Unlike the ABSDF, the FBC experienced no major power struggle. Since Zar Ni had created the organization singlehandedly, only those who were willing to work under his tutelage joined it. Thus the FBC's approach to decisions and activities was consistent and stable. In addition, the FBC did not have to support it's members as the ABSDF did it simply had to mobilize the support of people in western countries who were sympathetic to it's cause to begin with, which it did by highlighting the injustices inflicted on Burmese society by the military government and multinational corporations.
In sum, then,it is easier to sell the injustice frame to politically conscious Americans and Europeans than to sell the agency frame to dispirited Burmese students. All in all, it was the FBC's skillfull appropriation of norms, symbols,civil society or ganizations, and civil society space in it's host country that contributed to its emergence as the most successfull overseas Burmese prodemocracy organization