Of course, it’s mostly unattractive women.
BBC:
A growing movement among students has been calling for political reform in Thailand. In recent days, the protests have taken a surprising turn, writes an analyst in London for the BBC.
On a stage at an out-of-town campus of one of Thailand’s top universities, a young woman with wavy long hair and owlish spectacles steps forward, through a dramatic cloud of dry-ice, and reads out a 10-point manifesto to a crowd of cheering students.
Her demands, for a monarchy that is accountable to the country’s elected institutions, that moderates its use of public funds, stays out of politics and does not exercise control over important army units, would be unremarkable in most countries.
In Thailand, they are nothing short of revolutionary.
The BBC goes on to give 1,500 words about why this is good.
It’s actually not good, from my perspective.
What you are witnessing, yet again, is this push to equalize the entire world. They want a revolution in Thailand for the same reason they’re promoting feminism in Kenya. We are now in hyper-speed mode. The entire world is being prepared for a one-world system, where everything will be centrally controlled. For that to happen, you have to get everyone on the same page.
They’ve already completely defeated the first world, and now the majority of the population in our countries is basically ready for the big integration. At the very least, when the boomers die, the majority will be ready.
So now they’re going around to these second and third world countries and getting them on board. They will use these revolutions (Belarus), they will use financial pressure (African homosexuality and feminism), they will use bombings (Iran and Syria, other Moslem countries) – whatever. Every avenue is open in this big event, where the whole world is being forced on board with the agenda.
A New World Order is coming into view.
We had a chance to resist. That chance has now ended.
Now, the only thing we can do is ride it out.