The Pros and Cons of Artificial Intelligence

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is certainly the future. It’s already proved invaluable in weather forecasting and providing data for medical professionals during surgical operations. AI’s ability to retrieve and evaluate data from multiple sources at speed outstrips anything the human brain can do.

A I is often praised for its ability to process vast amounts of data, generate insights, and even mimic creativity. Yet it also raises concerns about authenticity, empathy, and the risk of reducing human experience to algorithms.

The early detection of diseases like cancer is made possible by AI algorithms, which diagnose diseases by analysing complex sets of medical data. For example, the IBM Watson system might be used to comb through massive data such as medical records and clinical trials to help diagnose a problem.

On the other hand, the personal opinions and biases of the humans who “train” the AI bots can result in the scripts to which the bots have access to are not factual. AI’s customers are then given completely false information.

I use AI for research—it can be invaluable for that—but I always double-check alternative sources. An example of the danger of AI occurred during the writing of this post. I asked for the location of a hill-tribe church in the mountainous region of Chiangmai. It repeatedly gave me a location in Chiangmai city.

A human would have spotted that the very word “hill-tribe” would have meant the church would be in the mountains and not in an urban environment. But bots can’t question, “they” must accept what the human trainers have put in the databases.

Here’s a fairly balanced account of AI
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/applications-of-artificial-intelligence

An Interesting and Informative Piece by Lode Engelen

Lode has written about the Karen hill-tribe in Thailand, from both personal experience when visiting them and from AI research. The photo below is just one he took and I am indebted to Lode for allowing me to use it. It shows the long-neck women of a Karen village in Northern Thailand.

His photographs are professionally taken, and I recommend his website. www.lodeengelen.be for anyone interested in Thailand’s traditions.

A Christian Church in a Hill-Tribe Community in Northern Thailand

I visited a hill tribe village about 7 years ago with my French friends, they were of course initially interested in taking photo opportunities with the long neck girls. But then they saw the non-touristy side of their culture when we were invited to join in their Christian service and have a meal together afterwards.

For those Christian villagers, God is in the nature that is around them, and which that same God created.

Sometimes, people question how Christianity and Animism can co-exist. They see animism as superstition. But it isn’t. Animism is not mere superstition; it’s a real belief in the creator God.

Although not an easy concept for we Westerners to grasp, the English poet and hymn writer, Dorothy Francis Gurney (1858-1932), did write A clear expression of the link between God and Nature.

“You are nearer to God in a garden than anywhere else on Earth”.

Dorothy Gurney – Wikipedia

Introduction: The Karen People


The Merging of Christianity and Animism

Hill-tribes; Christian and Animist. The Karen people, living across the mountainous borderlands of Thailand and Myanmar, have long been associated with the “long-neck women”, their colourful woven textiles, and their rustic bamboo houses perched on hillsides.

The Karen are more than subjects of curiosity for the tourists wanting photo opportunities with them. Yes, they make money by allowing themselves to be photographed by camera-wielding tourists, but essentially the Karen hill-tribes are a poor people with strong cultural and religious beliefs in Animism.

The Karen left Tibet and China 2,000 years ago as refugees and settled in Myanmar (Burma). Around 1997, they again became refugees, fleeing from the brutal military campaigns and ethnic cleansing tactics of the Myanmar junta and the military, the Tatmadaw. There was limited support from neighbouring countries.

Many communities embraced Christianity through missionary contact in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, yet they did not abandon their animist traditions. Instead, they wove the two together into a distinctive spiritual fabric.

A Sunday service may include hymns sung in their native language or Thai, prayers to the Christian God, and rituals that honour the spirits of forest, river, and mountain. Far from contradiction, this blending reflects a world-view in which divine presence permeates nature.

During my visit, I witnessed this integration first‑hand. After the formal service, villagers spoke of God’s creation not in abstract theological terms but in relation to the trees, streams, and fields that sustained their lives. For them, animism is not superstition but recognition of the sacred in everyday surroundings.

Dorothy Francis Gurney’s famous line, “You are nearer to God in a garden than anywhere else on Earth,” resonates deeply here. The hill-tribe I and my French friends were fortunate to visit do not separate faith from environment; they experience the divine in the soil beneath their feet and the sky above their homes.


Tourist Exploitation and the ‘Long Neck’ Image

Tourism has brought both visibility and vulnerability to some hill-tribe communities. The most recognisable image is that of the so‑called “long‑neck women,” whose brass coils elongate the neck by pressing down the collarbone.

Originally, this practice carried cultural and symbolic meaning, linked to beauty, identity, and sometimes protection. Yet in many villages today, the rings have become a spectacle for visitors, marketed as exotic curiosities rather than respected traditions.

During my visit, music filled the bamboo church with a quiet dignity. Afterwards, we shared a simple meal of rice and vegetables. In that moment, the community revealed itself not as a tourist attraction but as a living culture, rooted in faith and hospitality.

My friends left with fewer photographs but a deeper respect.

On one hand, tourism provides income in areas where economic opportunities are scarce. Villages often rely on visitor fees and handicraft sales to support families. On the other hand, the constant gaze of outsiders is a problem.

Women wearing coils may feel pressured to maintain the practice for financial survival, even if younger generations question its relevance. The danger lies in culture being frozen for display, rather than allowed to evolve naturally.

