There’s a lot that can be said about North Korea.
But little good. It is a totalitarian state, with as
many as 200,000 people thought to be locked up in deadly labor
camps. In the late 1990s at least 500,000 and as many as two
million people died in a famine, largely caused by Pyongyang’s
collectivization of agriculture. Religious liberty does not
exist, with the regime targeting believers in any god other than
the Kim family. Back in 1950 North Korean dictator Kim
Il-sung started a war which killed millions and devastated both
Koreas. His son, Kim Jong-il lived lavishly while begging the
world for aid to feed his people.
Quite a record.
But no matter.
On the Daily Kos Niccolo Caldararo wrote a truly remarkable
defense of the North. Sadly put upon by the West
and victimized by all the usual suspects, the communist
monarchy “today is the result of [North Korea’s] history, and
especially its most recent history with
America.” Indeed, he added:
While North Korea may behave in a strange fashion at times, its
political history is no less responsible toward its own citizens
than the history of the South, especially the recent history that
was dominated in the 1960s to 1980s by dictatorial regimes that
practiced torture and mass arrest. While we hear of
starvation and torture in North Korea, these are far less well
documented than the recent history of the South.
Whew!
(H/t to Tim Graham.)
There is much to complain about South Korea under military
rule. But, in case the professor didn’t notice, the
South Koreans escaped repression and achieved freedom. It
turns out that nasty dictator Park Chung-hee (and he was
nasty!) followed economic policies which allowed his people
to avoid famine and escape poverty. And dictator
Chun Doo-hwan responded to mass protests by holding an
election. Silly fellow. He was later convicted
and originally sentenced to death for his crimes.
His successor, a former general and ally named Roh Tae-woo, allowed
another election in which former dissident Kim Young-sam
was elected. Roh also later was convicted and sentenced to
prison.
These guys were amateurs compared to the Kims.
There also is much to complain about U.S. policy, including its
support for dictatorship, and I
have. Indeed, I have made myself unpopular in Seoul
by proposing the withdrawal of American troops from a
nation well able to protect itself. However, the U.S.
eventually did the right thing. Indeed, Kim Dae-jung, the
long-time dissident turned president, credited Washington with
saving his life after the South Korean KCIA kidnapped him intending
to murder him.
But really, wrong-headed U.S. policy in the past is beside
the point today. The difference between authoritarian South
Korea and totalitarian North Korea long ago turned
into one of kind, not degree. And today there is no
comparison. The North has more than “problems.” It is a
national prison camp for 23 million people.
And yes, to answer Professor Caldararo’s question: I have
visited both North and South Korea.