Tuesday, October 06, 2020

Donald Trump’s narcissism betrays a fragile ego lashing out in rage

The popular notion that narcissists are endowed with an extraordinary reservoir of confidence, self-importance and unconditional self-regard is mistaken

Narcissists like Trump try to mask their shortcomings and constantly attack others to protect their own fragile egos from being exposed and collapsing


Bertie Wai Published: 3 Oct, 2020

Illustration: Craig Stephens

The fiery US presidential debate between President Donald Trump and Joe Biden set the internet ablaze with criticism. The debate was described as chaotic, messy and a national embarrassment. CNN’s Jake Tapper summed up the debate in a colourful analogy: “That was a hot mess inside a dumpster fire inside a train wreck.”

Negative reviews rained on Trump’s self-congratulating parade, criticising him as a bully for bulldozing Biden and steamrollering Chris Wallace, the moderator of the debate. The 90-plus-minute barrage of personal attacks, insults, interruptions and incoherence was often credited to Trump’s lack of integrity, intelligence and decorum.
Mary Trump, a clinical psychologist and Donald Trump’s niece, wrote the book
Too Much and Never Enough which gave an insider’s view of how family influences helped shape Donald Trump. She said her uncle’s “debate performance was a grotesque combination of lies, racism, breathtaking callousness, and threats against our democracy”.

One of the labels mental health professionals often ascribe to Donald Trump is narcissism. In fact, the extensive broadcast of Trump’s ruthless thoughts and reckless behaviour has raised such alarm that many psychiatrists and mental health professionals in the United States are warning about the dangers of Trump’s narcissistic personality disorder (NPD).

This is exceptional because it flies in the face of the American Psychiatric Association’s (APA)
Goldwater Rule, which prohibits psychiatrists from diagnosing or commenting on the mental health of public figures without examination and consent.

There is an ongoing debate in the psychiatric community whether the Goldwater Rule should still be observed at an unusual time like this, when the unprecedented hazards that a commander-in-chief’s detrimental mental health condition can pose to national welfare and public safety are no longer contained within a reality TV show.

What is a narcissist? A common understanding is someone who is grandiose, entitled and lacks empathy. These descriptions fit what we often see on TV, where Trump never gets tired of reiterating he is the best, greatest and most presidential-est and is often portrayed as caring for no one but himself. Trump’s own sister Maryanne Trump Barry is known to have said, “Donald‘s out for Donald. Period.”

One might see a narcissist as someone who is endowed with an
extraordinary reservoir of confidence, self-importance and unconditional self-regard.

One could imagine a narcissist as basking in the blessed haven of an inflated ego under the eternal sunshine of gratifying thoughts about one’s greatness. Snow White’s evil queen comes to mind: “Mirror, mirror, on the wall, of course I am the prettiest of all!”

Those who work with NPD in a clinical setting are familiar with a psychological reality that is in stark contrast to the common myth. The psychological structure responsible for NPD is actually a very fragile ego. Because it is too painful to get in touch with such fragility, the narcissist goes to extreme lengths to banish any inkling of their own imperfections.
Mary Trump had this to say about her uncle: “Donald’s ego has been and is a fragile and inadequate barrier between him and the real world, which, thanks to his father’s money and power, he never had to negotiate by himself.

“Donald has always needed to perpetuate the fiction my grandfather started that he is strong, smart and otherwise extraordinary, because facing the truth – that he is none of those things – is too terrifying for him to contemplate.”

If it is too terrifying to contemplate one’s lack’s of extraordinary qualities, why can’t one just decide to not face it? Problem solved, right? Not so fast. Our psychology operates on different levels.

Even though we might be somewhat successful at times at shutting out an
inconvenient aspect of reality, we are still aware of it on a deeper level. This is one of the reasons material we don’t want to deal with in waking life shows up in our dreams in disguised forms.

The mirror that reveals Snow White as the prettiest of all is mirroring back a view the evil queen is too terrified to contemplate: she is not, in fact, the prettiest of all. Mary Trump had something similar to say of Donald Trump, who “began to believe his own hype, even as he paradoxically suspected on a very deep level that nobody else did”.



This is the plague of narcissism. Narcissists are persecuted by a fragile, impoverished ego; the only recourse to avoid the painful realisation of their fragility is to continuously inflate the ego as a countermeasure to keep their fragile ego from collapsing.

