Woman fights back (video)

By Tino Kuis
Posted in Remarkable
Tags:
February 9 2022

ScreenshotFacebook

A young woman ate noodle soup in a restaurant late at night. A man approached her and asked if she would like to clink a glass with him. See declined. The man came back a moment later and threw a glass of beer over her. You can see what happened next in the video, which has already been shared more than 2 million times.

The man in a blue vest, the woman in the wet green dress.

The man and woman were both summoned to the police station and each was fined 1.000 baht. The media are very angry that the woman was also fined.

The woman is a kickboxing champion with a gold medal. The man worked at a well-known hotel and has since been fired. Here's the message in the Bangkok Post: https://www.bangkokpost.com/thailand/general/2261407/man-loses-job-for-beer-pouring-stunt

And here on the Thai Enquirer site:

Rejected would-be Casanova fired by luxury hotel after getting his butt kicked by Muay Thai champ

ขอชนแก้วหน่อย khoh chon kaew noi (tones: rising, middle, falling, low) 'Cheers!' Literally: 'Let's bump the glasses together!'

24 Responses to “Woman Fights Back (Video)”

  1. Erik says up

    What a piece of sadness, that spoiled little man! She should have kicked him a little harder for his cl.. from me.

    • Johnny B.G says up

      Do you know the background of this whole story? How black and white is everything?

  2. Jacques says up

    If no response to this piece yet, I'll take a guess.
    My vision of this event is based on myself, which is a way that I have been honoring all my life. Going out of your own strength.
    I believe that people should avoid violence to the utmost. I myself started martial arts at the age of 17, younger was previously prohibited and it is the moral duty of an athlete to keep his knowledge and skills in the situation that it is legally allowed. With like-minded people, in the gym, etc.
    The force majeure situations are of a different order and can of course be a reason to defend or attack. In my view, that was not the case. A well-trained person also has no need to show his qualities to his fellow human beings who are not as such capable. With this idea as a basis, the woman in question goes too far with her behavior. She was hurt by the glass of beer poured over her and damaged in her honor by the approach of the offending party. The rejection must have hurt the man in question and that is why he decided to take action. Both go too far and in the wrong as far as I'm concerned and deserve their punishment. Hopefully they will learn from this and stop this kind of behavior.

    • He says up

      Was that only allowed at 17 years old? I started Karate at 14 in the Netherlands a long time ago so I don't quite understand that.

      • Jacques says up

        I started in early 1973 at the age of 17 and it could (legally) have been 16, but certainly not 14. I also wanted to start at 15, but was not allowed and had to be patient. I can't make more of it. I have not kept track of when age limits have subsequently been legally extended in the Netherlands. Nowadays, people of all ages are doing their best to master the techniques. Beautiful to see, instilling discipline from an early age reduces the risk of the kind of behavior the lady displayed in the video. It is the strong shoes that can carry the wealth.

        • He says up

          In 1964 I started karate when I was 14. I was already on judo in the same sports complex and wanted to do karate, but that was not allowed until I was 14 years old. I also think half of my class was people around 15/16 years old so have no idea where you got this from.
          And with us there was indeed a lot of discipline, unsportsmanlike behavior on the mat was immediately punished by a sparring match with the sensei and you didn't get off without bruises.
          In addition to karate, my sensei also had fourth dan judo and Wim Ruska came to train there once a week for the Olympic Games, I also played with that but never won.

  3. Rob says up

    The tall one can take a few lessons with her. Look at those sanctions. Immediately fired.

  4. He says up

    A kickboxing champion should be able to control himself and not go on a rampage against someone who is not physically aggressive.

    • Ton says up

      I clicked wrongly. This was an example of “girl power” under the motto “som nam na”.
      What person thinks they have the right to treat a woman like that.
      Night out, hair and clothes under stinking beer.
      I completely agree with her. Too bad she got fined too.

