Thailand's Filthy Manner of Life

Thailand's Filthy Manner of LifeABORTION

Abortion is allowed in Thailand under the law for the mother’s life, the mother’s physical health, the mother’s mental health, rape or defect in the child.  Research indicates as many as 37 out of 1000 women have an abortion, with about 80% induced by massage.  Here is a description of abortions in Thailand:  In practice, the law is not rigorously enforced. The prevalence of illegal abortion has been widely documented, particularly in the rural areas of the country.  One estimate suggests that, in the late 1970s, at least 300,000 illegal abortions were performed in rural Thailand.  Most illegal abortions are performed by non-medical personnel, such as self-trained practitioners, within the first trimester of pregnancy.  Whereas abortions can be obtained in urban hospitals using vacuum curettage, the most frequently used procedure in rural areas is traditional massage abortion, followed by uterine injections.  Some studies have shown that for a majority of women in rural areas, the stated reason for obtaining an abortion was to limit family size. A significant proportion of women also expressed the need for child spacing. See for more information and details http://www.un.org/esa/population/publications/abortion/doc/thailand.doc

Thailand is one of the focus areas internationally for HIV/AIDS.  By the end of 2007 there were estimated to be 600,000 living with HIV/AIDS in Thailand, which is 1.4% of the adult population.  Among women 15-49 there is an estimated 42% with HIV.  There are believed to be 14,000 children with HIV/AIDS, and during 2007 31,000 deaths were due to AIDS.

FAGS

Thailand has a thriving fag society with lots of social events.  When these governments come and go, they are unaffected. 

In 1956, sodomy was decriminalized in Thailand, and it is no longer considered a mental problem or disease in Thai law.  Since 2005 fags have been allowed openly into their military.  Fags are open about their “sexuality” in public, and Thailand is said to have one of the most open fag societies in the world.  Thailand has annual gay pride events in Bangkok, Pattaya and Phuket. 

Meanwhile the latest government in power suspended free speech rights, so no one will tell the fags they are sinners these days in Thailand. 

CHILD SEX TRADE

Because of their many idols, and the total acceptance of fags all through the nation, it should come as no surprise to you to know that Thailand has a reputation for engaging in one of the largest child sex trade operations in Southeast Asia.  UNICEF estimates that the number of Thai children involved in prostitution is between 60,000 and 200,000.  There is a highly profitable child sex tourism trade, and a Thai group called FACE (Fight Against Child Exploitation) says that 5,000 foreigners come to Thailand each year to have sex with children.

Like the last remnant of Judah clinging to its queen of heaven, and pouring out water and burning incense to her even as God was giving them over to captivity and destruction, these people in Thailand will hang on to their idols even as God deals them destructive blows in these Last of All Days.

Revelation 9:
20 And the rest of the men which were not killed by these plagues yet repented not of the works of their hands, that they should not worship devils, and idols of gold, and silver, and brass, and stone, and of wood: which neither can see, nor hear, nor walk:
21 Neither repented they of their murders, nor of their sorceries, nor of their fornication, nor of their thefts.

Don’t feel like the Lone Ranger Thailand; this will be a worldwide phenomenon.  But you’re primed and ready, with your idols and perverse monks and self-serving and selfish leaders.  God is cursing you in every way, but you just keep bowing down to your false god, and keep wallowing in your folk religions and worship of the dead.  At least you must be given credit for one thing, to wit, you don’t claim to be a Christian nation trying to tell the rest of the world what to do, like doomed america.

Sexual trafficking (report from http://www.state.gov/g/tip/rls/tiprpt/2008/105386.htm)

Thailand is a source, transit, and destination country for men, women, and children trafficked for the purposes of commercial sexual exploitation and forced labor. Thailand’s relative prosperity attracts migrants from neighboring countries who flee conditions of poverty and, in the case of Burma, military repression. Significant illegal migration to Thailand presents traffickers with opportunities to force, coerce, or defraud undocumented migrants into involuntary servitude or sexual exploitation. Women and children are trafficked from Burma, Cambodia, Laos, the People’s Republic of China (P.R.C.), Vietnam, Russia, and Uzbekistan for commercial sexual exploitation in Thailand. A number of women and girls from Burma, Cambodia, and Vietnam are trafficked through Thailand’s southern border to Malaysia for sexual exploitation. Ethnic minorities such as northern hill tribe peoples who have not received legal residency or citizenship are at high risk for trafficking internally and abroad, including to Bahrain, Australia, South Africa, Singapore, Malaysia, Japan, Hong Kong, Europe, and the United States. Some Thai men who migrate for low-skilled contract work to Taiwan, South Korea, Israel, the United States, and Gulf states are subjected to conditions of forced labor and debt bondage after arrival. Following voluntary migration to Thailand, men, women, and children, primarily from Burma, are subjected to conditions of forced labor in agricultural work, factories, construction, commercial fisheries and fish processing, domestic work, and begging. Thai laborers working abroad in Taiwan, Malaysia, the United States, and the Middle East often pay large recruitment fees prior to departure, creating debt, which in some cases may be unlawfully exploited to coerce them into conditions of forced labor. Children from Burma, Laos, and Cambodia are trafficked into forced begging and exploitative labor in Thailand. Four key sectors of the Thai economy (fishing, construction, commercial agriculture, and domestic work) rely heavily on undocumented Burmese migrants, including children, as cheap and exploitable laborers.