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  • 01 OCTOBER 2020 - DES MOINES, IOWA: RANDY KONG, a Des Moines busker, performs in an empty skywalk in downtown. Kong said the pandemic has devastated his income. There are much fewer people working downtown and the ones that are don't stop to listen to him or drop money into his guitar case. The economy in downtown Des Moines is still feeling the affects of the COVID-19 shutdown ordered in March. Seven months after the shutdown, employers still have their workers working from home. Restaurants, barbershops, and retail are feeling the impact. Many have closed or cut back on workers and hours.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    1001DwntwnEconomyBW029.jpg
  • 01 OCTOBER 2020 - DES MOINES, IOWA: RANDY KONG, a Des Moines busker, performs in an empty skywalk in downtown. Kong said the pandemic has devastated his income. There are much fewer people working downtown and the ones that are don't stop to listen to him or drop money into his guitar case. The economy in downtown Des Moines is still feeling the affects of the COVID-19 shutdown ordered in March. Seven months after the shutdown, employers still have their workers working from home. Restaurants, barbershops, and retail are feeling the impact. Many have closed or cut back on workers and hours.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    1001DwntwnEconomyBW028.jpg
  • 01 OCTOBER 2020 - DES MOINES, IOWA: RANDY KONG, a Des Moines busker, performs in an empty skywalk in downtown. Kong said the pandemic has devastated his income. There are much fewer people working downtown and the ones that are don't stop to listen to him or drop money into his guitar case. The economy in downtown Des Moines is still feeling the affects of the COVID-19 shutdown ordered in March. Seven months after the shutdown, employers still have their workers working from home. Restaurants, barbershops, and retail are feeling the impact. Many have closed or cut back on workers and hours.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    1001DwntwnEconomyBW027.jpg
  • 01 OCTOBER 2020 - DES MOINES, IOWA:  The Panera Bakery and Restaurant in Des Moines closed on September 30. The economy in downtown Des Moines is still feeling the affects of the COVID-19 shutdown ordered in March. Seven months after the shutdown, employers still have their workers working from home. Restaurants, barbershops, and retail are feeling the impact. Many have closed or cut back on workers and hours.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    1001DwntwnEconomyBW021.jpg
  • 01 OCTOBER 2020 - DES MOINES, IOWA:  The Panera Bakery and Restaurant in Des Moines closed on September 30. The economy in downtown Des Moines is still feeling the affects of the COVID-19 shutdown ordered in March. Seven months after the shutdown, employers still have their workers working from home. Restaurants, barbershops, and retail are feeling the impact. Many have closed or cut back on workers and hours.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    1001DwntwnEconomyBW019.jpg
  • 01 OCTOBER 2020 - DES MOINES, IOWA:  The empty dining and break room at the Wells Fargo Bank, one of the largest employers in downtown Des Moines. The economy in downtown Des Moines is still feeling the affects of the COVID-19 shutdown ordered in March. Seven months after the shutdown, employers still have their workers working from home. Restaurants, barbershops, and retail are feeling the impact. Many have closed or cut back on workers and hours.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    1001DwntwnEconomyBW018.jpg
  • 01 OCTOBER 2020 - DES MOINES, IOWA:  Construction work on a mixed use building in downtown Des Moines. The project is supposed to include residential units, offices, a hotel, restaurants and bars, and a movie theater. The city of Des Moines filed a notice of default in June and the bank foreclosed on the property on September 14. The developer said the "pandemic has created an environment where few are thinking about high-rises and bold projects like this one." The economy in downtown Des Moines is still feeling the affects of the COVID-19 shutdown ordered in March. Seven months after the shutdown, employers still have their workers working from home. Restaurants, barbershops, and retail are feeling the impact. Many have closed or cut back on workers and hours.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    1001DwntwnEconomyBW015.jpg
  • 01 OCTOBER 2020 - DES MOINES, IOWA:  Construction work on a mixed use building in downtown Des Moines. The project is supposed to include residential units, offices, a hotel, restaurants and bars, and a movie theater. The city of Des Moines filed a notice of default in June and the bank foreclosed on the property on September 14. The developer said the "pandemic has created an environment where few are thinking about high-rises and bold projects like this one." The economy in downtown Des Moines is still feeling the affects of the COVID-19 shutdown ordered in March. Seven months after the shutdown, employers still have their workers working from home. Restaurants, barbershops, and retail are feeling the impact. Many have closed or cut back on workers and hours.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    1001DwntwnEconomyBW014.jpg
  • 01 OCTOBER 2020 - DES MOINES, IOWA:  Construction work on a mixed use building in downtown Des Moines. The project is supposed to include residential units, offices, a hotel, restaurants and bars, and a movie theater. The city of Des Moines filed a notice of default in June and the bank foreclosed on the property on September 14. The developer said the "pandemic has created an environment where few are thinking about high-rises and bold projects like this one." The economy in downtown Des Moines is still feeling the affects of the COVID-19 shutdown ordered in March. Seven months after the shutdown, employers still have their workers working from home. Restaurants, barbershops, and retail are feeling the impact. Many have closed or cut back on workers and hours.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    1001DwntwnEconomyBW013.jpg
  • 01 OCTOBER 2020 - DES MOINES, IOWA:  STEPHANIE MATTISON, a downtown barber, waits for customers in her shop in the skywalk. Mattison said she used to be busy all day, but when the pandemic struck in March her business dropped to next to nothing. Now she said she's lucky to see one or two customers a day. The economy in downtown Des Moines is still feeling the affects of the COVID-19 shutdown ordered in March. Seven months after the shutdown, employers still have their workers working from home. Restaurants, barbershops, and retail are feeling the impact. Many have closed or cut back on workers and hours.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    1001DwntwnEconomyBW011.jpg
