This is a copy and paste from another post I commented on. Just some background.
I am an American expat in Thailand. As such, I am not intimately familiar with Myanmar, but I have a general understanding of what was happening there. Understand that the current regime led by Aung San Suu Kyi, the NLD party, was very popular a decade ago. She came to lead the government with a lot of hopes. The Burmese constitution is basically a power sharing arrangement between the military and the political establishment. Each keeps checks on the other.
Over the years people have become less enchanted with Aung San Suu Kyi. She has forged close ties with very corrupt individuals, and the high esteem she started with has eroded dramatically. Worse, Myanmar has developed a reputation as a hotbed of human trafficking. The stateless Rohingya providing a near perfect source of children for the disgusting cabal, and Aung San Suu Kyi doing absolutely nothing to stop this state of affairs at best, and encouraging it at the worst. In short, she wasn't the savior the people had hoped for. And her party was going under.
So, she did what any corrupt politician does...she cheated. During campaigning they allowed each party to have a small amount of airtime on TV to present their case to the people. But the government refused to allow these parties to say anything bad about Aung San Suu Kyi or the NLD during these broadcasts. Many parties boycotted the rigged official statements. The government also systematically hindered voting in areas critical of the NLD party. And, of course, we now know they used corrupt Smartmatic voting software to rig the vote.
All of these tactics were designed to weaken the power of the military and unfairly strengthen her position. I doubt this was done without the support of the international cabal, given her compliance in providing them with Rohingya children for their sick practices.
The Burmese military is not known for being angels. In fact, they would rather not have democracy at all. But they are still viewed with more reverence by the average person in Myanmar than the corrupt police or politicians. So this is a complex situation, and I am not sure how closely it really parallels the situation in the USA. The one thing this does do however, is put the human trafficking pipelines in check for a while. And for that, I think we all have to be thankful.
This is a copy and paste from another post I commented on. Just some background.
I am an American expat in Thailand. As such, I am not intimately familiar with Myanmar, but I have a general understanding of what was happening there. Understand that the current regime led by Aung San Suu Kyi, the NLD party, was very popular a decade ago. She came to lead the government with a lot of hopes. The Burmese constitution is basically a power sharing arrangement between the military and the political establishment. Each keeps checks on the other.
Over the years people have become less enchanted with Aung San Suu Kyi. She has forged close ties with very corrupt individuals, and the high esteem she started with has eroded dramatically. Worse, Myanmar has developed a reputation as a hotbed of human trafficking. The stateless Rohingya providing a near perfect source of children for the disgusting cabal, and Aung San Suu Kyi doing absolutely nothing to stop this state of affairs at best, and encouraging it at the worst. In short, she wasn't the savior the people had hoped for. And her party was going under.
So, she did what any corrupt politician does...she cheated. During campaigning they allowed each party to have a small amount of airtime on TV to present their case to the people. But the government refused to allow these parties to say anything bad about Aung San Suu Kyi or the NLD during these broadcasts. Many parties boycotted the rigged official statements. The government also systematically hindered voting in areas critical of the NLD party. And, of course, we now know they used corrupt Smartmatic voting software to rig the vote.
All of these tactics were designed to weaken the power of the military and unfairly strengthen her position. I doubt this was done without the support of the international cabal, given her compliance in providing them with Rohingya children for their sick practices.
The Burmese military is not known for being angels. In fact, they would rather not have democracy at all. But they are still viewed with more reverence by the average person in Myanmar than the corrupt police or politicians. So this is a complex situation, and I am not sure how closely it really parallels the situation in the USA. The one thing this does do however, is put the human trafficking pipelines in check for a while. And for that, I think we all have to be thankful.