
Forward (excerpts)
The historian's first task is finding the evidence. Documents, letters, memoirs, interviews, pictures, movies, novels, or poems can provide facts and clues. Then the historian questions and compares the sources. There is more to do than in a courtroom, for hearsay evidence is welcome, and the historian is usually looking for answers beyond act and motive. Different views of an event may be as important as a single verdict. How a story is told may yield as much information as what it says.
Along the way the historian seeks help from other historians and perhaps from specialists in other disciplines. Finally, it is time to write, to decide on an interpretation and how to arrange the evidence for readers.
Khmer folks must stop faking documents, doctoring pictures and falsifying facts. I am tired of seeing you folks cut and paste picture of Mr. Hun Sen bowing low to Vietnamese as well as making his wife's legs spreading out in offending pose.
ReplyDeleteThat's why no International group or body wants to help the opposition. They prefer Mr. Hun Sen who are more serious and stable. Mr. Hun Sen is winning big, he does not need to resort to lying, cheating like the opposition.
And you folks must stop insulting United Nations. Last time, UN came with the official map to compare, CNRP was a no-show despite repeated invitation. The moment UN left, CNRP immediately accused UN as liar, then showed a new map found in New York library.
UN will never want to help CNRP ok?