  • 01 OCTOBER 2020 - DES MOINES, IOWA:  STEPHANIE MATTISON, a downtown barber, waits for customers in her shop in the skywalk. Mattison said she used to be busy all day, but when the pandemic struck in March her business dropped to next to nothing. Now she said she's lucky to see one or two customers a day. The economy in downtown Des Moines is still feeling the affects of the COVID-19 shutdown ordered in March. Seven months after the shutdown, employers still have their workers working from home. Restaurants, barbershops, and retail are feeling the impact. Many have closed or cut back on workers and hours.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    1001DwntwnEconomyBW008.jpg
  • 01 OCTOBER 2020 - DES MOINES, IOWA:  Traffic coming into downtown. The economy in downtown Des Moines is still feeling the affects of the COVID-19 shutdown ordered in March. Seven months after the shutdown, employers still have their workers working from home. Restaurants, barbershops, and retail are feeling the impact. Many have closed or cut back on workers and hours.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    1001DwntwnEconomyBW005.jpg
  • 01 OCTOBER 2020 - DES MOINES, IOWA:  A person walks through an empty skywalk in downtown Des Moines. The skywalk system used to be crowded, especially on cold days, but since the pandemic struck and businesses moved employees to work from home the skywalks are deserted. The economy in downtown Des Moines is still feeling the affects of the COVID-19 shutdown ordered in March. Seven months after the shutdown, employers still have their workers working from home. Restaurants, barbershops, and retail are feeling the impact. Many have closed or cut back on workers and hours.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    1001DwntwnEconomyBW004.jpg
  • 01 OCTOBER 2020 - DES MOINES, IOWA:  An empty co-working space in downtown Des Moines. The economy in downtown Des Moines is still feeling the affects of the COVID-19 shutdown ordered in March. Seven months after the shutdown, employers still have their workers working from home. Restaurants, barbershops, and retail are feeling the impact. Many have closed or cut back on workers and hours.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    1001DwntwnEconomyBW003.jpg
  • 01 OCTOBER 2020 - DES MOINES, IOWA:  A homeless person sleeps in an alley in downtown. Des Moines. Capacity at the homeless shelter in Des Moines was reduced to accommodate CDC guidelines for COVID-19. The economy in downtown Des Moines is still feeling the affects of the COVID-19 shutdown ordered in March. Seven months after the shutdown, employers still have their workers working from home. Restaurants, barbershops, and retail are feeling the impact. Many have closed or cut back on workers and hours.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    1001DwntwnEconomyBW002.jpg
  • 01 OCTOBER 2020 - DES MOINES, IOWA:  A homeless person sleeps in an alley in downtown. Des Moines. Capacity at the homeless shelter in Des Moines was reduced to accommodate CDC guidelines for COVID-19. The economy in downtown Des Moines is still feeling the affects of the COVID-19 shutdown ordered in March. Seven months after the shutdown, employers still have their workers working from home. Restaurants, barbershops, and retail are feeling the impact. Many have closed or cut back on workers and hours.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    1001DwntwnEconomyBW001.jpg
  • 15 FEBRUARY 2019 - SIHANOUKVILLE, CAMBODIA:  Chinese construction workers in Sihanoukville walk through their housing area on the way to lunch. The workers live in prefabbed units made in China and stacked atop each other like shipping containers. There are about 80 Chinese casinos and resort hotels open in Sihanoukville and dozens more under construction. The casinos are changing the city, once a sleepy port on Southeast Asia's "backpacker trail" into a booming city. The change is coming with a cost though. Many Cambodian residents of Sihanoukville  have lost their homes to make way for the casinos and the jobs are going to Chinese workers, brought in to build casinos and work in the casinos.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SihanoukvilleBW024.jpg
  • 15 FEBRUARY 2019 - SIHANOUKVILLE, CAMBODIA: A Chinese construction boss (background, striped shirt) talks to Chinese workers eating their lunch about the afternoon's work. There are about 80 Chinese casinos and resort hotels open in Sihanoukville and dozens more under construction. The casinos are changing the city, once a sleepy port on Southeast Asia's "backpacker trail" into a booming city. The change is coming with a cost though. Many Cambodian residents of Sihanoukville  have lost their homes to make way for the casinos and the jobs are going to Chinese workers, brought in to build casinos and work in the casinos.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SihanoukvilleBW023.jpg
  • 15 FEBRUARY 2019 - SIHANOUKVILLE, CAMBODIA: Chinese construction workers get lunch at the dining hall in the housing complex at which they live. There are about 80 Chinese casinos and resort hotels open in Sihanoukville and dozens more under construction. The casinos are changing the city, once a sleepy port on Southeast Asia's "backpacker trail" into a booming city. The change is coming with a cost though. Many Cambodian residents of Sihanoukville  have lost their homes to make way for the casinos and the jobs are going to Chinese workers, brought in to build casinos and work in the casinos.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SihanoukvilleBW020.jpg
  • 15 FEBRUARY 2019 - SIHANOUKVILLE, CAMBODIA: A Chinese construction worker jumps out of a tuk-tuk that shuttles workers from their housing to the job site. There are about 80 Chinese casinos and resort hotels open in Sihanoukville and dozens more under construction. The casinos are changing the city, once a sleepy port on Southeast Asia's "backpacker trail" into a booming city. The change is coming with a cost though. Many Cambodian residents of Sihanoukville  have lost their homes to make way for the casinos and the jobs are going to Chinese workers, brought in to build casinos and work in the casinos.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SihanoukvilleBW016.jpg
  • 25 JANUARY 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Members of the band "PopUp" perform during a "J Pop" (Japanese Pop music) concert at the Japan Expo in Central World, a shopping mall in Bangkok.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    JPopCentralWorldBW022.jpg
