E%8B%E5%90%8E%E5 % 9C% B0% E4% BD% 8D-% E7% A4% BE% E4% BA% A4% E7% B6% B2% E7% 98% 8B% E5% 82% B3% E6% B3% B0% E7% 8E% 8B% E5% BB% A2% E5% A6% 83% E5% B7% B2% E6% AD% BB-082922875.html


Accused of challenging Queen's status
[on.cc Eastnet]
on.cc Eastnet

20.4k followers

January 3, 2020 at 4:29 pm

King Thai (left) had previously won all titles from Shin Inat (right).
King Thai (left) had previously won all titles from Shin Inat (right).

Thai King Phra Siralongkorn adjusted his royal discipline last year, claiming all royal and military titles from the 34-year-old patron saint Inat. The social network reported on Friday (3rd) that Yinate was dead, but could not confirm it.

Correspondent Andrew MacGregor Marshall reposted on Twitter. He wrote: "Social networks have spread the rumor that Thai King Majesty's messenger Inat is dead." Marshall emphasized that the information could not be verified for the time being.

On the evening of October 21st last year, the Thai royal family suddenly ordered to seize all the titles of Inat. The Gazette stated that she was unfaithful to the Thai King and challenged the Thai King's appointment of Queen Sudita, and tried everything possible to sit on par with the Queen.
 

eatshitndie

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that's seeminut lah. koi koi. kena caught red-handed in orgy with other men?
 
Last edited:

syed putra

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The New Thai King’s Reign of Fear
April 18, 2017
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3961677D00000578-3835977-Crown_Prince_Maha_Vajiralongkorn_in_crop_top_is_rumoured_to_be_a-m-30_1476443612938.jpg

By: Pavin Chachavalpongpun






The overwhelming success of the reign of the late King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand, who died on Oct. 13, 2016, has evidently become an entrapment for his son Maha Vajiralongkorn, who has failed to follow in the footsteps of his much-revered father but instead is a mirror image. Some analysts have expected Vajiralongkorn to be a weak king precisely because of the lack of moral authority, divinity and popularity once enjoyed by Bhumibol.
Bhumibol’s moral authority was made a sacred instrument that underpinned his effective reign for seven decades. It legitimized his political position, to place it above what were perceived to be ill elements, including ‘dirty’ politics and ‘corrupt’ politicians. Members of the network monarchy worked indefatigably to ensure the strengthening of his moral authority, through vigorous glorification programs in the media and national education, about the devoted king who strove for his people’s better livelihood. It was his moral authority which was partly exploited to justify the use of the lese-majeste law, which punishes disrespect for the royalty.
Now that Bhumibol has passed from the scene, a critical question emerges: how has Vajiralongkorn forged new alliances and eliminated enemies and critics in order to consolidate his reign?
Without his own charisma, or baramee, Vajiralongkorn has used fear to command those serving him instead of trusting or convincing them to work for him based on love and respect, as argued by a recent article of Claudio Sopranzetti. He has used fear to build order, perhaps in the way in which mafias, or chaophos in Thailand operate their empire.
Vajiralongkorn reigns as a monarch whose authority is based upon fear, and cares little about people around him. Fear is a tool to threaten his subordinates and drive them to the edge to keep them compliant and docile. He has kept his subordinates in line with unnecessary yet rigid rules from ordering cropped haircuts to a tough fitness regime. But such rules possibly reflect his own state of fear. He does not know who will betray him at the end of the day. His intimidating image is his only source of personal power — but he also realizes how fragile it could be.

