I have another idea. buy hundreds of drones, attach american dollars, attach non perishable food, guns, communication device, ammunition, manuals for guerilla warfare. drop that shit all over North Korea outside of Pyongyang. It'd be Kim's worst nightmare when civilians are armed and not starving and have suddenly very motivated. The North Korean army is weak and starving, they have no fuel reserves to power their tanks (apart from shitty military parades), jets, navy. Only a matter of time. Just need funding from the CIA and we are good to go.
I don't think it's that simple, and a civil war will only result in more death and suffering, even if it is successful. The people are very brainwashed and terrified. The regime would certainly consider it an act of war and possibly retaliate against South Korea.
Probably, but that's North Koreans' choice to make. When you declare that other people live in a hellhole and start killing them for their freedom, there's a term for that: invasion.
I really don't think North Koreans have any choice they can make on their own. They need outside countries to assist them, to save them from a family of lunatics who shit on the concept of human rights.
For better or worse, the current regime has a surprisingly good track record at not forcing the Korean War to go "hot" again.
A hypothetical "worse regime" might become less interested in self-preservation than the current regime, and more interested in taking out as many people as they can before they fall. Right now the mass murder and slaughter seems to be largely a byproduct that they are not particularly concerned by, rather than their goal.
Oh, great, American expansionism (let CIA fund "freedom fighters" against villains; what could possibly go wrong?) combined with the American mythology that dictators are somehow afraid of armed people.
That "weak and starving" North Korean army would cut through a town-ful of untrained militia like knife going through butter. Really, stop fantasizing about armed revolution just because it once worked for your ancestor 200 years ago. It fails more often than not, and with near certainty when someone foreign nation has the bright idea of arming insurgents.
I think if you asked a North Korean today if they wanted "American expansionism" or their current state of affairs, the answer would be what any starving person would do, choose the lesser of two evils that feeds them.
I hardly think North Koreans would have a problem with democracy and freedom that feeds them than their leader which have failed them and forced to praise them at gun point.
It's funny because lot of left-leaning South Koreans have a naive view of their Northern cousins. News flash: North Korea is a time travel to Chosun Dynasty gone horribly wrong, nothing to do with communism. Some actually believe South Korea is under worse condition because of Uncle Sam that saved the country just as they were about to get overrun by Kim Il Sung, than under Japanese Imperial rule because of "democracy and freedom". I invite these people to defect to the North, and see why there's streams of North Koreans going the other way and staring at you like you are crazy.
Well, I concede that some South Koreans have a very naive view of North Korea, but it doesn't logically follow that the US saved South Korea from similar fate. In fact, historical economic data shows that South Korea was as shitty as North Korea in its early years[1]. Nor was its pro-American leader Rhee much better in terms of human rights: he murdered some 100k-200k of his own people[2] for being communists (many of them were anything but).
So, what you propose offering to North Koreans is not in fact "democracy and freedom". With high chance, you're offering a civil war, followed by yet another dictator with horrible human right records, except that he would have close friends in Washington DC instead of Beijing, and the US will tolerate this dictator because at least he's fighting bad guys and giving a semblance of "stability" in the region. Honestly I don't think the US could make a better outcome even if it wanted to (which is another question).
Note that the massacre happened during Korean War. If Kim Il Sung hadn't invaded South, none of this would've happened.
North Korea had an edge in terms of economic power up until Park Chung Hee came into power and began revitalizing the economy. Again, apples and oranges when it comes to comparing North and South. The other is completely void of rationality.
Highly doubt a civil war will be allowed to go alone. United States and South Korea have clear interest to secure nuclear facilities as a top priority. Can't let that fall into another dictator.
The real problem is China, as it sees North Korea as a buffer.
Democracy and freedom isn't going to feed the North Koreans. They need an authoritarian government that understands geopolitics and economics, and has the ability to exploit the former to jump-start the latter. It's how every successful East Asian country has done it - Japan (Meiji bureaucracy and then LDP post-WW2), South Korea (Park Chung-hee), Singapore (Lee Kuan-yew), Taiwan (KMT in the 70s/80s), and now China (CCP). Of course, it's possible that they end up with a shitty dictator (like in the Philippines), but democracy only produces change very slowly.
The North Korean army actually having to bother fighting is a best case scenario anyway. It's a pretty big assumption that isolated peasants, brought up in an environment where periodic famine is the norm and indoctrinated from birth about the importance of vigilance against the US aggressor, would upon seeing their hated enemy drop propaganda leaflets, immediately rush to read them and carry out their instructions about militia formation.
The North Korean stakeholders both inside and outside the regime understand how tailored it is to needing a member of the Kim family at the top. The destabilization is something they fear tremendously. There's a lot of inertia here and many structural problems to changing.
There are groups though that do what you're suggesting with balloons. News does get into North Korea in small doses - but nothing like to the degree it used to get into the Eastern block. It's much more locked down.
