X

Get FREE Email Updates

Sign Up

Dave's Travel Corner

Seeing the World One Step at a Time

  • Home
  • Blog
  • Guides
  • Journals
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Links
  • Interviews
  • About

journals

Visitor submitted travel journals. Submission guidelines


Thailand Vies to Become Global LGBTQ4GF150™ Capital

June 15, 2026 by Ben BarteeLeave a Comment

Originally published via Armageddon Safari:

One would hope this is just about drawing more tourism dollars, one of the major economic engines of the country — and yet, when the social engineers who pimp globo-homo race communism get involved, there’s always some darker ulterior motive afoot.

Via Bangkok Post (emphasis added):

“The Bangkok Pride Parade is scheduled for May 31 as Thailand bids to host World Pride 2030.

One of the region’s major Pride parades is set to take place on Silom Road under the theme “Patch the World with Pride”, conveying a message of peace and inclusivity amid global conflict, Bangkok Pride organisers said at a press conference on Thursday on the upcoming Bangkok Pride Festival 2026…

The organisers said the first parade in 2022 drew about 20,000 participants, with numbers rising to 100,000 in 2023, 250,000 in 2024 and 350,000 in 2025.

This year, they expect half a million participants from around the world to join the march.

The parade and festival events this year will also showcase Thailand’s readiness to host World Pride 2030, with Bangkok competing against Barcelona and London.”

As my friend and colleague, Nicholas Creed, and I discussed in the context of this tranny expo, the promoters could have chosen from thousands of model-caliber ladyboys for the Pride™ promotional material.

Alas, they instead opted for this gaggle of fuglies, having seemingly gone out of their way to locate and recruit the only fat ladyboy in all of the country.

Because, as explored at length previously, ugliness is the new Western aesthetic — a tactic employed to demoralize you.

That’s how you know some Western NGO is calling the shots on this one.

(Unlike Western trannies, who deliberately turn themselves into repulsive beasts with tasteless tattoos and twenty facial piercings and BMIs of 40+, Thai ladyboys actually make a concerted effort to make themselves attractive, which includes, in the aesthetic domain, not being gluttonous slobs. In addition to being naturally slender people, it also helps with their weight management that a lot of them, as explored in groundbreaking guerilla journalism in my expat memoir, Broken English Teacher: Notes From Exile, supplement their nightlife with methamphetamine, or “ya ice,” as it’s called.)

Thailand was a Sodom and Gomorrah wonderland, in the best sense of the term, long before the Western social engineers descended on Thailand with their lengthy acronyms for marginalized peoples and grievance politics.

The ladyboys were doing fine.

The kids were alright.

Everything was, a few cases of AIDS here and there aside, okay.

But the Rainbow Mafia people just can’t leave well enough alone.

What they’re all about, obviously, whether they’re conscious of their participation in the project or not, is tearing apart the fabric of society so that Thailand, like all the nations of Earth, can be rolled into their globalized, pan-optican Beast system.

These same entities have been quietly at work trying to overthrow the Thai monarchy — a truly beloved institution by the people — for years, most recently with the CIA-backed opposition party Future Forward and astroturfed color revolution protests that erupted all around Bangkok in the late 2010s and early 2020s.

Which, to be honest vexes me, in that, one the one hand, I am reflexively, as a true American in spirit, opposed in principle to the concept of a monarchy, in which one human is vested with the status of a god on Earth and — at least until relatively recent reforms that have rendered many rulers, include the Thai royal house more ceremonial and less endowed with official governmental power — the power of life and death over his subjects.

On the other hand, anyone who follows this stuff can see what dystopia awaits on the other side should the Thai monarchy (and other institutions) lose their stature, which is, again, globo-homo race communism and all of the deracination and immiseration that it entails.

Maybe this is one of those rock-and-hard-place kind of things.

Related posts:

A Surprise Weekend in Glorious Budapest 10 Best Things to do in Jaisalmer: A Golden Oasis in the Thar Desert Village Updates, Thailand Art, Beauty, History, and Cuisine on the English Riviera Bangkok, Thailand – Temples & Shrines

Filed Under: Asia · Tagged: Africa Safari, Bangkok Thailand, Expatriate, Festival, London, Nightlife, Spain, Thailand

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Want an avatar to show with your comments? Get a free Gravatar

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Dave's Wines Logo

The Official Wine Club of
the Napa Wine Project!

Your personal membership to the
finest Napa Valley artisan wineries.
Learn More
Follow @DaveDTC

Get FREE Email Updates ▶

Categories

Journals — Home

  • Africa
  • Antarctica
  • Asia
  • Australia
  • Caribbean
  • Europe
  • Middle East
  • North America
  • South America
  • South Pacific
  • Other

Latest Posts

  • Why Corregidor Island Deserves a Place in a Deeper…
  • Kisoro Art Island Officially Launches as a New Cul…
  • 5 Extraordinary Wildlife Destinations for Nature L…
  • Thailand Vies to Become Global LGBTQ4GF150™ Capita…
  • Nina Karnikowski, Australian Travel Writer, Author…

Explore

  • Above the Clouds
  • Guides
  • Highlight of the Month
  • Interviews
  • Journals
  • Press Releases
  • Videos

Prepare

  • Book Reviews
  • Pack List
  • Quiz: Geography
  • Quiz: Travel
  • Tour Booking
  • Travel Insurance
  • Travel Products

Share

  • Contribute
  • Forums
  • Links
  • Photos

About

  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Contributors
  • Email Dave
  • Media Coverage
  • Media Kit
Hi I'm Dave. After a life changing trip in 1996, I began this site as a creative outlet to educate, inspire and share travel experiences. Read more...
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • Vimeo
  • YouTube

Return to top of page
Copyright © 1996–2026 Dave's Travel Corner · All Rights Reserved · Log in

7ads6x98y