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Final Step Toward Full Collectivization

Bossza007

I am From Thailand
GA Member
World Power
May 4, 2021
3,033
Bangkok, Thailand
1100 ICT (GMT +7)
November 21, 2004

Bangkok-city-panorama-lower.jpg

Panoramic View of Bangkok, Capital of the Republic of Thailand

Secret and secure unless contextually possible. | NSST 1.0 Architecture

Change was sweeping across Thailand, a transformation eagerly awaited. Seven and a half years after the 1998 Thai Revolution, socialism had triumphed over crony capitalism, ensuring social justice. Today, the reckoning with private property continued—a reckoning for the exploitation and sacrifices demanded of workers by a system that only sought profit. Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra declared that property relations must be radically redefined to extend democracy into every aspect of society. Private property would give way to common property, a right deserved by all within the community.

As foreign private property owners, except those from France, Sweden, Poland, Portugal, and Spain, were expelled from Thailand, their assets were seized according to parliamentary orders. This action ensured that no foreign capitalist elites could exploit Thai workers and resources again. Meanwhile, any private corporation with more than fifty employees that hadn't transitioned to a worker cooperative after a six-month grace period was raided by the Labor Right Enforcement Agency (LREA). The rule of law prevailed, holding all individuals accountable for non-compliance and exploitative behavior.

In the heart of the class struggle between the common people and the elites, GlobalTech Infrastructure Solution emerged as the fiercest adversary, seeking to undermine the labor and sacrifices of the workers. Six thousand employees within Bangkok marched toward the headquarters of this corporation. Wearing black shirts and carrying red flags, they demanded recognition of the laws protecting their right to unionize. Alongside them were comrades from the Labor Rights Enforcement Agency (LREA), well-armed and ready to challenge the elites' dominance and restore power to the people.

"Down with Capitalism! Rise up, workers!" the demonstrators chanted as more people joined the march. The streets were clean and organized, the path to the headquarters clear. The executives of GlobalTech grew increasingly nervous, realizing that their wealth and manipulation paled in comparison to the combined might of international worker solidarity. Their time was up as over a hundred LREA forces stormed the GlobalTech headquarters.

"Workers of GlobalTech!" a leading figure shouted into her microphone. "Today, we reclaim our right to self-management. We stand against the exploitation by capitalist elites. No longer will the products of our collective labor be sold back to us in a manipulated market. No longer will the profits generated by us, the working people, be reserved for the executives. No more! Today, the power is back in our hands. It is our time to define our futures. It is our time to shape our way of life. It is our time to resist the oppressors. We, the oppressed, will no longer be exploited!" The crowd of more than seventy thousand people roared in front of the building.

And thus, the private sector in Thailand ceased to exist as workers stood up against the executive elites. Private property within enterprises was replaced by common property owned by the workers and public property managed by the government. A revolutionary once declared before the democracy movement, "Morning will come, Victory is close." Would this victory lead to a bright and hopeful morning? That was for the workers to decide.
 
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