Things like this are what make me a "bad" libertarian. Strict libertarians are all about keeping our nose (and military) out of other people's business. Put yourself in the POTUS' shoes, as the Commander-in-Chief of one of the largest potential forces for good the world has ever known, and tell me why we aren't rescuing the entire country of North Korea?
Life isn't black and white. What that means is that maybe US should get involved in some situations, and not get involved in others. So you don't have to think that either you get involved in no situation, or in all situations outside of the country.
I think US has done at least as much damage [1] as it has helped, which is why the situations need to very weighted very carefully, especially in the past decade or two, when it seems it has mostly used humanitarian excuses to get involved in new conflicts but with the main agenda of helping its economic interests, which is quite far from the goal of "helping others" for the sake of it.
1994, Clinton administration was prepared to launch an invasion into North Korea but was stopped by Jimmy Carter cutting a deal with North Korea and also the South Korean president at the time opposed Seoul becoming shelled with North Korean rockets and artillery shells.
The opposition comes mainly from South Koreans themselves, they do not want a war, they rather enjoy the status quo and look the other way when their own countrymen on the other side of border are getting massacred. Economy is more important in this mindset.
North Korea sinks a South Korean ships and kills 50 sailors and then proceeds to shell an island. South Korea's response is to do absolutely nothing but look to United States for "what do we do now" because their capital is in the artillery firing range of North Korea. The difference is that this time South Korean president Lee Myung Bak ordered airstrike but the South Korean air force generals replied by saying they need American permission, essentially suggesting South Korean president is not really in charge of it's own military in the time of need.
It seems like whenever South Korea doesn't want to take action on North, United States is willing. When United States is unwilling, South Korea is willing. A stark reminder that two countries, although an alliance forged with blood spilled during the Korean War, cannot share the same national interests because in the end, they are two different countries, with different culture and perspective.
If you are not willing to pay the price for reunification now, you certainly won't be able to reap the benefits of a reunification when it inevitably happens.
As a US-born Korean, American interventionism really bothers me. As others have discussed what happens when America tries to "make the world safe for democracy", the South Korean people and its government should be the sole arbiters of how they want to deal with these problems, instead of waiting to get a permission slip from Washington. There should be only one military force in South Korea, a South Korean military, under the command of the South Korean president.
I don't think it would be so bad. Both countries would still remain allies, and South Korea would still be under the US nuclear umbrella. The hope is that there wouldn't be any of this embarrassing vacillation in policy you just described.
Question, Russia and China threatens to Nuke South Korea and United States too if it interferes. South Korea gets nuked first. Does United States head down towards mutually assured destruction over a country smaller than the size of Minnesota? I think that it's a nuclear umbrella with large holes in it.
I agree with you. That's why the US troops are still in South Korea. South Korea is perfectly capable of defending itself but if there are no US troops to die in the first strike the US can do the sensible thing. But with them there North Korea soon becomes former North Korea.
And South Korea has slightly fewer people than France. It's not Minnesota.
>Strict libertarians are all about keeping our nose (and military) out of other people's business.
That just makes libertarians bad, not you a bad libertarian. Libertarianism is marked by a lack of concern for others and a reticence to help them. Whether it's social darwinism, isolationism, or opposition to social programs to help the less fortunate, the defining feature of libertarianism seems to be saying "fuck you, help your own self" to anyone in need.
That's a pretty silly idea of libertarianism. I think you're equating it with things like anarcho-capitalism and minarchism instead of proper anarchism.
Maybe I'm grossly misunderstanding libertarianism, but I've never seen a libertarian say, "we have a duty to help those in need". I've never seen a libertarian say, "the fortunate have a moral obligation to help the less fortunate", or "the fact that so few have so much while so many have so little is a fundamental injustice that needs to be rectified".
Instead, I read, "if you feel like helping someone it's good to do so, but you have no moral obligation to it", and "the problem with the poor is that we're not incentivizing them to get out of poverty", both of which display a profoundly alien concept of human morality and indeed human nature. Libertarianism is the conceit of the fortunate that they are deserving, and that the unfortunate are undeserving.
You have to judge based on the libertarian. Many political philosophies attract hoards of what I call "SWE Groupies." When you apply the Small World Effect to political philosophy, you will find that you can easily blame all the worlds problems on anything you want (the government, the patriarchy, the market, etc) because everything is interconnected. Based on purely anecdotal evidence, it seems that almost everyone who eventually wanders away from the political philosophy they were born into falls into the trap of blaming exactly one of these entities when the usual state of affairs is that they all hold blame to an uneven and debatable extent that changes depending on the issue in question. The worst result of such naivete is that it creates blind spots. Libertarians fail to propose measures to control market failures, socialists fail to propose measures to control bureaucracy, etc. In any case, most people are eventually confronted with enough counterexamples to shake them out of their blind faith and they move on to a mix-and-match philosophy that proposes systems more similar to real, proven governments (funny how that works).