  • 25 JANUARY 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Young men react to women Japanese performers during a "J Pop" (Japanese Pop music) concert at the Japan Expo in Central World, a shopping mall in Bangkok.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    JPopCentralWorldBW018.jpg
  • 25 JANUARY 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Members of the band "W." perform during a "J Pop" (Japanese Pop music) concert at the Japan Expo in Central World, a shopping mall in Bangkok.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    JPopCentralWorldBW014.jpg
  • 25 JANUARY 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Young men react to women Japanese performers during a "J Pop" (Japanese Pop music) concert at the Japan Expo in Central World, a shopping mall in Bangkok.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    JPopCentralWorldBW012.jpg
  • 25 JANUARY 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Members of the band "W." perform during a "J Pop" (Japanese Pop music) concert at the Japan Expo in Central World, a shopping mall in Bangkok.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    JPopCentralWorldBW010.jpg
  • 25 JANUARY 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Young men react to women Japanese performers during a "J Pop" (Japanese Pop music) concert at the Japan Expo in Central World, a shopping mall in Bangkok.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    JPopCentralWorldBW006.jpg
  • 25 JANUARY 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Young men react to women Japanese performers during a "J Pop" (Japanese Pop music) concert at the Japan Expo in Central World, a shopping mall in Bangkok.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    JPopCentralWorldBW005.jpg
  • 25 JANUARY 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Members of the band "W." perform during a "J Pop" (Japanese Pop music) concert at the Japan Expo in Central World, a shopping mall in Bangkok.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    JPopCentralWorldBW004.jpg
  • 25 JANUARY 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Members of the band "W." perform during a "J Pop" (Japanese Pop music) concert at the Japan Expo in Central World, a shopping mall in Bangkok.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    JPopCentralWorldBW003.jpg
  • 19 JANUARY 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: People wearing breathing masks on the BTS Skytrain in Bangkok. Bangkok has been shrouded in a cloud of polluted air for most of January.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    JPopCentralWorldBW002.jpg
  • 14 JANUARY 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:       Air pollution obscures the skyline in central Bangkok looking down Sukhumvit Road. Bangkok has been blanketed by heavily polluted air for almost a week. Monday morning, the AQI (Air Quality Index) for Bangkok  was 182, higher than New Delhi, Jakarta, or Beijing. The Saphan Kwai neighborhood of Bangkok recorded an AQI of 370 and the Lat Yao neighborhood recorded an AQI of 403. An AQI above 50 is considered unsafe. Public health officials have warned people to avoid “unnecessary” outdoor activities and wear breathing masks to filter out the dust.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BangkokPollutionBW009.jpg
  • 14 JANUARY 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:       Air pollution obscures the Bangkok skyline looking up Sukhumvit Road. Bangkok has been blanketed by heavily polluted air for almost a week. Monday morning, the AQI (Air Quality Index) for Bangkok  was 182, worse than New Delhi, Jakarta, or Beijing. The Saphan Kwai neighborhood of Bangkok recorded an AQI of 370 and the Lat Yao neighborhood recorded an AQI of 403. An AQI above 50 is considered unsafe. Public health officials have warned people to avoid “unnecessary” outdoor activities and wear breathing masks to filter out the dust.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BangkokPollutionBW008.jpg
  • 14 JANUARY 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A man wearing dust filter breathing mask stops to pray at a Brahmin shrine in central Bangkok. Bangkok has been blanketed by heavily polluted air for almost a week. Monday morning, the AQI (Air Quality Index) for Bangkok  was 182, worse than New Delhi, Jakarta, or Beijing. The Saphan Kwai neighborhood of Bangkok recorded an AQI of 370 and the Lat Yao neighborhood recorded an AQI of 403. An AQI above 50 is considered unsafe. Public health officials have warned people to avoid “unnecessary” outdoor activities and wear breathing masks to filter out the dust.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BangkokPollutionBW005.jpg
  • 14 JANUARY 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:       Women wearing dust filters wait for a bus in Bangkok. Bangkok has been blanketed by heavily polluted air for almost a week. Monday morning, the AQI (Air Quality Index) for Bangkok  was 182, worse than New Delhi, Jakarta, or Beijing. The Saphan Kwai neighborhood of Bangkok recorded an AQI of 370 and the Lat Yao neighborhood recorded an AQI of 403. An AQI above 50 is considered unsafe. Public health officials have warned people to avoid “unnecessary” outdoor activities and wear breathing masks to filter out the dust.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BangkokPollutionBW004.jpg
  • 14 JANUARY 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:       Air pollution obscures the Bangkok skyline looking down Phaya Thai Road. Bangkok has been blanketed by heavily polluted air for almost a week. Monday morning, the AQI (Air Quality Index) for Bangkok  was 182, worse than New Delhi, Jakarta, or Beijing. The Saphan Kwai neighborhood of Bangkok recorded an AQI of 370 and the Lat Yao neighborhood recorded an AQI of 403. An AQI above 50 is considered unsafe. Public health officials have warned people to avoid “unnecessary” outdoor activities and wear breathing masks to filter out the dust.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BangkokPollutionBW001.jpg
  • 29 DECEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A woman stretches longevity noodles during the drying process in front of her family shophouse. The family has been making traditional "mee sua" noodles, also called "longevity noodles" for three generations in their home in central Bangkok. They use a recipe brought to Thailand from China. Longevity noodles are thought to contribute to a long and healthy life and  are served on special occasions, especially Chinese New Year, which is February 4, 2019. These noodles were being made for Chinese New Year.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    NoodleMakersBW019.jpg
