Here‘s a public service announcement against pornography currently running on TV in Thailand.
All posts in category Harry Nicolaides
Thailand’s anti-pornography campaign
Posted by acilius on February 27, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/02/27/thailands-anti-pornography-campaign/
Harry Nicolaides speaks
After the jump, two brief newspaper articles based on interviews Harry Nicolaides has granted since his release. Most interesting to me is this paragraph from the first article:
Harry admits that an article by him published in Eureka Street, a Melbourne based publication, alleging that Thai police turned a blind eye to the importation of child pornography from Burma, may have impacted on his situation, “It may have put me on the radar, I knew I was always provocative but at worst if anything at all happened I thought I would be deported, never jailed.”
Posted by acilius on February 25, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/02/25/harry-nicolaides-speaks/
New Harry Nicolaides Site

And now
Forde Nicolaides has launched a new website to publicize the case of his imprisoned brother Harry. The site includes a petition, a fundraising link, and contact information for Australian officials. I learned of it from an email sent to members of the Free Harry Nicolaides group on Facebook. The same email included a statement from Harry Nicolaides. What struck me about it was how much attention he paid to fellow prisoners of his who are suffering even worse deprivations than he is. Read it, after the jump.
Posted by acilius on February 3, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/02/03/new-harry-nicolaides-site/
Harry Nicolaides hopes for royal pardon
Latest newspaper report about Harry Nicolaides:
THE stress can be seen in Harry Nicolaides’ gaunt face as he leans towards the barred prison window and speaks of his hopes and fears.
“I am so jaded, so cynical,” says the Melbourne writer, hunching his shoulders. “I am placing my faith in my family, my girlfriend, the Australian Government and the reputation of the Thai king. The Australian Government is supporting a pardon for me. But I am gun-shy at the moment. It’s all so opaque.”
Sentenced on Monday to three years’ jail for writing three sentences about the Thai royal family in a novel that sold fewer than 10 copies, Nicolaides, 41, can now only hope for a pardon from Thailand’s King Bhumibol Adulyadej. There is no guarantee he will get one.
Read the rest in Australia’s The Age.
Posted by acilius on January 26, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/01/26/harry-nicolaides-hopes-for-royal-pardon/
More on the Harry Nicolaides Affair
In the 29 July, 2009 edition of Eureka Street, Australian writer Harry Nicolaides reported on a market at Tachilek in eastern Burma where child pornography is openly sold. The authorities in Burma and Thailand must know about this market; Mr Nicolaides certainly had no difficulty finding it. Yet, Mr Nicolaides writes, “unless you are a saffron-robed monk, you will not be searched on the way back across the border into Thailand.” Nicolaides’ report was reprinted in the December January issue of Chronicles (which I noted here.)
The Thai police have still done nothing about the trafficking of child pornography from Tachilek through their country. But let it not be said that they have simply been idle. No indeed. In August, four weeks after the publication of the report, they arrested the reporter. Monday, he was sentenced to three years in prison. The court did not of course say that Mr Nicolaides was being punished for exposing the Thai government’s complicity in brutal crimes against children the world over. Instead, the authorities cited a brief passage in an extremely obscure (sold only seven copies) novel Nicolaides self-published almost four years ago, claiming that the fictional character of a Crown Prince described there reflected badly on Thailand’s actual Crown Prince and thus violated the country’s strict laws against lese-majeste.
Here is an online petition asking for the release of Harry Nicolaides.
More information about the case, including links to several sites offering downloads of the novel which the Thai authorities cited as the cause of their action against Mr Nicolaides, can be found here.
On 24 September 2008, a friend of Harry Nicolaides posted a piece about Mr Nicolaides’ arrest. On 20 January 2009, the same friend posted about Mr Nicolaides’ plea and sentence; I commented on this latter post, bringing up Mr Nicolaides’ investigation into the child pornography industry and asking his friend whether he thought the prosecution might be the Thai government’s way of hushing that issue up.
Posted by acilius on January 23, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/01/23/more-on-the-the-harry-nicolaides-affair/
Harry Nicolaides

The man who told the truth
Recently, I posted on Australian writer Harry Nicolaides’ gut-wrenching expose of the complicity of the Thai and Burmese governments in the worldwide market for child pornography. Now, Harry Nicolaides is in a Thai prison. The official charge against him is that a novel he wrote and self-published in 2005, a novel which The Economist says sold “fewer than ten copies,” showed disrespect to Thailand’s Crown Prince, a man who is in fact never named in the novel. Here’s an article on the case from Melbourne’s The Age newspaper, and here’s one from The Sydney Morning Herald about an Australian senator who is calling for action to free Nicolaides.
Posted by acilius on January 23, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/01/23/harry-nicolaides/
New Year, Old Right
The latest issues of my two standard “paleocon” reads, The American Conservative and Chronicles, include fewer really noteworthy articles than average. The election of Mr O as president and a solidly Democratic Congress freed them to turn from the constant struggle to show how they differ from the Bush/ Cheney Right and toward standard-issue conservative territory, denouncing government spending, unconventional family structures, etc.
In The American Conservative, Daniel McCarthy argues that George McGovern’s 1972 presidential campaign triggered a transformation of the Republican Party by driving Cold War liberals into its ranks. Mary Wakefield reviews Richard Dowden’s Africa: Altered States, Ordinary Miracles, Wakefield reports that Dowden, the current director of the Royal African Society, is deeply pessimistic about western programs to aid Africa, but deeply optimistic about Africans’ ability to build a future for themselves if left alone.
Sheldon Richman offers a succinct explanation of the Austrian school of economics’ theory of malinvestment and uses this theory to explain the current financial crisis. David Gordon reviews a book by the most celebrated living opponent of the theory of malinvestment, Paul Krugman.
Jim Pittaway, licensed psychotherapist and friend of the late Michael Aris, applies his professional expertise and his personal animosity to Aris’ widow, Aung San Suu Kyi, to an analysis of western policy towards Burma. The professional expertise part is quite illuminating. Suggesting that we should view the Burmese regime’s relationship to its people as one of captor to hostage, he asks us to apply “the biggest rule of hostage crises: unless you can take him out right now, don’t threaten the perp.” Since the 1990 election, the West’s dealings with Burma have consisted primarily of a series of idle threats, and the hostages have paid the price.
Posted by acilius on January 9, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/01/09/new-year-old-right/