When the mirror on the wall sends back a view that challenges the evil queen’s inflated sense of her prettiness, she responds with a murderous rage. This is not an uncommon response from a narcissist – any threat to their sense of superiority will be
met with rage.

Mary Trump observed that, “Donald met any challenges to his sense of superiority with anger, his fear and vulnerabilities so effectively buried that he didn’t even have to acknowledge they existed.”

Trump wants no rule changes after chaotic debate, declares himself winner
2 Oct 2020


It sounds like a tragedy that, “there would be no love for Donald at all, just his agonising thirsting for it. The rage, left to grow, would come to overshadow everything else”.

Donald Trump’s rage whenever challenged is as predictable as 1+1=2. The president said so himself on Twitter: “When someone attacks me, I always attack back...except 100x more. This has nothing to do with a tirade but rather, a way of life!”

The psychological reality a narcissist has to contend with is very far from a blessed haven of warm and fuzzy feelings for oneself. It is a psychological warfare that has no place for peace because one has to keep up the attacks on others to protect one’s fragile ego from being exposed and collapsing.



Dr Bertie Wai is a bilingual clinical psychologist at Beautiful Mind Therapy and Family Services in Central. She provides therapy to children, teens, adults and couples, as well as parenting consultation.
Trump’s Covid-19 diagnosis sparks worries in Asia – and the headline ‘Life’s a bleach’

Asian governments are worried about a possible leadership vacuum in the White House if the US President falls seriously ill or there is a delay in the election

Newspapers across the region splashed Trump’s diagnosis across their front pages with one West Australian tabloid using the headline ‘Life’s a bleach’



Kok Xinghui and Dewey Sim in Singapore
Published: 3 Oct, 2020


US President Donald Trump disembarks from the Marine One helicopter as he arrives at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on Friday following his diagnosis with coronavirus. Photo: EPA

US President Donald Trump’s Covid-19 diagnosis on Friday has sparked concern across Asia about the possibility of the US election in November being delayed and a leadership vacuum in the White House if he falls seriously ill.

The US has never delayed an election before and the decision lies with Congress, but analysts say given the partisan divide, it seems unlikely that Republicans and Democrats would be able to come to an agreement on postponing the election date.

In South Korea, the administration of President Moon Jae-in, is probably preparing a Plan B for Seoul-Washington relations in case Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden wins the upcoming election, said Choi Kang, vice-president of the Asan Institute for Policy Studies in Seoul.

Trump’s illness would affect the presidential election and this would might influence the US approach to North Korea, said Choi.


“For the Moon administration, the Trump administration may look better when it comes to dealing with the North,” Choi said. Moon has been pushing for greater inter-Korean engagement but has faced political fallout at home after a recent incident where troops from the North found an unarmed man from the South floating in their waters and killed him.

Joseph Liow, an international affairs analyst and dean of the Nanyang Technological University’s College of Humanities, Arts and Social Science in Singapore, said Trump’s illness “makes an already uncertain future even more uncertain”.

Governments have consulted constitutional experts to ask what would happen to the election if Trump cannot recover in time, or if his condition worsens.

US President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump test positive for Covid-19

Mustafa Izzuddin, a senior international affairs analyst at management consultancy firm Solaris Strategies Singapore, said a delay in the November 3 poll was something Asian governments would frown upon, and that leaders in the region would want to know if the elections would go on smoothly.

“Asia prefers to know who’s in the White House so they can deal with the person accordingly,” he said.

Besides this, Trump’s diagnosis had no “drastic impact on Asia”, he added.

“Trump has been quite eccentric. So, in a very crude sense, I don’t think Asia would be bothered by what happens to him.”

Hikmahanto Juwana, an international relations professor at the University of Indonesia, said the US president’s ailment was likely to have less of a direct impact on Southeast Asian countries but could be a cause for concern in Singapore, which as a “close ally” of Washington, “needed to have certainty” about the US leadership.

‘We feel sorry for decent Americans’: election debate bewilders Asian viewers
1 Oct 2020


Hoo Chiew Ping, international and strategic relations expert from the National University of Malaysia said while people were still trying to understand the implications of the news, the most immediate questions had to do with governance in the US and the election.

These included whether Trump could still make decisions and run the country, or whether he would blame China even more, or if Vice-President Mike Pence would end up being the Republican candidate if Trump was not able to run.

