The Key To Burma's Woes: Excessive Tea Consumption
As of 2002, roughly a tenth of a percent of Burma's 47 million people had access to television channels other than the state-run MRTV. The powers that be have deemed this too many:
Burma's military government has unexpectedly raised the annual fee for television satellite dishes in an apparent attempt to block public access to outside broadcasts.
The massive price hike was discovered when residents went to renew their licenses Wednesday. They were told the annual fee had increased from about $5 to nearly $800.
Subtle! Since no normal person could afford satellite TV even before the government fees became multiples of the average annual salary, most people who watch do so from tea shops or other public spaces. Reports The Irrawaddy:
Rangoon's mayor, Brig-Gen Aung Thein Lin has announced a cutback in the number of restaurant and tea shop licenses to be issued in 2008, reportedly because he believes people waste too much time and money in them.
The cutback was reported by a Rangoon journal, which quoted the killjoy mayor as saying: "There will not be any improvement for the people as long as there are so many tea shops in the city, so we have stopped issuing licenses to open more."
As one Rangoon journalist points out, the tea shops being targeted happen to be the ones with satellite dishes.
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Just imagine what we could accomplish if all this effort put into oppression were used for something useful or positive (often both)...
Once again, economic government powers become a back door for violating civil liberties.
Just imagine what we could accomplish if all this effort put into oppression were used for something useful or positive (often both)...
Hahahahahahah hahaha ahah oh my
jtuf, I believe your conjunction of the words "back door" and "violating" in connection with this abuse are fully justified.
Hey! Ease off on the Mayor! It is well known that tea is a diuretic.
Obviously people were pissing away too much time.
"There will not be any improvement for the people as long as there are so many tea shops in the city, so we have stopped issuing licenses to open more."
The beatings will continue until morale improves.
Darn, Ken, you beat me to it.
Are the leaders of Burma all bad?
I'm mean, for instance, do they provide universal health care?
If so, then they are ok in my book.
There's always the Boston Harbor precedent.