Monday, September 19, 2011

Lotus Revolution Message No. 3

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MEq4lr29P_c

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

តាមស្តាប់ មើលទៅដូចជាមានសមាជិក១លាននាក់
ហើយ តែមិនហ៊ានចេញមុខទេ

Anonymous said...

Revolution my ASS. It's a communist's word, MOTHERFUCKER!

Anonymous said...

If you told to the khmer people ,don't go to vote meaning you let the time to yuon people go to vote right ? This idia ,it's idea of yuon (it's the strategy of yuon ) .In 1997 sankat election ,it has some yuon agent ,they said to the khmer people don't go to vote even we vote for opposition ,Hun Sen will win the same ,but yuon people they go to vote 100% ,I saw one yuon people talk khmer not well ,he said to khmer people (bang eng min teuv baus snot ,shnom teuv baus snot auy pak CPP yeung and he show the ink on his finger ) .Are we khmer if we don't go to vote are we shame about that ,if win or lost we are khmer people we has to vote ,we has to response our future .Don't believe that we don't vote UN don't recognize the new government.

Anonymous said...

12:59AM but if we all boycut it the world will know! we can not beat aaahKwack cheating anyway!

Anonymous said...

Cambodia has over 14 millions people but New Zealand has only less than 5 millions look at the difference between the two goverment! And ask Why ? and Why not ?

"Christchurch earthquake:

government wants to demolish 5,000 homes
The New Zealand government has offered to buy thousands of the most badly quake-damaged houses in Christchurch so it can demolish them.

Announcing the buyout plan, John Key, the prime minister, said some land in the worst-hit areas was so unstable it would be impossible to rebuild on it "for many years".
The decision means land in the razed suburbs will effectively be abandoned in the city's rebuild.
Christchurch, the country's second biggest city, was devastated by major earthquakes in September 2010 and again in February this year, and continues to be rocked by strong aftershocks which are causing more damage.

Mr Key said engineers have divided the city, home to 350,000 people, into four zones.

The government will offer to buy all 5,000 properties in the worst affected areas, classed as red zone.
Householders who accept must assign their right to an insurance payout to the government in return.
He estimated the net cost to the government would be up to NZ$635 million (£323 million).

About 10,000 houses in an orange zone need further investigation, while a further 100,000 in a green zone can be rebuilt.
Properties yet to be assessed comprise a white zone.

The worst-hit suburbs are all in low-lying eastern areas of the city that suffered liquefaction, a process in which the ground turns to liquid during the shaking and leaves a quagmire of sludge.
As beleaguered residents, frustrated by months of waiting for the announcement, pored over online maps to see which zone their street was in, Mr Key pledged: "The government remains fully committed to rebuilding Christchurch."

He went on: "Since September last year, the government has been working to provide certainty for residents, while recognising many people have their life savings tied up in their homes."
The prime minister said the move was "the next step in the government's ongoing work to give the people of greater Christchurch a clearer picture of what their future holds".

The cost of rebuilding Christchurch has been estimated at NZ$15 billion (£7.6 billion) or more."