“If he recovers well (which is most likely the case), would this mean the rhetoric that he’ll launch is likely to sway in his favour, or the reverse could happen?” he asked.

“There’s so much polarising sentiments being expressed online that they cloud our judgment about the likelihood of this outcome. There’s only so much we can tell by observing from afar.”

The West Australian’s cover featured a photograph of Trump along with the headline ‘Life’s a bleach’. Photo: Handout


Mustafa, the analyst based in Singapore, said Asian governments seemed eager to have Biden, the former vice-president during the Obama administration, in the White House, as Trump “has not really been keen on Asia”.

Analysts had earlier cast doubt on Trump’s commitment to the region and his absence last November from the East Asia Summit – a key regional forum attended by the 10
Asean countries and the bloc’s eight key trading partners – had been criticised.

Dylan Loh, assistant professor of public policy and global affairs at Nanyang Technological University, felt that the “best outcome” would be for Trump to make a speedy recovery.

“I think of greater concern would be the uncertainty that may arise if a leadership vacuum appears but that is of course premature given that Trump has stressed repeatedly that it is business as usual with him in charge,” he said.


The front page of The Japan Times. Photo: Handout

While Asian governments can only wait and see what happens, ordinary citizens have been searching for more details on the fallout of Trump’s illness, especially with more White House aides, members of the press pool and senators who attended an event last week, where Trump announced the nomination of Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court testing positive.

According to Google Trends, searches for “Trump” peaked across the region on Friday, from Japan to Thailand and Vietnam to Malaysia, soon after the president announced that he and first lady Melania were down with the coronavirus. Hashtags including #TrumpHasCovid dominated Twitter.

The stunning news was also splashed on the front pages of Asian newspapers on Saturday morning.

The Straits Times reported that Trump’s illness has thrown the presidential polls into disarray. Photo: Handout

Singapore’s The Straits Times wrote that the news had thrown the looming US presidential elections “into disarray”, while Indonesia’s The Jakarta Post and The Japan Times carried sober headlines on Trump’s infection.

Taiwan’s edition of tabloid Apple Daily splashed a picture of Trump across the front page, saying the news had shocked the world.

In Australia, the Perth-based tabloid The West Australian’s cover featured a photograph of Trump along with the headline “Life’s a bleach”, with sub-headings pointing out that Trump had tested positive for the virus that he “repeatedly played down” and it was only five months ago that he had “suggested ingesting bleach as a miracle coronavirus cure”.

Additional reporting by John Power and Tashny Sukumaran


Kok Xinghui is a journalist based in Singapore, covering breaking news, politics, economy and health and social issues in the city state for the SCMP. She previously worked for The Straits Times and Today.

Dewey Sim is a reporter for the Asia Desk, covering Singapore politics, economy, diplomacy as well as Sino-Singapore ties. Dewey graduated from the Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information. He began contributing to the Post in 2019, before joining the staff in August, 2019.
Trump ‘brought Covid-19 upon himself’, Japan business lobby chief says

Hiroaki Nakanishi said the US president did not take enough precautionary steps against the coronavirus

Trump has been treated at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center near Washington since Friday



Kyodo Published: 5 Oct, 2020

Supporters of Donald Trump rally outside Walter Reed Medical Center in Bethesda, where the US president is being treated for Covid-19. Photo: AFP

US President Donald Trump, in hospital for treatment of Covid-19, did not take enough precautionary steps against the coronavirus and brought it upon himself, the head of Japan’s biggest business lobby Keidanren said on Monday.

“I believe he must have been careless. In a sense, he had it coming,” Hiroaki Nakanishi, chairman of the Japan Business Federation, said during an online press conference, noting that Trump was not seen wearing a face mask when attending large gatherings.
Last week, 

Trump and first lady Melania tested positive for the virus.

Trump, 74, has been treated at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center near Washington since Friday with only a month to go until the US presidential election in early November.

Before he contracted the virus that has claimed the lives of over 1 million people globally, he repeatedly played down its risks and ditched wearing face masks. In the US alone, over 200,000 people have died, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

With the spread of coronavirus infections yet to be contained, “We will have to live with the novel coronavirus for a while,” Nakanishi said online from the hospital where he has been receiving treatment for lymphoma.
Engagement with the Vatican must not be squandered by Beijing

Rapprochement with the Holy See will prove that the communist central government can be a trustworthy partner with major religious authorities around the world



SCMP Editorial Published: 4 Oct, 2020


Pope Francis celebrates Mass in the crypt of the Basilica of St. Francis, in Assisi, Italy on Saturday. Photo: Vatican Media via AP

Beijing and the Vatican are ready to renew a deal on the appointment of Catholic bishops in China. Extending the same terms as the agreement they reached two years ago, both sides are wise to reach out to each other at a time of international turmoil and uncertainty.