  • 29 DECEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A man stretches longevity noodles in front of his family shophouse. The family has been making traditional "mee sua" noodles, also called "longevity noodles" for three generations in their home in central Bangkok. They use a recipe brought to Thailand from China. Longevity noodles are thought to contribute to a long and healthy life and  are served on special occasions, especially Chinese New Year, which is February 4, 2019. These noodles were being made for Chinese New Year.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    NoodleMakersBW017.jpg
  • 29 DECEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A man hangs longevity noodles out to dry in front of his family shophouse. The family has been making traditional "mee sua" noodles, also called "longevity noodles" for three generations in their home in central Bangkok. They use a recipe brought to Thailand from China. Longevity noodles are thought to contribute to a long and healthy life and  are served on special occasions, especially Chinese New Year, which is February 4, 2019. These noodles were being made for Chinese New Year.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    NoodleMakersBW013.jpg
  • 29 DECEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A man stretches longevity noodles in his family shophouse. The family has been making traditional "mee sua" noodles, also called "longevity noodles" for three generations in their home in central Bangkok. They use a recipe brought to Thailand from China. Longevity noodles are thought to contribute to a long and healthy life and  are served on special occasions, especially Chinese New Year, which is February 4, 2019. These noodles were being made for Chinese New Year.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    NoodleMakersBW008.jpg
  • 29 DECEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A woman and her husband make longevity noodles in her family shophouse. The family has been making traditional "mee sua" noodles, also called "longevity noodles" for three generations in their home in central Bangkok. They use a recipe brought to Thailand from China. Longevity noodles are thought to contribute to a long and healthy life and  are served on special occasions, especially Chinese New Year, which is February 4, 2019. These noodles were being made for Chinese New Year.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    NoodleMakersBW007.jpg
  • 29 DECEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Making longevity noodles in a shophouse in Bangkok. The family has been making traditional "mee sua" noodles, also called "longevity noodles" for three generations in their home in central Bangkok. They use a recipe brought to Thailand from China. Longevity noodles are served on special occasions, especially Chinese New Year, which is February 4, 2019.        PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    NoodleMakersBW006.jpg
  • 29 DECEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A woman makes longevity noodles in her family shophouse. The family has been making traditional "mee sua" noodles, also called "longevity noodles" for three generations in their home in central Bangkok. They use a recipe brought to Thailand from China. Longevity noodles are thought to contribute to a long and healthy life and  are served on special occasions, especially Chinese New Year, which is February 4, 2019. These noodles were being made for Chinese New Year.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    NoodleMakersBW005.jpg
  • 29 DECEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A woman makes longevity noodles in her family shophouse. The family has been making traditional "mee sua" noodles, also called "longevity noodles" for three generations in their home in central Bangkok. They use a recipe brought to Thailand from China. Longevity noodles are thought to contribute to a long and healthy life and  are served on special occasions, especially Chinese New Year, which is February 4, 2019. These noodles were being made for Chinese New Year.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    NoodleMakersBW003.jpg
  • 29 DECEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A woman makes longevity noodles in her family shophouse. The family has been making traditional "mee sua" noodles, also called "longevity noodles" for three generations in their home in central Bangkok. They use a recipe brought to Thailand from China. Longevity noodles are thought to contribute to a long and healthy life and  are served on special occasions, especially Chinese New Year, which is February 4, 2019. These noodles were being made for Chinese New Year.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    NoodleMakersBW002.jpg
  • 29 DECEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A woman makes longevity noodles in her family shophouse. The family has been making traditional "mee sua" noodles, also called "longevity noodles" for three generations in their home in central Bangkok. They use a recipe brought to Thailand from China. Longevity noodles are thought to contribute to a long and healthy life and  are served on special occasions, especially Chinese New Year, which is February 4, 2019. These noodles were being made for Chinese New Year.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    NoodleMakersBW001.jpg
  • 22 DECEMBER 2018 - CHANTABURI, THAILAND: A Chinese gem buyer talks to a man selling gems in the gem market in Chantaburi. The gem market in Chantaburi, a provincial town in eastern Thailand, is open on weekends. Chantaburi used to be an active gem mining area in Thailand, but the mines are played out now. Now buyers and sellers come from around the world to Chantaburi for the weekend market. Many of the stones come from Myanmar, others come from mines in Afghanistan and Africa.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChantaburiGemMarketBW014.jpg
  • 22 DECEMBER 2018 - CHANTABURI, THAILAND: The gem market in Chantaburi, a provincial town in eastern Thailand, is open on weekends. Chantaburi used to be an active gem mining area in Thailand, but the mines are played out now. Now buyers and sellers come from around the world to Chantaburi for the weekend market. Many of the stones come from Myanmar, others come from mines in Afghanistan and Africa.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChantaburiGemMarketBW013.jpg