  5. Peter (editor) says up

    My feeling says, good and fine that she stands up for herself. My mind says, she's too aggressive. The man does nothing else, but she continues to hit and kick. I'm glad she got fined too.

    • nick says up

      It is possible that the woman tried to seduce the man into aggression, so that she could have a reason to file a complaint with the police or provoke the police to intervene.
      And if she were injured in the process, it could have led to nasty criminal prosecution for the man.
      Fortunately, the man remained admirably calm and some bystanders had the greatest difficulty in containing the woman's aggression, which was difficult.
      But my first reaction was also 'well done', that woman does not need a confidant to tell her story about the man's misdeed.

    • RonnyLatYa says up

      Every story has at least 2 versions… it depends which version is told here

  6. Stefan says up

    It is wrong that the woman was physically aggressive. But given the degrading treatment, it is excusable. That woman feels punished twice: by beer and by fine.

  7. Rob V says up

    What a pathetic little guy! And that lady, yes, my feeling also says that you have to get back at such a “man”, and that could be a kick or a splash of drink in the face. But responding to aggression with aggression instead of de-escalating is not wise. I certainly hope that pathetic men (or women) learn a lesson from it and learn to deal with rejection normally. Unfortunately, that message will not reach everyone.

  8. YES says up

    I am surprised to read the above entries.
    The man throws the woman a glass of beer into her.
    She should have slapped him on the top of his mouth.
    That seems like an appropriate punishment. Totally incomprehensible
    that the woman will be fined.

    YES

  9. Marcel says up

    According to my wife via Thai social media, the man had already approached her that night when visiting a disco and received a rejection. Do you remember, gentlemen? If a woman says no, then it's no. But this gentleman also thought that a no from a woman should be ignored. I'm sorry he got hit. He gets away with that because a Thai man had pulled out a shotgun!

  10. Erik says up

    Women write here, don't they? Come on ladies, let's hear your vision! Otherwise it will be one sided.

  11. He says up

    Actually, the title of this story is wrong. The woman does not fight back because the man does nothing physically, all aggression comes from the woman. A slap with the flat of the hand would have been punishment enough.

    • Tino Kuis says up

      Really and truly? So if I throw a glass of beer over you with some accompanying swear words, you don't think that's aggressive? What would you call that? A joke?

      • He says up

        Most people will get it but apparently not all, so let me explain
        If someone throws a glass of beer on my head and I hit him on the face resulting in a broken nose, jaw or otherwise, you will be in court. The judge's argument will be that this is not self-defense, that you could have just left. Clearly?

        • Tino Kuis says up

          That's true. The extent to which the woman responds is certainly important. But the fact that the man does nothing physically and that all aggression comes from the woman is incorrect. The woman gives a few kicks and punches, the man doesn't seem very damaged, so...

    • Jacques says up

      There is only one who was fighting and that was the lady in question. Knowing what we know now, we know it was water, not beer, poured on her. The man in question had sacrificed too much to bacchus and may be of the opinion that this is a ground for exclusion from punishment. The drink in man does what it cannot resist. The punishment he received, namely the bruises from the kicking and the dismissal of his employer, do not compensate for the suffering the lady was inflicted, according to some. Incomprehensible, a little water that has long since dried up. I think this man has learned from it, but the lady who has to set a good example as a muy thai fighter and instructor, I have a completely different feeling about that. In the Netherlands we had Mr. Badr Hari, among others, who also showed his skills outside the dojo or ring. He did receive different treatment from the court, but it was a bit worse, admittedly.

      • He says up

        The lady was also stopped, Badr was not and she is of course much more violent, stronger.

  12. RonnyLatYa says up

    It would now be nice to read all these reactions that this set up game would be to launch her career or give her name recognition as a Thai Boxer… 😉
    What is a 1000 Baht fine in the advertising world?


Leave a comment

Thailandblog.nl uses cookies

Our website works best thanks to cookies. This way we can remember your settings, make you a personal offer and you help us improve the quality of the website. read more

Yes, I want a good website