Pope Francis’ rapprochement will help improve the position and status of all Catholics in China. Beijing, meanwhile, has much to gain with a friendly state with such spiritual authority. The Holy See has shown courage in resisting unprecedented pressure from Washington and was right to have refused a meeting with US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo ahead of the US election.

America’s top diplomat, who is the most senior Washington official to be so openly hostile to China, has tried to convince the Vatican to scrap the deal and instead to attack the country on human rights and treatment of ethnic minorities. It is unheard of for a top US official – or any senior Western official – to be so open in pressuring the pope, and is another sign of Pompeo’s diplomatic overreach.

Given the Vatican’s commitment in the past two years, Beijing must realise by now that Francis is someone they can do business with and trust. There has been justifiable criticism that the Chinese side has been slow in implementing the full terms of the deal, the details of which have never been published.

The Vatican's Secretary of State, Italian Cardinal Pietro Parolin meets US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Thursday. Photo: Vatican Media via AFP

Open engagement with this most sensible and courageous of popes is an opportunity that Beijing must not squander. At a time when Beijing is fighting on so many international fronts, rapprochement with the Holy See will not only be a big score but also prove that the communist central government can be a trustworthy partner with major religious authorities around the world. It will also vindicate the pope’s wise commitment to China.

Critics of the Chinese-Vatican deal almost always overlook that fact that Francis is continuing a long-standing policy that predates his office.

The Vatican has long had similar agreements with the governments of Laos and Vietnam to agree on mutually acceptable bishops for selection. It is simply not the case that Beijing is demanding an exception when other governments comply with the Vatican’s choices.

Pompeo gets Italian promise on 5G security but fails on Vatican-China deal
2 Oct 2020


The Second Vatican Council marks a pivotal reform period in the 1960s. A key document is Christus Dominus, which is the Council’s Decree on the Pastoral Office of Bishops. For the first time, it requests “the civil authorities … voluntarily to renounce the above-mentioned rights and privileges [that is, the selection of bishops] which they presently enjoy by reason of a treaty or custom.”

Not all governments have volunteered. Hence with countries such as Laos, Vietnam and China, the Vatican must pursue and sustain diplomatic engagement, to guarantee the welfare and rights of the faithful in those countries.




SCMP Editorial
Editorials represent the views of the South China Morning Post on the issues of the day.

Hong Kong madam raked in HK$31.5 million profit during nine-year run operating prostitution ring out of Mid-Levels flat with help of domestic workers

But Heidi Wong’s two helpers earned just HK$1,000 a month for their part in the scheme, which used fake images to lure customers

Undercover police busted the ring after arranging a series of liaisons in 2018; sexual services were typically offered starting at HK$6,000

Jasmine Siu Published:  5 Oct, 2020

The District Court on Monday heard that Heidi Wong’s sex syndicate pulled in more than HK$30 million during it’s nine-year run. Photo: Nora Tam

A Hong Kong housewife and her domestic helpers operated a sex syndicate for nine years out of a Mid-Levels residence, raking in profits of up to HK$31.5 million (US$4.1 million), the District Court heard on Monday.

Heidi Wong Pui-ting, 68, admitted to enlisting the help of Filipino domestic workers Jo-an Evera Palpal-Latoc, 42, and Jeanette Villaflores Gallego, 47, to operate the syndicate, which saw her pimp women for sex through six websites that advertised using fake images.

The operation came to light in 2018 after four undercover police officers posed as customers and made multiple calls to the mobile phone numbers listed on the sites between April 16 and May 15 of that year, prosecutors said.

Heidi Wong’s flat in Hong Kong’s Mid-Levels neighbourhood was secretly running a prostitution business worth millions for nearly a decade. Photo: Google

The officers were then connected to Palpal-Latoc or Gallego, who sent them pictures of women from whom they could choose, offering sexual services at negotiable prices based on a standard rate of HK$6,000 when paid in cash, or HK$7,080 via credit card. The difference was attributed to credit card company charges, which, in fact, added just 3 per cent to each transaction.