  • 22 DECEMBER 2018 - CHANTABURI, THAILAND: Merchants in the gem market eat lunch from a street food cart in front of a gem cutting shop in Chantaburi. The gem market in Chantaburi, a provincial town in eastern Thailand, is open on weekends. Chantaburi used to be an active gem mining area in Thailand, but the mines are played out now. Now buyers and sellers come from around the world to Chantaburi for the weekend market. Many of the stones come from Myanmar, others come from mines in Afghanistan and Africa.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChantaburiGemMarketBW012.jpg
  • 22 DECEMBER 2018 - CHANTABURI, THAILAND: Merchants in the gem market eat lunch from a street food cart in front of a gem cutting shop in Chantaburi. The gem market in Chantaburi, a provincial town in eastern Thailand, is open on weekends. Chantaburi used to be an active gem mining area in Thailand, but the mines are played out now. Now buyers and sellers come from around the world to Chantaburi for the weekend market. Many of the stones come from Myanmar, others come from mines in Afghanistan and Africa.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChantaburiGemMarketBW011.jpg
  • 22 DECEMBER 2018 - CHANTABURI, THAILAND: A gem buyer grades gems brought to him in the gem market in Chantaburi. The gem market in Chantaburi, a provincial town in eastern Thailand, is open on weekends. Chantaburi used to be an active gem mining area in Thailand, but the mines are played out now. Now buyers and sellers come from around the world to Chantaburi for the weekend market. Many of the stones come from Myanmar, others come from mines in Afghanistan and Africa.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChantaburiGemMarketBW010.jpg
  • 22 DECEMBER 2018 - CHANTABURI, THAILAND: The entrance to the gem market in Chantaburi. The gem market in Chantaburi, a provincial town in eastern Thailand, is open on weekends. Chantaburi used to be an active gem mining area in Thailand, but the mines are played out now. Now buyers and sellers come from around the world to Chantaburi for the weekend market. Many of the stones come from Myanmar, others come from mines in Afghanistan and Africa.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChantaburiGemMarketBW009.jpg
  • 22 DECEMBER 2018 - CHANTABURI, THAILAND: A European gem buyer (left) and his translator look at gems brought to them in the gem market in Chantaburi. The gem market in Chantaburi, a provincial town in eastern Thailand, is open on weekends. Chantaburi used to be an active gem mining area in Thailand, but the mines are played out now. Now buyers and sellers come from around the world to Chantaburi for the weekend market. Many of the stones come from Myanmar, others come from mines in Afghanistan and Africa.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChantaburiGemMarketBW006.jpg
  • 22 DECEMBER 2018 - CHANTABURI, THAILAND: A Thai man selling loose gems waits for customers with his daughter in the gem market in Chantaburi. The gem market in Chantaburi, a provincial town in eastern Thailand, is open on weekends. Chantaburi used to be an active gem mining area in Thailand, but the mines are played out now. Now buyers and sellers come from around the world to Chantaburi for the weekend market. Many of the stones come from Myanmar, others come from mines in Afghanistan and Africa.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChantaburiGemMarketBW005.jpg
  • 22 DECEMBER 2018 - CHANTABURI, THAILAND: A European gem buyer looks at gems brought to him in the gem market in Chantaburi. The gem market in Chantaburi, a provincial town in eastern Thailand, is open on weekends. Chantaburi used to be an active gem mining area in Thailand, but the mines are played out now. Now buyers and sellers come from around the world to Chantaburi for the weekend market. Many of the stones come from Myanmar, others come from mines in Afghanistan and Africa.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChantaburiGemMarketBW004.jpg
  • 21 DECEMBER 2018 - CHANTABURI, THAILAND: A Chinese gem merchant talks to a customer in the Chantaburi gem market. The gem market in Chantaburi, a provincial town in eastern Thailand, is open on weekends. Chantaburi used to be an active gem mining area in Thailand, but the mines are played out now. Now buyers and sellers come from around the world to Chantaburi for the weekend market. Many of the stones come from Myanmar, others come from mines in Afghanistan and Africa.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChantaburiGemMarketBW001.jpg
  • 17 DECEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: An inflatable toy seller walks through a working class neighborhood behind Siam Paragon, an exclusive mall in central Bangkok. According to Credit Suisse Global Wealth Databook 2018, which surveyed 40 countries, Thailand has the highest rate of income inequality in the world. In 2016, Thailand was third, behind Russia and India. In 2016, the 1% richest Thais (about 500,000 people) owned 58.0% of the Thailand's wealth. In 2018, they controlled 66.9%. In Russia, those numbers went from 78% in 2016, down to 57.1% in 2018. The Thai government disagreed with the report and said the report didn't take government anti-poverty programs into account and that Thailand was held to an unfair standard because most of the other countries in the report are developed countries in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    2018IncomeInqualityBW012.jpg
  • 17 DECEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Men cut up durian to sell in the morning market in a working class neighborhood about one kilometer from Siam Paragon, an exclusive mall in central Bangkok. According to Credit Suisse Global Wealth Databook 2018, which surveyed 40 countries, Thailand has the highest rate of income inequality in the world. In 2016, Thailand was third, behind Russia and India. In 2016, the 1% richest Thais (about 500,000 people) owned 58.0% of the Thailand's wealth. In 2018, they controlled 66.9%. In Russia, those numbers went from 78% in 2016, down to 57.1% in 2018. The Thai government disagreed with the report and said the report didn't take government anti-poverty programs into account and that Thailand was held to an unfair standard because most of the other countries in the report are developed countries in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    2018IncomeInqualityBW011.jpg
  • 17 DECEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Men cut up durian to sell in the morning market in a working class neighborhood about one kilometer from Siam Paragon, an exclusive mall in central Bangkok. According to Credit Suisse Global Wealth Databook 2018, which surveyed 40 countries, Thailand has the highest rate of income inequality in the world. In 2016, Thailand was third, behind Russia and India. In 2016, the 1% richest Thais (about 500,000 people) owned 58.0% of the Thailand's wealth. In 2018, they controlled 66.9%. In Russia, those numbers went from 78% in 2016, down to 57.1% in 2018. The Thai government disagreed with the report and said the report didn't take government anti-poverty programs into account and that Thailand was held to an unfair standard because most of the other countries in the report are developed countries in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    2018IncomeInqualityBW010.jpg
