A willfully vague law

Re: "Student Union calls on Prayut to scrap new 'code of conduct'", (BP, Aug 18).

The Ministry of Education again shows its expected competence fully consistent with Thailand's Programme for International Student Assessment (Pisa) ratings year after year. If you want "to prevent the problems of brawling, motorcycle racing, and drug use", the intelligent response is to ban "brawling, motorcycle racing, and drug use". You do not make a much broader, willfully vague law based on bad morals to infringe unjustly on a range of personal matters.

It is not the ministry's business what sort of pictures students post online; it is certainly bad morals for any ministry to be dictating what people do in private. If they want to have consensual sex, even orgies, the Minister of Education should not be interfering in any such acts. If the orgies are non-consensual, that is a police matter properly covered by the criminal law code.

But it's all expected: it is the rule under Thainess that whenever officials or greedy politicians talk of "good morals", they are doing something that is bad morals. The ongoing dictatorship, which loves to lip-synch the phrase "good morals", is the obvious example, but this latest regressive move that treats young adults as enslaved military conscripts is exactly the same. It is moral corruption deceitfully pretending to be its opposite. As such, it is a perfect example of traditional Thainess imposed by the oligarchy that likes to lord it over the peasants, who have, these past 20 years, taken to voting in informed ways that are healthily contrary to the corrupt bad old ways.

As is also the norm in Thailand, the young students protesting demonstrate a better grasp of moral right and wrong than do the ageing phu yai dictating to them. If there were any justice, the old relics would be down on their knees respectfully waiing the students who are correcting their morally corrupt prejudices.

Felix Qui
Conduct code flawed

Re: "Student Union calls on Prayut to scrap new 'code of conduct'", (BP, Aug 18).

I fully agree with the Student Union of Thailand that the Education Ministry's proposed code of conduct should be scrapped as it treats students as kids requiring babysitting, instead of gradually preparing them to be active, concerned, informed citizens fully able to participate in society.

Bertrand Russell said: "Education should have two objects: first, to give definite knowledge, reading and writing, language and mathematics, and so on; second, to create those mental habits which will enable people to acquire knowledge and form sound judgements for themselves."

The draft code of conduct won't help achieve either of the two goals above, eg, preventing students from leaving school premises, clamping down on public displays of affection, or sharing revealing photos on social media. Besides, don't we already have laws covering the topics concerned?

Education permanent secretary Karun Sakulpradit says that the code's "end goal is to build a framework which ensures the youth are free from temptations." But you cannot keep students in a sterile atmosphere, suddenly release them into the real world upon graduation, and expect them to cope.

Instead, follow Russell's advice, teach them how to analyse, ask probing questions, and be accountable -- as exemplified by public figures. For example, we want graduates to be honest. So, when Deputy Prime Minister Prawit Wongsuwon flashes 25 ultra-expensive watches, society, led by Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha, should show students that even lawmakers must obey the law. Thus as Education Minister Teerakiat Jareonsettasin said in London, Mr Prawit should have resigned from day one, instead of brazening it out.

Burin Kantabutra
R-E-S-P-E-C-T for a legend

Re: "Say a little Prayer for the queen of soul", (Opinion, Aug 19).

Aretha Franklin was not just a queen of soul but a heavenly voice that could reverberate the masses and take their hearts and fill them up with hope, love and joy. She was an amazing phenomenon, a true symbol of American soft power and prowess.

Kuldeep Nagi

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