Prosecutor Andrew Raffell said the officers then selected partners and checked into different hotels, where the sex workers would then visit and offer their services.

Payment was made directly to the women, with Wong pocketing half the fee and offering a small percentage – about HK$1,000 – to each of her two helpers every month.

Three of the sex workers, two Russian passport holders and a Venezuelan, were arrested during the final operation on May 15 for breaching their conditions of stay.

Sex syndicate smuggled women from mainland China, used Hong Kong hotels as base: police
22 Aug 2020


On that same day, police raided Wong’s flat, located at Tavistock II, Tregunter Path, and arrested her along with the two domestic workers.

Officers also seized 17 ledgers along with various documents, phones, computers, credit card imprinters and blank invoices.

Ten of the ledgers, which recorded the dates of encounters, names of sex workers deployed, hotels and clients, and credit card details, showed net profits of up to HK$31.5 million. The remaining ledgers had fewer entries and registered HK$5.6 million in income.

Investigations showed one of the websites was registered in Hong Kong by Firstmount Investments, a local company with Wong and her number listed as contacts, and her residence as the billing address.

Five mobile phone numbers shown on the website were also registered by Firstmount, with all of their incoming calls automatically forwarded to three landline numbers registered by another local company, Vardenvale, at the same address.

Coronavirus: ‘I don’t want to infect my children,’ says Hong Kong sex worker
18 Apr 2020


Three bank accounts were used to handle the proceeds, which involved thousands of transactions, adding up to more than HK$48 million, which in whole or in part, directly or indirectly, represented proceeds of crime.

Case officers believed some 20 to 30 prostitutes were engaged each year, but the total number remained unclear, as the ledgers were believed to be incomplete and some workers were identified by multiple names.

Under caution, Palpal-Latoc told police she began answering calls, recording details of the transactions and arranging for the women to meet the clients, upon Wong’s instructions, a month after she started working as her domestic helper in April 2009.

Gallego was jailed for 10 months last October after pleading guilty to one count of conspiracy to live on the earnings of prostitution of others, an offence punishable by 10 years in prison.

On Monday, Wong and Palpal-Latoc pleaded guilty to the same charge, and each admitted to three counts of dealing with property known or believed to represent proceeds of an indictable offence, punishable by a term of 14 years.

Both women had no prior convictions.

Hong Kong sex gang used fake prostitutes to blackmail victims
17 Jul 2020


In mitigation, defence lawyer Charlotte Draycott SC revealed that Wong was once an escort herself, providing sexual services until her age made it difficult for her to continue, at which point she turned to helping friends find clients before starting this operation.

Draycott also claimed Wong, who insisted she was actually in her early 70s, contrary to police records, had not dealt with the business for “many years” because of her mental health, as she was struggling with depression and the onset of dementia.

The counsel argued that this was “a crime with no victim” as Wong had conducted “an honest and decent business” in plain sight, without devising any sophisticated scheme to hide the money, and engaged consulting adults, while pocketing HK$2.5 million a year.

“At no stage has she ever forced anyone to do anything,” Draycott said.

But counsel Mohammed Shah, for Palpal-Latoc, argued that the domestic worker, whose monthly salary was just HK$4,310, was a victim, as she had been told prostitution was legal and it would be alright for her to earn money on the side.

“[Wong] was the mastermind and the boss,” Shah said. “There was a gross breach of trust by [Wong] towards [Palpal-Latoc] by inviting, coaching, and getting [her] involved in the operation.”

District judge Amanda Woodcock will sentence both women on October 12.

Until then, Wong was remanded in custody, while bail was extended for Palpal-Latoc, who had already been remanded for eight months.


This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Housewife and two helpers ran sex ring, court told


Jasmine Siu is a reporter who covers Hong Kong courts and legal affairs at the Post.

For shame: Hong Kong again exposed for heartless way it treats foreign domestic workers after Covid-19 payout snub

Abused, disrespected, and treated shamefully. The lack of financial support for this segment of society highlights how little we actually care for the people who have allowed Hong Kong to be successful


Luisa Tam Published: 10:00am, 26 Sep, 2020

I have waited long enough, it’s time to speak an uncomfortable truth.
Once again, the Hong Kong government has chosen to perpetuate systemic discrimination in its latest round of Covid-19 relief measures.