  • 17 DECEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Shoppers on an escalator in Siam Paragon, an exclusive mall in central Bangkok. According to Credit Suisse Global Wealth Databook 2018, which surveyed 40 countries, Thailand has the highest rate of income inequality in the world. In 2016, Thailand was third, behind Russia and India. In 2016, the 1% richest Thais (about 500,000 people) owned 58.0% of the Thailand's wealth. In 2018, they controlled 66.9%. In Russia, those numbers went from 78% in 2016, down to 57.1% in 2018. The Thai government disagreed with the report and said the report didn't take government anti-poverty programs into account and that Thailand was held to an unfair standard because most of the other countries in the report are developed countries in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    2018IncomeInqualityBW008.jpg
  • 17 DECEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A mall employee cleans the floor in front of the McClaren showroom in Siam Paragon, an exclusive mall in central Bangkok. According to Credit Suisse Global Wealth Databook 2018, which surveyed 40 countries, Thailand has the highest rate of income inequality in the world. In 2016, Thailand was third, behind Russia and India. In 2016, the 1% richest Thais (about 500,000 people) owned 58.0% of the Thailand's wealth. In 2018, they controlled 66.9%. In Russia, those numbers went from 78% in 2016, down to 57.1% in 2018. The Thai government disagreed with the report and said the report didn't take government anti-poverty programs into account and that Thailand was held to an unfair standard because most of the other countries in the report are developed countries in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    2018IncomeInqualityBW007.jpg
  • 17 DECEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Young men look at the Rolls-Royce showroom in Siam Paragon, an exclusive mall in central Bangkok. According to Credit Suisse Global Wealth Databook 2018, which surveyed 40 countries, Thailand has the highest rate of income inequality in the world. In 2016, Thailand was third, behind Russia and India. In 2016, the 1% richest Thais (about 500,000 people) owned 58.0% of the Thailand's wealth. In 2018, they controlled 66.9%. In Russia, those numbers went from 78% in 2016, down to 57.1% in 2018. The Thai government disagreed with the report and said the report didn't take government anti-poverty programs into account and that Thailand was held to an unfair standard because most of the other countries in the report are developed countries in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    2018IncomeInqualityBW006.jpg
  • 17 DECEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Shoppers use an airconditioned walkway to go from Siam Discovery Mall to Siam Center Mall, both upscale malls in central Bangkok. According to Credit Suisse Global Wealth Databook 2018, which surveyed 40 countries, Thailand has the highest rate of income inequality in the world. In 2016, Thailand was third, behind Russia and India. In 2016, the 1% richest Thais (about 500,000 people) owned 58.0% of the Thailand's wealth. In 2018, they controlled 66.9%. In Russia, those numbers went from 78% in 2016, down to 57.1% in 2018. The Thai government disagreed with the report and said the report didn't take government anti-poverty programs into account and that Thailand was held to an unfair standard because most of the other countries in the report are developed countries in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    2018IncomeInqualityBW003.jpg
  • 17 DECEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Shoppers use an airconditioned walkway to go from Siam Discovery Mall to Siam Center Mall, both upscale malls in central Bangkok. According to Credit Suisse Global Wealth Databook 2018, which surveyed 40 countries, Thailand has the highest rate of income inequality in the world. In 2016, Thailand was third, behind Russia and India. In 2016, the 1% richest Thais (about 500,000 people) owned 58.0% of the Thailand's wealth. In 2018, they controlled 66.9%. In Russia, those numbers went from 78% in 2016, down to 57.1% in 2018. The Thai government disagreed with the report and said the report didn't take government anti-poverty programs into account and that Thailand was held to an unfair standard because most of the other countries in the report are developed countries in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    2018IncomeInqualityBW002.jpg
  • 17 DECEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Shoppers use an airconditioned walkway to go from Siam Discovery Mall to Siam Center Mall, both upscale malls in central Bangkok. According to Credit Suisse Global Wealth Databook 2018, which surveyed 40 countries, Thailand has the highest rate of income inequality in the world. In 2016, Thailand was third, behind Russia and India. In 2016, the 1% richest Thais (about 500,000 people) owned 58.0% of the Thailand's wealth. In 2018, they controlled 66.9%. In Russia, those numbers went from 78% in 2016, down to 57.1% in 2018. The Thai government disagreed with the report and said the report didn't take government anti-poverty programs into account and that Thailand was held to an unfair standard because most of the other countries in the report are developed countries in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    2018IncomeInqualityBW001.jpg
  • 26 OCTOBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Commuters wait to board subway trains (called the MRT in Bangkok) in the Sukhumvit MRT station.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SukhumvitMRTBW006.jpg
  • 26 OCTOBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Commuters wait to board subway trains (called the MRT in Bangkok) in the Sukhumvit MRT station.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SukhumvitMRTBW005.jpg
  • 26 OCTOBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Commuters wait to board subway trains (called the MRT in Bangkok) in the Sukhumvit MRT station.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SukhumvitMRTBW004.jpg
  • 26 OCTOBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Commuters wait to board subway trains (called the MRT in Bangkok) in the Sukhumvit MRT station.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SukhumvitMRTBW002.jpg
