How to draw a perfect triangle

Thaksin Shinawatra is going to need a new lawyer now that his whole legal team has been thrown in jail for trying to bribe the Supreme Court, but he should have his old lawyer back soon, once Noppadon Pattama loses his job as Foreign Minister over the Preah Vihear fiasco.
Meanwhile, naturally, nothing’s actually changed, so back to more speculation about the supernatural.
The picture above shows an equilateral triangle superimposed on a Google Earth image of Central Thailand and western Cambodia. Preah Vihear is at one corner, and Koh Kong — the Cambodian island in which Thaksin is allegedly investing — at another. I added a triangle thinking the other point would rest on Bangkok, but it doesn’t. It sits almost exactly on Nakhon Nayok.
Five years ago, when Thaksin was at the height of his power as prime minister, he designated Ban Na, a largely agricultural district in Nakhon Nayok, about 100 kilometres northeast of Bangkok, as the future site of Thailand’s new administrative capital, along with adjacent areas of Saraburi province’s Wihan Daeng and Kaeng Khoi districts.
He called it Muang Mai, meaning “New City”, although the name Muang Sawan — Celestial City — was also kicked around.
The idea was to ease Bangkok’s population burden and, starting in 2005, to move the halls of government to 250,000 rai in the adjoining provinces to the northeast, to be shared with residential and commercial development, a new royal palace, schools, hospitals, first-class hotels, its own mass-transit system linked to Bangkok and Suvarnabhumi Airport, facilities devoted to “environmental tourism” and hi-tech industry — but no polluters.
More than a third of the area was to remain green, with parks or retained farmland. Ban Na means “home of the paddy fields”.
Civic planning began in earnest, and public forums got the citizens of Nakhon Nayok excited about the prosperity that development would bring. Land prices immediately jumped tenfold as speculators swarmed in, and at least one newspaper openly accused two of the country’s biggest corporations of hoarding thousands of rai while owners of small parcels were being duped.
Then, in August 2006, there was a larger-than-usual gathering of military officers for the annual anniversary celebrations of the Royal Military Academy in Nakhon Nayok. Privy Council president Prem Tinsulanonda attended for the first time in years, the Bangkok Post reported, quoting sources close to him as saying his presence “was aimed at fostering unity, amid reports of attempted political interference”. There’s more!


Kids have funny names these days, don’t they? But what’s funnier — at times, less so at others — is the state in which newspaper owners come back from media conferences where they’ve been breathing the hyper-charged oxygen piped in from cyberspace.
I have plenty of reverence for the Net, but in terms of faith I’m very much an agnostic. I expect the Web will still be 90% trivia the day I die and long afterward too. But now the printed news media, convinced by advertisers that the only market is youth, are frantically replicating its format and giving more weight to page views than facts checked, more heft to hit counts than a decent story well told.

Not that it needed a smokescreen. Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej was anxious to get started on his official visit to Burma earlier this month to sign a pact protecting Thai investment there when someone must have asked him about the rest of the world’s sanctions against the junta for, you know, killing Buddhist monks.
Many bricks in the wall: Official HQ of the thieving government of Myanmar
The book seemed to be a genuine journal, filled with detailed descriptions of places visited and events witnessed, but what an exciting story! A reviewer in Le Figaro demanded confirmation as to whether the account was truth or fiction. Jules Verne was suddenly the centre of attention.
His father was a lawyer, though, and that’s what he wanted Jules to be, so he sent him to Paris to study. Big mistake. Paris! The theatre alone in Paris was a fantasy come true! He met Victor Hugo, and Jacques Arago, who’d written the bestseiller “Journey Around the World”, and Alexandre Dumas, the author of “The Three Musketeers”, and became best pals with Dumas’ son. Jules was prodded to try writing plays. He kept at it for a decade, finishing his law studies but leaving it at that, and yet foundering in his literary efforts. “Blind Man’s Bluff” did fairly well, and there were 25 others, but he was far from rolling in francs. His father had cut him off, so he got a job as a stockbroker, and only then did he have enough money to get married.