This time round, it is giving a one-time payout of HK$10,000 (US$1,290) to non-permanent residents “in need” by way of a supposedly humanitarian move. However, this so-called compassionate act excludes the foreign domestic workforce of 400,000. How baffling.

The reason for extending the relief scheme is to aid newcomers, namely arrivals from mainland China who haven’t lived in Hong Kong for seven years to qualify for permanent residency, in a bid to acknowledge them as a part of the city’s fabric.

Welfare chief Dr Law Chi-kwong specifically pointed out that the government was obliged to help all who are “bona fide” residents. So, if that’s the case, what makes the foreign domestic workers not qualify as bona fide residents?


A domestic helper crosses the road with an elderly woman in Sai Ying Pun. Photo: Jonathan Wong

From this, is the government inferring they are not sterling members of our society because their contributions are negligible.

I beg to differ, because it’s not only far from the truth, it’s also insulting to this significant segment of our population.

These migrant workers contributed an estimated US$12.6 billion to our economy in 2018 alone, by freeing Hong Kong women from childcare and household responsibilities. And as a result, it has allowed tens of thousands of households to benefit from a dual income.

The presence of the migrant domestic workforce has many knock-on effects throughout the local economy and society.

First, it helps families earn a higher household income, and with more money, they can afford a better quality of life, and provide a better education for their children to help them secure a better future, which can indirectly benefit society as a whole.

It is utterly heartless for our government to say these workers haven’t contributed enough to the city to warrant help

And at the end of the day, how do we repay our benefactors? Shamefully, I would say.

First, we don’t give them a respectable wage; they earn a monthly salary of HK$4,630, but the minimum wage in Hong Kong is HK$37.5 an hour, and if we use that as a benchmark, a legal monthly wage for these migrant workers should be about HK$12,000, because they work at least 12 hours a day, six days a week.

We don’t bestow upon them the same right to be eligible for permanent residency after living here for seven years as we give other foreign employees.

We don’t give them the respect they deserve; in this day and age, we sometimes still see some places that implicitly don’t welcome migrant domestic workers. They are prohibited from using some public spaces and facilities like toilets.

Domestic helpers in Hong Kong pitch in to try and stop the spread of coronavirus in the city

Like in the aforementioned cash relief scheme, we don’t reciprocate and reward them for all the good they have done for our city.

Conversely, our government quite often turns a blind eye and allows unscrupulous employment agencies to exploit them, or employers to abuse them by making them work long hours with a lack of proper rest or holidays.

Foreign domestic workers are saviours wherever they go; just look at Singapore and Malaysia where they are commonly employed. They contributed US$8.2 billion to Singapore’s economy, and US$900 million to Malaysia’s in 2018.

They bring positive economic and social benefits to our city, and yet, they are often excluded financially and socially.

Hong Kong’s reputation as one of the world’s most expensive cities to live has also burdened migrant domestic workers with heavy debts that have accumulated over the course of their employment.

Helpers’ live-in rule in Hong Kong should be relaxed
25 Sep 2020


According to Justice Centre Hong Kong, a non-profit human rights organisation, eight in 10 migrant domestic workers in Hong Kong reported being in debt, compared to 34 per cent in Singapore, and 65 per cent in Malaysia.

Most of their debts are incurred because of recruitment costs, and the situation is particularly serious in Hong Kong. These workers often have to borrow money to cover these costs so they can work with the hope that if they stay long enough in their chosen city, they will be able to save and provide for their families back home after repaying the initial loans.

It is utterly heartless for our government to say these workers haven’t contributed enough to the city to warrant help. To be honest, it is the other way around; they have and continue to help our city to grow and flourish more than we have cared to reciprocate.

They are not just part of our city’s fabric, they are part of its foundation.

Migrant domestic workers have helped many families attain a more comfortable life and our city grow its economic prowess over the years. It’s time for us to make their lives a little bit better and the cash payout is a good starting point.

Luisa Tam is a Post correspondent who also hosts Cantonese-language video tutorials on Cantonese language that are now part of Cathay Pacific’s in-flight entertainment programme

Luisa Tamhas been a journalist for more than 30 years. She has held a variety of roles during her career, including working as a producer for NDR German TV, a media campaigner with Greenpeace, and as the deputy managing editor of Eastern Express. She previously worked at the Post from 1988 to 1990, before rejoining in her current role in 2015.