  • 26 OCTOBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Commuters wait to board subway trains (called the MRT in Bangkok) in the Sukhumvit MRT station.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SukhumvitMRTBW001.jpg
  • 13 OCTOBER 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA:  Thousands of people marched through central Seoul to protest South Korean President Moon Jae-in's rapprochement with North Korea. Moon's approval ratings have plunged in recent months, due mostly to a softening in the South Korean economy.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    AntiMoonProtestBW013.jpg
  • 13 OCTOBER 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA:  Thousands of people marched through central Seoul to protest South Korean President Moon Jae-in's rapprochement with North Korea. Moon's approval ratings have plunged in recent months, due mostly to a softening in the South Korean economy.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    AntiMoonProtestBW011.jpg
  • 13 OCTOBER 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA:  Thousands of people marched through central Seoul to protest South Korean President Moon Jae-in's rapprochement with North Korea. Moon's approval ratings have plunged in recent months, due mostly to a softening in the South Korean economy.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    AntiMoonProtestBW008.jpg
  • 13 OCTOBER 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA:  Thousands of people marched through central Seoul to protest South Korean President Moon Jae-in's rapprochement with North Korea. Moon's approval ratings have plunged in recent months, due mostly to a softening in the South Korean economy.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    AntiMoonProtestBW002.jpg
  • 09 OCTOBER 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA:  Hundreds of Samsung workers marched through central Seoul Tuesday to draw attention to the company's labor issues, which includes punishing workers for joinging unions, retaliating against labor organizers and profiling potential "troublemakers" who are thought likely to organize. Samsung has also started layoffing workers, especially younger ones, as company profits have decreased. Layoffs in South Korea have been relatively rare, many workers thought a job with Samsung and other South Korean industrial giants was a job for life.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SamsungLaborProtestBW010.jpg
  • 09 OCTOBER 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA:  Hundreds of Samsung workers marched through central Seoul Tuesday to draw attention to the company's labor issues, which includes punishing workers for joinging unions, retaliating against labor organizers and profiling potential "troublemakers" who are thought likely to organize. Samsung has also started layoffing workers, especially younger ones, as company profits have decreased. Layoffs in South Korea have been relatively rare, many workers thought a job with Samsung and other South Korean industrial giants was a job for life.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SamsungLaborProtestBW007.jpg
  • 09 OCTOBER 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA:  Hundreds of Samsung workers marched through central Seoul Tuesday to draw attention to the company's labor issues, which includes punishing workers for joinging unions, retaliating against labor organizers and profiling potential "troublemakers" who are thought likely to organize. Samsung has also started layoffing workers, especially younger ones, as company profits have decreased. Layoffs in South Korea have been relatively rare, many workers thought a job with Samsung and other South Korean industrial giants was a job for life.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SamsungLaborProtestBW004.jpg
  • 09 OCTOBER 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA:  Hundreds of Samsung workers marched through central Seoul Tuesday to draw attention to the company's labor issues, which includes punishing workers for joinging unions, retaliating against labor organizers and profiling potential "troublemakers" who are thought likely to organize. Samsung has also started layoffing workers, especially younger ones, as company profits have decreased. Layoffs in South Korea have been relatively rare, many workers thought a job with Samsung and other South Korean industrial giants was a job for life.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SamsungLaborProtestBW001.jpg
  • 12 SEPTEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Travelers get free haircuts at Hua Lamphong train station in Bangkok. Barber schools set up in the station and offer free haircuts to travelers.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    HuaLamphongBarbersBW008.jpg
  • 12 SEPTEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Travelers get free haircuts at Hua Lamphong train station in Bangkok. Barber schools set up in the station and offer free haircuts to travelers.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    HuaLamphongBarbersBW002.jpg
  • 12 SEPTEMBER 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Travelers get free haircuts at Hua Lamphong train station in Bangkok. Barber schools set up in the station and offer free haircuts to travelers.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    HuaLamphongBarbersBW001.jpg
  • 15 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: A man prays in Seoul Central Mosque on Eid al Fitr, the Muslim Holy Day that marks the end of the Holy Month of Ramadan. There are fewer than 100,000 Korean Muslims, but there is a large community of Muslim immigrants in South Korea, most in Seoul. Thousands of people attend Eid services at Seoul Central Mosque, the largest mosque in South Korea.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    2018EidAlFitrBW010.jpg
  • 15 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: Men greet each other after Eid al Fitr services at Seoul Central Mosque on Eid al Fitr, the Muslim Holy Day that marks the end of the Holy Month of Ramadan. There are fewer than 100,000 Korean Muslims, but there is a large community of Muslim immigrants in South Korea, most in Seoul. Thousands of people attend Eid services at Seoul Central Mosque, the largest mosque in South Korea.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    2018EidAlFitrBW008.jpg