Even prior to the death of Bhumibol, Vajiralongkorn relied on fear for his own rearrangement of power. He allowed a faction under his control to purge another perceived to be disloyal to him. The soothsayer Suriyan Sucharitpolwong, (Moh Yong), Police Major Prakrom Warunprapha, and Major General Phisitsak Seniwongsena Ayutthaya — all of whom worked for Vajiralongkorn, most visibly in the ‘Bike for Mum’ project — died under mysterious circumstances, a possibility that death could become a reward for those who breached his trust.
A prison has been built within Vajiralongkorn’s palace, Dhaveevatthana. The Ministry of Justice, during the administration of Pheu Thai party leader Yingluck Shinalwatra, announced on 27 March 2013 that a 60 square meter plot of land within Dhaveevathana was allocated for the building of what is now called the BhudhaMonthon Temporary Prison. This ‘temporary’ prison has been legalized, potentially allowing the king to detain anyone under its roof legally. Adjacent to the prison is a crematorium. Major General Phisitsak died inside the prison and was cremated there.
His former consort, Srirasmi, has been put under house arrest in a Rachaburi house, shaved and dressed as a nun. Her family members and relatives were imprisoned on dubious charges. PongpatChayaphan, a former Royal Thai Police officer who was the head of the country’s Central Investigation Bureau, was convicted in 2015 from profiting from a gambling den, violating a forestry-related law, and money laundering. Srirasmi is his niece. Earlier in 2014, Police General AkrawutLimrat, a close aide to Pongpat, was also found dead following a mysterious fall from a building.
Vajiralongkorn’s estranged sons, Juthavachara, Vacharaesorn, Chakriwat and Vatcharawee — who live in exile in the United States with their mother SujarineeVivachawonsge, née YuvathidaPolpraserth — have been banned from coming home. These extreme punitive measures punctuate the fact that fear once again functions as a controlling device over his subjects, even those with royal blood.
Vajiralongkorn has reorganized the Privy Council, the chief advisory body to the royalty, appointing new faces from the Queen’s Guard to entrench his alliance with the junta. He has also let General Prem Tinsulanonda remain in his position of President of the Privy Council, arguably, as part of using fear to keep his enemy close to him, so that Prem could be closely monitored and work under his direct command. Recently, he punished one of his close confidants, Police General Jumpol Manmai, a former deputy national police chief, labeling him an extremely evil official so as to justify the humiliation caused to him. Jumpol was arrested and imprisoned. His head was shaved, like Moh Yong and Prakrom, and was sent to undergo military training within the Dhaweevattana Palace. Like Pongpat, he was found guilty of forest encroachment.

Meanwhile, some have been promoted, some demoted. The king’s new favorites have enjoyed speedy promotions in the military and the police. Those irritating him have been discarded, although they were first humiliated on the pages of the newspapers. Vajiralongkorn purged the entire Vajarodaya clan, one of the most prominent families of palace officials serving under Bhumibol. DisathornVajarodaya was stripped of his power in the palace, forced to re-enter a military training at the age of 53, and is now working as a house maid who serves drinks to guests of the new king. Meanwhile, Suthida Vajiralongkorn na Ayutthaya, a former Thai Airways flight attendant, was promoted to the rank of a general. She is currently Vajiralongkorn’s chief mistress. But Suthida is not without competition. Colonel Sineenat Wongvajirapakdi, aka Koi, who is a nurse, is reportedly becoming his number one favorite. A video clip of Vajiralongkorn and Koi, both wearing skimpy crop tops barely covering fake tattoo wandering a Munich mall, was viral on the Internet.
In the political domain, Vajiralongkorn has directly meddled in the drafting of the new constitution, requesting an amendment to boost royal powers. The changes included removing the need for him to appoint a regent when he travels overseas. More importantly, a clause that gave power to the constitutional court and other institutions in the event of an unforeseen crisis was removed. But by removing it, the king’s political role was significantly reinforced.
Because of his direct interference in Thai political affairs, it is naïve to assume that Vajiralongkorn is simply a mad king, clueless about running his kingdom. His meddling has unveiled his desire to solidify his power at this critical juncture in politics, forging ties with his allies while deposing his enemies and critics through brutal means.
Fear — for one’s own freedom, or one’s own personal safety — is a key weapon of Vajiralongkorn’s in keeping elites around him in line, alongside the longstanding use of the lese-majeste law to curb public discontentment against him. For instance, the military government chose to punish Jatupat ‘Phai’ Boonpattararaksa for sharing a BBC article on the biography of Vajiralongkorn, underscoring the use of fear to warn the public to stay away from his private life. Jatupat is the only person to be imprisoned for sharing the article.
On the eve of the recent Songkran holidays, the Ministry of Digital Economy and Society released an announcement forbidding the public from following, befriending and sharing content of three critics of the monarchy: myself, the exiled historian Somsak Jeamteerasakul, and former reporter Andrew MacGregor Marshall. Fear has now been used at a national level, in cyberspace, to frighten ordinary social media users. In failing to obey the royal prerogatives, some could be jailed, like Jatupat.
But fear can fall away. Overused and frequently exploited, fear will eventually loose its spell. Exactly how long Vajiralongkorn will continue to count on fear to build up his power remains uncertain. What is certain today is the fact that Thailand is no long a smiling country. It is a country in deep anxiety.
 

laksaboy

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Why would Trump want to kill himself? The Dems' impeachment circus has helped his approval rating and fundraising. Whoever the Dem candidate is, he/she is going to lose by a landslide in Nov 2020. :cool:

Those Thai women deserve it for wanting to be Vaginalongkorn's fucktoys. The Thais are unfortunate to have a fucked up king like him. When he dies, you won't see too many Thais mourning him. :wink:
 

Narong Wongwan

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No 10 is proving to be more scheming and cunning than No 9.
But then he has had lots decades of learning from his folks.
He will eventually outwit outplay and outlast the clueless junta govt
 
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