 

MORE TRUMP QUACKERY
HIS SO CALLED DOCTOR IS A BONE CRUNCHER,
A CHIROPRACTOR BY ANY OTHER NAME 

which may be why the media does not clarify
his lack of credentials for public health, 
or epidemiology 

Fake Medicine in the US Navy, say it ain't so, wait it is also practiced by former navy Captain Ron Hubbard.

Osteopathy
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the American medical practice of osteopathic physicians in the United States, see Osteopathic medicine in the United States.

For diseases of the bone, see bone disease and osteology.

Osteopathy

OMT technique for the treatment of impotence in the 1898 Osteopathy Complete manual
Alternative therapy
Benefits Placebo
MeSH D026301
ICD-10-PCS 7
ICD-9-CM 93.6

This article is part of a series on
Alternative medicine


General information[show]

Fringe medicine and science

Traditional medicine

Osteopathic medicine in the United States

Andrew Taylor Still (founder)

Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (DO)
Medicine
US Medical education
Schools
Physicians
Osteopathic Manipulative Medicine
AOA
AACOM
AAO
COMLEX
MD & DO Comparison
Specialty Colleges
AOA BOS


Osteopathy is a type of alternative medicine that emphasizes physical manipulation of muscle tissue and bones.[1][2] Practitioners of osteopathy are referred to as osteopaths.[3][4][5] Its name derives from Ancient Greek "bone" (ὀστέον) and "sensitive to" or "responding to" (-πάθεια).[6][7][8]

Osteopathic manipulation is the core set of techniques in osteopathy.[9] Parts of osteopathy, such as craniosacral therapy, have no therapeutic value and have been labeled as pseudoscience.[10][11] The techniques are based on an ideology created by Andrew Taylor Still (1828–1917) which posits the existence of a "myofascial continuity"—a tissue layer that "links every part of the body with every other part". Osteopaths attempt to diagnose and treat what was originally called "the osteopathic lesion", but which is now named "somatic dysfunction",[9] by manipulating a person's bones and muscles. Osteopathic Manipulative Treatment (OMT) techniques are most commonly used to treat back pain and other musculoskeletal issues.[9][12]

In the United States, the 21st century training of osteopathic physicians (who practice osteopathic medicine, not osteopathy) is equivalent to that of Doctor of Medicine (MD) physicians.[13][14] While osteopathic manipulation is still included in the curricula of osteopathic physicians, and is promoted as a unique aspect of DO (Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine) training, this has been described as nothing more than "'extra' training in pseudoscientific practices".[15] Osteopathic medical schools have been criticized as weaker in research than MD schools with regard to research and the understanding of scientific inquiry. In the US, graduates of osteopathic medical schools have the option to sit for both the osteopathic physician-specific COMLEX medical licensing exam and the general USMLE licensing exam.

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KENNEY'S ALBERTA MEME


 

In Thailand, ‘Egg Boy’ believers ask temple-dwelling spirit to grant their wishes

Hundreds of thousands of visitors are flocking to a temple in the country’s south to see if a mysterious child spirit can make their dreams come true

The popularity of ‘Egg Boy’ has been a boon to the local tourism industry but critics dismiss it as a religious fad designed to monetise superstition at a time of unrest


Jitsiree Thongnoi Published: 4 Oct, 2020

Believers pray to Ai Khai’s statue in the Wat Chedi temple. Photo: Facebook


Winning the lottery, finding a lost item, landing a promotion or finally closing a real estate deal: these are just some of the wishes that Thailand’s “Egg Boy” – a spirit said to reside in an ancient temple deep in the country’s south – has been asked to grant.

Ai Khai, as the spirit is known locally, has attracted almost 1 million visitors to his shrine at Wat Chedi temple in Nakhon Si Thammarat, 780km south of Bangkok, since Thailand emerged from its coronavirus lockdown in July, according to tourism authorities’ estimates.

The phenomenon coincides with a period of economic and political turmoil in Thailand. The government has been promoting domestic tourism to support an industry that is normally the backbone of the Thai economy but has been badly damaged by the pandemic.

Meanwhile, the capital has been rocked by student-led protests calling for political reform, including rewriting the constitution, holding new elections and curbing the influence of the kingdom’s monarchy.

Some analysts, as well as social media posters, have lamented the Egg Boy fad as a superstitious response to the unrest on both fronts.

Although the number of visitors to the shrine at Wat Chedi falls far short of the almost 40 million foreign tourists the country welcomed last year, the influx has turned the once-sleepy seaside town into a bustling tourist magnet, offering the industry as a whole hope of recovery.