  • 15 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: Men pray at Seoul Central Mosque on Eid al Fitr, the Muslim Holy Day that marks the end of the Holy Month of Ramadan. There are fewer than 100,000 Korean Muslims, but there is a large community of Muslim immigrants in South Korea, most in Seoul. Thousands of people attend Eid services at Seoul Central Mosque, the largest mosque in South Korea.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    2018EidAlFitrBW005.jpg
  • 15 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: Men pray at Seoul Central Mosque on Eid al Fitr, the Muslim Holy Day that marks the end of the Holy Month of Ramadan. There are fewer than 100,000 Korean Muslims, but there is a large community of Muslim immigrants in South Korea, most in Seoul. Thousands of people attend Eid services at Seoul Central Mosque, the largest mosque in South Korea.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    2018EidAlFitrBW003.jpg
  • 15 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: Men pray at Seoul Central Mosque on Eid al Fitr, the Muslim Holy Day that marks the end of the Holy Month of Ramadan. There are fewer than 100,000 Korean Muslims, but there is a large community of Muslim immigrants in South Korea, most in Seoul. Thousands of people attend Eid services at Seoul Central Mosque, the largest mosque in South Korea.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    2018EidAlFitrBW002.jpg
  • 15 JUNE 2018 - SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA:  A Muslim family waits to get an elevator in Itaewon Subway Station on their way to Seoul Central Mosque on Eid al Fitr, the Muslim Holy Day that marks the end of the Holy Month of Ramadan. There are fewer than 100,000 Korean Muslims, but there is a large community of Muslim immigrants in South Korea, most in Seoul. Thousands of people attend Eid services at Seoul Central Mosque, the largest mosque in South Korea.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    2018EidAlFitrBW001.jpg
  • 08 APRIL 2018 - SAN PA TONG, CHIANG MAI, THAILAND:  at the market in San Pa Tong (also spelled Sanpatong), a town about 30 minutes from Chiang Mai. On Saturday's, farmers and livestock dealers come to the market to buy and sell cattle and water buffalo.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SanpatongLivestockMarketBW034.jpg
  • 08 APRIL 2018 - SAN PA TONG, CHIANG MAI, THAILAND:  at the market in San Pa Tong (also spelled Sanpatong), a town about 30 minutes from Chiang Mai. On Saturday's, farmers and livestock dealers come to the market to buy and sell cattle and water buffalo.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SanpatongLivestockMarketBW033.jpg
  • 08 APRIL 2018 - SAN PA TONG, CHIANG MAI, THAILAND:  at the market in San Pa Tong (also spelled Sanpatong), a town about 30 minutes from Chiang Mai. On Saturday's, farmers and livestock dealers come to the market to buy and sell cattle and water buffalo.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SanpatongLivestockMarketBW032.jpg
  • 08 APRIL 2018 - SAN PA TONG, CHIANG MAI, THAILAND:  at the market in San Pa Tong (also spelled Sanpatong), a town about 30 minutes from Chiang Mai. On Saturday's, farmers and livestock dealers come to the market to buy and sell cattle and water buffalo.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SanpatongLivestockMarketBW029.jpg
  • 08 APRIL 2018 - SAN PA TONG, CHIANG MAI, THAILAND:  at the market in San Pa Tong (also spelled Sanpatong), a town about 30 minutes from Chiang Mai. On Saturday's, farmers and livestock dealers come to the market to buy and sell cattle and water buffalo.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SanpatongLivestockMarketBW027.jpg
  • 08 APRIL 2018 - SAN PA TONG, CHIANG MAI, THAILAND:  at the market in San Pa Tong (also spelled Sanpatong), a town about 30 minutes from Chiang Mai. On Saturday's, farmers and livestock dealers come to the market to buy and sell cattle and water buffalo.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SanpatongLivestockMarketBW026.jpg
  • 08 APRIL 2018 - SAN PA TONG, CHIANG MAI, THAILAND:  at the market in San Pa Tong (also spelled Sanpatong), a town about 30 minutes from Chiang Mai. On Saturday's, farmers and livestock dealers come to the market to buy and sell cattle and water buffalo.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SanpatongLivestockMarketBW025.jpg
  • 08 APRIL 2018 - SAN PA TONG, CHIANG MAI, THAILAND:  at the market in San Pa Tong (also spelled Sanpatong), a town about 30 minutes from Chiang Mai. On Saturday's, farmers and livestock dealers come to the market to buy and sell cattle and water buffalo.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SanpatongLivestockMarketBW022.jpg
  • 08 APRIL 2018 - SAN PA TONG, CHIANG MAI, THAILAND:  at the market in San Pa Tong (also spelled Sanpatong), a town about 30 minutes from Chiang Mai. On Saturday's, farmers and livestock dealers come to the market to buy and sell cattle and water buffalo.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SanpatongLivestockMarketBW020.jpg
  • 08 APRIL 2018 - SAN PA TONG, CHIANG MAI, THAILAND:  at the market in San Pa Tong (also spelled Sanpatong), a town about 30 minutes from Chiang Mai. On Saturday's, farmers and livestock dealers come to the market to buy and sell cattle and water buffalo.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SanpatongLivestockMarketBW019.jpg
  • 08 APRIL 2018 - SAN PA TONG, CHIANG MAI, THAILAND:  at the market in San Pa Tong (also spelled Sanpatong), a town about 30 minutes from Chiang Mai. On Saturday's, farmers and livestock dealers come to the market to buy and sell cattle and water buffalo.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SanpatongLivestockMarketBW017.jpg
  • 08 APRIL 2018 - SAN PA TONG, CHIANG MAI, THAILAND:  at the market in San Pa Tong (also spelled Sanpatong), a town about 30 minutes from Chiang Mai. On Saturday's, farmers and livestock dealers come to the market to buy and sell cattle and water buffalo.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SanpatongLivestockMarketBW016.jpg
  • 08 APRIL 2018 - SAN PA TONG, CHIANG MAI, THAILAND:  at the market in San Pa Tong (also spelled Sanpatong), a town about 30 minutes from Chiang Mai. On Saturday's, farmers and livestock dealers come to the market to buy and sell cattle and water buffalo.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SanpatongLivestockMarketBW014.jpg
  • 08 APRIL 2018 - SAN PA TONG, CHIANG MAI, THAILAND:  at the market in San Pa Tong (also spelled Sanpatong), a town about 30 minutes from Chiang Mai. On Saturday's, farmers and livestock dealers come to the market to buy and sell cattle and water buffalo.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SanpatongLivestockMarketBW011.jpg
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Jack Kurtz, Photojournalist & Travel Photographer

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