Responsible tourism requires more than curiosity. It asks visitors to look beyond the brass rings, to listen to stories, to share meals, and to respect rituals. It means recognising that behind every photograph is a person whose life is shaped by faith, hardship, and resilience.

To see the hill-tribes only through the lens of exoticism is to miss their humanity. To engage with them as neighbours is to honour their dignity.


Life in Border Camps

For many families, life is not lived in the villages that tourists visit but in the sprawling refugee camps along the Thai–Myanmar border. These camps, established decades ago, were meant to be temporary shelters for those fleeing conflict in Myanmar.

Yet for thousands of hill-tribe people, they have become semi‑permanent homes, places where generations grow up without ever knowing the security of citizenship.

The camps are crowded, with bamboo huts pressed close together and narrow paths winding between them. Families often share small spaces, with limited access to clean water and sanitation. Food supplies depend heavily on international aid, and shortages are common.

Healthcare is minimal, with clinics struggling to meet the needs of malnourished children, pregnant women, and the elderly. In this environment, resilience is not a choice but a necessity.

Statelessness compounds the hardship. Without official identification, refugees cannot travel freely, seek formal employment, or access higher education. Young people grow up in limbo, their futures constrained by paperwork they do not possess.

Some attempt to leave the camps illegally to find work in Thai cities, risking arrest or exploitation. Others remain, caught between the hope of resettlement abroad and the reality of indefinite waiting.

Yet even in these conditions, community life persists. Children play football on dusty clearings, women weave traditional textiles, and elders tell stories of ancestral villages across the border. The spirit of hill-tribers endures, even when political borders deny them recognition.

The border camps symbolise both the resilience and the vulnerability of the people. They are places of survival, but also of stagnation. To understand hill-tribe culture fully, one must look beyond the tourist villages and into these camps, where the struggle for dignity continues daily. Their story is not only about tradition but about endurance in the face of uncertainty.

Education Barriers

Education is often described as the key to breaking cycles of poverty, yet for many Karen children it remains out of reach. In the villages and border camps, schools are few, resources are scarce, and opportunities are unevenly distributed. Where classrooms exist, they are often overcrowded, with one teacher responsible for dozens of pupils.

Textbooks may be outdated or incomplete, and lessons are frequently interrupted by shortages of supplies or the need for children to help their families with farming and household work.

Language presents another barrier. Many children grow up speaking their own dialects at home, but schooling is conducted in Thai or Burmese. This linguistic gap makes learning difficult, and some children fall behind or drop out altogether.

Without adequate support, they struggle to bridge the divide between their mother tongue and the national language, leaving them disadvantaged in examinations and future employment.

Distance compounds the problem. In rural areas, children may walk several kilometres each day to reach the nearest school. The journey is tiring, and during the rainy season paths become treacherous. Some families, faced with the choice between education and safety, keep their children at home.

Others cannot afford the costs of uniforms, books, or transport, even when tuition itself is nominally free.

The consequences are profound. Limited education perpetuates cycles of poverty and restricts access to skilled jobs. Young hill-tribers often find themselves confined to low‑paid labour, with little chance of advancement. Yet aspirations remain strong. Many children express dreams of becoming teachers, nurses, or community leaders.

Their determination highlights both the urgency of the problem and the potential that could be unlocked with better support. Education is not simply about literacy; it is about dignity, opportunity, and the chance to shape a future beyond survival.


Health, Poverty, and Exploitation

Beyond the challenges of education and displacement, communities face persistent struggles with health and poverty. In remote villages and border camps, access to medical care is limited. Clinics are often understaffed and under‑resourced, with shortages of medicines and equipment.

Preventable illnesses such as diarrhoea, malaria, and respiratory infections remain common, and malnutrition affects many children. For families already living on the margins, the cost of treatment can be prohibitive, forcing them to rely on traditional remedies or endure illness untreated.

Poverty is not only a matter of income but of opportunity. Many hill-tribe people lack secure land rights, leaving them vulnerable to eviction or exploitation. Without citizenship papers, they cannot claim legal protection or access government support.

As a result, they are often employed in low‑paid, insecure jobs, particularly in agriculture and construction. Migrant labourers may work long hours for minimal wages, with little recourse if they are cheated or abused. Women are especially vulnerable

Conclusion

The villagers of the Christian/Animist community which I visited showed a unique spiritual combination of Christianity and animism is the heart of their identity and resilience.

Their Christian faith provides strength despite their refugee status, poverty, and feeling of being oppressed in their “host” countries. It anchors them to their ancestral lands and spirits, even as political borders and refugee camps challenge their sense of belonging.

They do not see faith and environment as separate; rather, they experience God in the soil beneath their feet, the rivers that flow, and the forests that shelter them.

To really understand the hill-tribes who live in Thailand’s mountainous regions, you have to look past the tourist photos and stereotypes. Their spirituality is alive and changing, a mix of beliefs that helps them hold on to hope, community, and dignity.

When we visit or hear their stories, it’s important to see them as people like us, not just as exotic curiosities. Their faith is lived out in everyday life, closely tied to the land and nature around them. This blending of tradition and belief shows a deep resilience, helping them face the challenges of a world that keeps changing.

© Matt Owens Rees 2026

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