Showing posts with label Angkor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Angkor. Show all posts

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Can Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Angkor and the Kingdom affect your life?



Drinking and Driving:
Can Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Angkor
and the Kingdom affect your life?

Three main things that cause deadly collisions are:

1-Roadway conditions

2-Vehicle conditions (equipments)

3-Human conditions-drivers (human errors)

Out of the three conditions, human errors, motives and mental attitude are accountable for most accidents.

In Cambodia today, roadway conditions and vehicle conditions need to be drastically improved.

But at this time what need to be improved first and more than anything else is the human conditions—the people’s attitude toward their overall safety.

Drinking and taking or using drugs (legally or illegally) and driving are the formula of death or serious injuries. There are thousands of lightweight vehicles (motorcycles, scooters, tricycles, bicycles, etc.) on the roads every minute in Cambodia. When they collide with heavier vehicles like cars or trucks, the results are deadly.

Stop drinking or drinking responsibly will help reduce traffic death and injuries! 

If you have blood alcohol content (BAC) of .05, you are considered impaired. A BAC of .08 or higher you are actually intoxicated.

Consuming one can of beer like the "Angkor" beer will raise your BAC to .02. Two cans will raise it to .04 and more than two cans you will become impaired and 4 cans you will be intoxicated. Will you resist an additional drink so that you and your fellow countrymen can come home safely to hug their loved ones?

However, drinking is a habit formed by Cambodians themselves with the help of heavy advertisements on radios, televisions, billboards and other forms of commercials and infomercials.







What is more interesting is that today's Cambodians have been [proudly] introduced to consume what they have never seen and heard before in the past decades.

All of Cambodian famous and sacred symbols and names are being used as powerful forms of advertisement to lure more Cambodian drinkers.



Angkor: The famous name of Khmer National Symbol now has become the name of beer that has ABV equal to more than 5%.

ABV: alcohol by volume (abbreviated as abv or ABV) is a standard measure of how much alcohol (ethanol) is contained in an alcoholic beverage...



 Phnom Penh: The name of Cambodian Proud Capital City has also become the name of alcoholic drinks.

Cambodia: The name of the country of which Cambodians are proud of has now become the name of an alcoholic beverage.


Kingdom: Usually is a symbol of Respected Khmer Monarchy, a part of Cambodian National Motto, is now a symbol of Cambodian beer breweries...

What have happened lately to Cambodians and Cambodia, a Buddhist Nations ingraved in the country's  National Constitution?  

The answerer remains unknown, but what is known thus far is the destructive habits and behaviors formed by more and more Cambodians by ways of drinking, taking illegal drugs, gambling, sex trading, etc. The habits were warned more than two thousands years ago by the very person that Cambodians bow to every day--Lord Buddha.

Stop drunk drivers and help save Khmer lives!

Timothy Chhim
NY 03-23-2013



Tuesday, October 16, 2012

A Great Opportunity to Reconcile: Make that phone call now.


A Great Opportunity to Reconcile: Make that phone call now.


When the father is gone, the children should reconcile.

Former Cambodian King Norodom Sihanouk

Every adversity, defeat, loss, disappointment carries with it the seed of an equivalent or greater benefit, said Dr. Napoleon Hill the author of “Think and Grow Rich” which had sold nearly a billion of copies worldwide.

Regardless of how each of us thinks or feels about King Sihanouk, the majority of Khmer people and the people of the world recognize him as the Father of ALL Cambodians and a god King of Cambodia.

Perhaps Khmers can find the seed of an equivalent or greater benefit from the loss of King Father. 

The very least I can think of now is that the death of King Sihanouk can definitely help bring unity for all Cambodians regardless of their political or religious beliefs. That means it is time for ALL Cambodians to reconcile.

Sam Rainsy should pick up the phone and call Hun Sen to let him know that as one of King Sihanouks’ sons and a son of Cambodia Sam Rainsy will be in Phnom Penh to join Hun Sen in the mourning ceremony of Cambodians “God King” or King Father. 

Hun Sen should reconsider and help facilitate one of his Khmer brothers to join him in such a rarest ceremony. Let King Sihanouk’s spirit leaves this planet in peace. By doing this Sam Rainsy and Hun Sen will both win, hence the Cambodian people will also win.

As a great gesture the Current Cambodian King Sihamoni should use this opportunity to help free all political prisoners including Mam Sonando and others. He should also request Premier Hun Sen to intercede with the Cambodian court to help remove all charges against Sam Rainsy. By doing this King Sihamoni will be remembered as the next great King of Cambodia after King Sihanouk.

Yes, there are more seeds or opportunities than we need to find good things to help Cambodia after her greatest loss in modern time: the death of the God King. 

But, someone needs to take his personal initiative: Make that phone call, now.

Timothy Chhim
October 15, 2012

Turning Adversity to Avantage

Napoleon Hill says "definiteness of purpose is the starting point of all achievement," and my personal definiteness of purpose...