Brook's side
International Regular
Nah, you'll have to educate me.Think carefully about the difference between the ex-pats who work in those countries vs. those in Cambodia you absolute moron.
Nah, you'll have to educate me.Think carefully about the difference between the ex-pats who work in those countries vs. those in Cambodia you absolute moron.
I have theory that he was an AI chatbot that was/is being piloted in this forum for some nefarious Psyops operation and that the finished form will be unleashed during the 2024 American election cycle.I think he should've just been continuously infracted for spam. It was an insane level of posting with about 90% being scorecard updates and cricbuzz stats/trivia. He racked up 2k+ posts in the short time he was actively posting.
The rest of the stuff like plagiarism, ugly thread titles, wrong threads in wrong subbies etc is meh. Weird that he didn't follow instructions, maybe he just didn't understand or something. Was he really in his 80s?
I wouldn't in the slightest. Any more than I would a team of 11 players of south asian heritage representing England.Next, he might question my West Indian-ness because I’m of Indian descent like Pooran, Chanderpaul, Sarwan.
let me tell you something. I’m 100% West Indian!
Hong Kong etc. is way more internationalised than Cambodia and it's easier to get by there not knowing a word of the local language, even given ex-pat enclaves or whatever. I know two people who lived in Cambodia for a couple of years teaching (arguably one of the few careers where you can actually get by knowing only English) and they seem to be able to speak basic Khmer. It's not some weird moon language that's impossible for people to learn, particularly people that you've seen in a cricket photo and automatically decided they couldn't possibly speak a word.So @RossTaylorsBox what's the key difference between expats in Hong Kong and GCC and these guys in Cambodia, which makes me a moron for missing, and which explains why they speak Khmer?
I've spent several months in Cambodia btw, and am almost certain I never heard a person of south asian heritage speak a word of Khmer, and I also know that there are expats who've been living there 15 years who don't speak Khmer. But if you can explain why these guys probably speak the lingo based on them not being in Hong Kong it'd be interesting to know.
Also, of course, if you can't tell me, then you owe me an apology.
Well there's your problem.right minded
Gall?????The gall to mock the ground that's used to play cricket in a place where the sport is in its infancy is just shocking really. How can any right minded cricket fan act like this?
When you called me a moron, you said that the expats were different, not the locals. But FYI, it's easy to get by in the cities and towns of Cambodia without a word of Khmer. Also FYI, there are expats live there for years without knowing the language.Hong Kong etc. is way more internationalised than Cambodia and it's easier to get by there not knowing a word of the local language, even given ex-pat enclaves or whatever. I know two people who lived in Cambodia for a couple of years teaching (arguably one of the few careers where you can actually get by knowing only English) and they seem to be able to speak basic Khmer. It's not some weird moon language that's impossible for people to learn, particularly people that you've seen in a cricket photo and automatically decided they couldn't possibly speak a word.
There used to be serious suggestions that we should get Chanderpaul as he has some Indian ancestry coz the ****er kept smashing us everytime we played.Next, he might question my West Indian-ness because I’m of Indian descent like Pooran, Chanderpaul, Sarwan.
let me tell you something. I’m 100% West Indian!
It's the Cambodia Board XI, which has previously played international friendlies. The photo is taken from the Wikipedia entry for the Cambodia cricket team.Again, that's not their cricket team, it's some tennis ball tournament. The actual team I think has two white dudes and the rest have desi sounding names.