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"I'm not asking for much," Chuvit called out as he wandered through neon-lit alleyways of Patpong, where go-go girls waved excitedly from heaving barroom doorways. "If you are a family of 10, just give me five votes!" Patpong, he said, is symbolic of the nation's hypocrisy: A part of society "which everybody outside Thailand knows
-- but no one (here) accepts." "No one accepts even that they have sex in Thailand, that they have a sex business," he said, shaking his head. "The Thai people always, you know, they always smile as you can see, but they never talk the truth." That's why one campaign poster shows a smiling, tie-sporting Chuvit proudly shaking the paw of his four-year-old white bull terrier, Moto Moto. Honesty, trustworthiness
-- "Why they have that in the dog," he asked, "and you don't have that in the politics?" Chuvit clearly relishes the role of maverick. He may be the only candidate to have tweeted a photo of himself "planking"
-- the Internet craze in which people lie face down in a public place and upload it online. His Rak Thailand ("Love Thailand") party has erected hundreds of placards in English so the rest of the world "can know what is happening" here. The signs say simply: "Against Corruption." Chuvit spent several years in the U.S while in his 20s, attending a string of colleges but graduating from none. Still, he garnered an appreciation of American-style capitalism, and a penchant for outspokenness. After returning home, he made a fortune during a late 1980s real estate boom. When a client took him to an upscale massage parlor, he had an epiphany. "I said `Oh wow, it's good!' It's like a Hugh Hefner: You know, surrounded by the beautiful girls, making money." In his heyday, Chuvit commanded half a dozen jacuzzi-filled pleasure palaces
-- Victoria's Secret, Honolulu Love Boat, Copa Cobana -- employing more than 1,000 women who lined up behind huge glass "fishbowls" with numbers pinned on skimpy dresses for customers to choose. He sold his slice of the sex business years ago, and says he's done with it for good. But when people ask about his former life, "I say yes ... I should go back to the massage parlors," he sighed. "Because that was better
-- cleaner than politics." In politics you have to "look smart, talk smart, but it's not good," Chuvit said. "This is real life, and the people in real life look like me."
[Associated
Press;
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