In contemporary Thai politics, salim (Thai: สลิ่ม, pronounced [sā.lìm]) is a Thai slang referring to people who are sceptics of democracy and supports the military's involvement in politics.[1][2] Politicist Surachart Bamrungsuk saw salims as representatives of right wing middle class.[3] The term initially referred to the "multicoloured shirts" as a reference to the colourful Thai dessert sarim and was considered by some as a pejorative.[4] It later included other people outside the "multicoloured shirts" as well.[2][5] The term has been used on mainstream media by 2011.[6] In late February 2020, the term gained popularity following the Thai Constitutional Court's order to disband the pro-democracy Future Forward Party. Students, seeing the order as a political abuse, began to use hashtags including the term salim as their online activism against the ruling.[1]
Thailand in 2005-2010 saw two main political sides either supporting or opposing then prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra. The two identified themselves by their shirt colours, nominally; the yellow shirts (anti-Thaksin) and the red shirts (pro-Thaksin). In 2010, a new political group Network of Citizen Volunteers Protecting the Land was formed[7] and identified as the "multicoloured shirts" to distinguish it from the aforementioned two.[8] Some netizens later called the group salim after Thai dessert sarim which is known for its colourfulness. The term is believed to be first used on Thai web-board Pantip.com.[9]
The term has always been a topic of various definitions and studies socially, politically, philosophically, and economically.[10]
In 2010, Thatsana Thirawatphirom described that some of the shared traits in definitions of salim include ultra-royalism, ethical, being educated but only believe in what was thought in the curricula, highly cynical but gullible when it comes to people who are seemingly knowledgable, being a strong follower of politics news and see Thaksin Shinawatra as a long-time threat to Thai politics, being bourgeois and trand-settlers, and highly hypocritical.[10]
In 2011, Faris Yothasamuth describe the uniqueness of salims as being the Thaksin-haters, monarchists, pro-military, democracy skeptics, lacked of reasoning, and deludingly higher than others.[2][11]
Since the 2020 Thai protests, the term has turned derogatory.[12][13] It has since been used to refer to those who are ultraconservative, ultra-royalist,[14] and pro-Prayut cabinet.[15][16]
Prior to 2020 protests, the term was sparsely used by some writers, journalists, and academics including Nidhi Eoseewong[17] and Kham Phaka.[18]
In late February 2020, the term gained popularity following the Thai Constitutional Court's order to disband the pro-democracy New Future Party. Students, seeing the order as a political abuse, began to use hashtags including the term salim as their online activism against the ruling.[1] Some of them include "#BUกูไม่เอาสลิ่ม" (Bangkok University [BU] don't want salims),[5] "#ราชภัฏอยากงัดกับสลิ่ม" (Rajabhat universities want to fight with salims),[19] "#KUไม่ใช่ขนมหวานราดกะทิ" (Kasetsart University [KU] is not salim).[20] In 29 February, a channel SalimVEVO released the parody song named du salim (ดูสลิ่ม, lit. looking like a salim) with the lyrics beginning with "[salims are those who] love the specially tailored laws" on YouTube.[21]