Thailand has allowed no foreign visitors since it closed its borders to non-nationals in April but there are plans to allow a limited number of foreigners to return, starting in October.

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The government on Monday approved the entry of long-stay tourists and business travellers without a work permit, as well as holders of an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Business Travel Card from low-risk countries, a move welcomed by tour operators and hotels across Thailand.

This might be good news for the once booming tourism hotspots of Phuket, Krabi, Pattaya and Chiang Mai, but Nakhon Si Thammarat seems content to rely on the legions of locals coming to see Egg Boy – who apparently excels at generating revenue as well as granting wishes.

“We expect that by the end of September, 800,000 visitors will have made the trip here, garnering over 800 million baht [US$25.2 million] in revenue.” said Pitsinee Tatniyom, provincial director with the Tourism Authority of Thailand. “There have been some 400,000 visitors already in September alone.”

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Nakhon Si Thammarat “is being lit up”, she said, thanks in large part to the intertwining of religion and tourism in what she referred to as “faith marketing”. Whereas the province’s airports used to accept about a dozen flights each day from elsewhere in the country, that number rose to 50 by the end of September.

With about 10,000 visitors every day during the week, rising to 25,000 per day at the weekends, Wat Chedi has recorded a surge in revenue from donations and the sale of items such as Egg Boy amulets and pieces of holy cloth. Hundreds of people often queue through the night to get their hands on the items before they sell out.


Criticisms of the Egg Boy shrine include the questionable morality of exploiting people’s faith to make money. Photo: Facebook

Believers pray to the spirit’s statue in the temple and if their wish is granted, they usually return to perform kae bon, a thanksgiving ceremony which often involves firecrackers and more donations.

Even those who do not visit the shrine sometimes have their wishes granted, according to Benjapop Benjathammatorn, owner of the nearby Sichon Cabana beach resort.

“One of my customers lost a necklace at the beach and after praying to Egg Boy for help, the necklace was found the next morning,” he said.

The local tourism industry is thriving, with many businesses welcoming repeat customers as well as those who have been urged to visit by friends or relatives.

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Leng Khanom, who works at an Egg Boy amulet shop in Nakhon Si Thammarat, said the trinkets can fetch as much as 100,000 baht (US$3,155) depending when they were made – the oldest, dating back to 1983, are usually the most expensive.

According to local legend, the temple at Wat Chedi is hundreds of years old but it had been reduced to a pile of ruins until it was rebuilt about 60 years ago.

Egg Boy’s reputation has now grown to the point where a statue has been erected in other provinces and his amulets are also reproduced elsewhere, prompting the abbot of Wat Chedi in September to obtain the copyright for the various items the temple produces and sells.

One Twitter user asked: “Registering for Ai Khai copyrights means the spirit is completely commercialised. Shouldn’t the temple be scrutinised?”

Wat Chedi welcomes 10,000 visitors every day during the week and 25,000 per day on the weekends. Photo: Facebook

Other criticisms of the Egg Boy shrine include the questionable morality of exploiting people’s faith to make money, and the dismissal of the craze as mere superstition.

“#AiKhai says how desperate the people in this country are with the daily grind that they have to ask for money from leaves and trees,” another Twitter user wrote. “Is politics not involved?”

Phra Maha Paiwan Warawanno, a monk and social critic, said the Egg Boy fad will eventually fade. “This sort of popularity is superficial as we have seen from the previous phenomena in Thailand,” he said, pointing to other once fashionable items such as Jatukham Rammathep amulets, believed to provide protection and good fortune, or the Luk Thep baby dolls believed to be possessed by auspicious spirits.

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“It is human nature to want to have hope and holy items are an accessible source of hope. But in the long run, the roles of temples can be distorted. Temples should provide people with intellect and an ability to see things with reason.”

Pipad Krajaejun, a history lecturer at Thammasat University, noted that Egg Boy’s fame had coincided with the coronavirus pandemic “which caused the economy to crash and people to lose hope”.

According to Pipad, Ai Khai’s popularity reflects a society where wealth has grown increasingly concentrated among Thailand’s elite, curtailing the prospects of regular Thais.

“Thailand has to remodel its political and economic structure to allow people to acquire well-being and opportunity in order to be less attached to praying for wealth and materialism,” he said.