This leaves the problem of finding a label for yourself, which can no longer be done in an absolutely precise manner. Milton Friedman, a "philosophically mature" libertarian, might agree with a devout socialist on a great many things (giving money to poor people), even though they identify with philosophies that look like polar opposites to the corresponding SWE Groupies. I bet that you show segments of the video I linked to SWE Libertarians and get them to swear up and down that this guy was a socialist.
People like Milton Friedman don't deserve to be lumped with people like Ayn Rand, and just because SV is infested with SWE Groupies of the libertarian persuasion (it's convenient to be a libertarian when the market is smiling upon your profession) doesn't mean that you won't find yourself on the wrong end of a political philosophy debate if you attack libertarianism as a whole rather than individual points raised in the argument.
That's more of a caricature of libertarianism. Libertarians are against government for various reasons (some view it as inefficient and corrupt, others because they believe it's morally wrong to violate property rights and force people to do things.) However none but objectivists/ayn-rand-types would say "fuck you, help your own self". They would just support private charities and the like over government.
I am not a libertarian anymore mostly because I believe people should be forced to help others, but I do understand what they believe.
I thought America's presence in Korea was imperialist until I went to Seoul in April and walked around trying to forget about the missiles that were pointed at my head. All of a sudden I discovered a newfound appreciation for American foreign policy, despite its faults.
Because of the Prime Directive. Although we may think we are doing good there is no way to know if our actions may lead to cultural destruction and ultimately cause more harm than good.
I'm not a libertarian and I believe in intervention for humanitarian reasons on principle however the cost has to be considered not just the benefit.
How many lives and injuries, (North Korean, South Korean and American/allied) would it be worth to free the survivors in North Korea? Even assuming China and Russia managed to stay out of it.
There is a cost in life that would be worthwhile but there are also costs that would be too high. I would like it to be possible but I'm far from convinced it is.
Practically any solution probably has to come through China or internal leadership succession.
" Strict libertarians are all about keeping our nose (and military) out of other people's business."
That depends on whether you're referring to Party Line Libertarian or a "libertarian" who is actually pro-liberty. Regarding the latter, liberty definitely condones coming to the defense of another person's liberty, regardless of borders.
Yeah, how hard can it be? Send a few ships down there, bomb the country two or three times (and ignore their rockets and possible nuclear weapons) and then send in the army to make peoples live better. Should be done in a few weeks!
Sorry for the sarcasm, but just look at Iraq for the effects of "rescuing the entire country" (from the clutches of Saddam Hussein) - if you have a good idea how to do it "the right way", then go on. Tell us. Tell someone whose job it is to fix that country right now. I'm pretty sure everyone would like to hear an easy solution.
Oh no, a downvote without any arguments attached, how intimidating! Here's an idea, don't just take the empty rhetoric at face value, also look at what actually took place. But don't insult my intelligence with this nonsense.
Think of North Korea as one gigantic hostage situation. Has it ever gone well when the so-called good guys decide to go in shooting? There are far more tactful ways to effect a rescue, it just requires a whole lot of political will which we are sadly lacking.
Why is North Korea such a hot topic these days? Is the US so free of problems, and other countries so free of human tragedies, that we can focus A LOT of our attention on North Korea?
I honestly think it's because North Korea is the easiest thing to paint as "the bad guys". Lots of easy "evil bits" for the media to cling on to:
They starve their people! They make people participate in charades! They withhold technology advances from their citizens!
But did you know there are countries with higher rates of undernourishment? How often have you seen these countries in the news?
Or maybe it's because we perceive the government is more "at fault" for the situation in North Korea as opposed to the above mentioned countries.
But is that fair? Aren't you equally liable for a starving population whether you've explicitly deprioritized it or not?
Let me wrap this up by saying
1) It's great you care about the situation in North Korea. It's terrible.
2) I hope that you'll consider caring about other countries facing similar humanitarian crises. I hope that you consider where to send your money weighing the facts as opposed to which is brought to your attention by the news.
2 - Just because NK is in the new a lot doesn't mean people don't care as much about other places, or have bad priorities.
3 - If you're going to rank countries by evilness of their regime towards their own population, NK would be probably be #1; you have to consider more than just whether people starve. Hell, if NK fed everyone it would still be an atrocity.
What part of a country with concentration camps operating for decades would not catch our attention?
This sort of comment you have just made is total bullshit: If you are concerned that the situation in Haiti is not getting enough attention, then complain that the situation in Haiti is not getting enough attention. Don't complain that the situation in North Korea is getting too much attention. North Korea deserves all the attention it gets. We don't need to "deprioritize" our concern with North Korea to have some concern "left over" for Haiti. The situation with North Korea is not being exaggerated into being something worse than it really is.
the mass exodus of top war leaders in the country was a start. some brave souls will soon sacrifice their life and assassinate the rest & hopefully overthrow / mutiny will take place liberating all. </my fantasy>
Random tidbit, but Project for Awesome is run by John and Hank Green, who live in Indiana and Montana, respectively, so I'm not sure where they got the notion that it's a South Korea-based organization. Pretty poor background on that one.
62 comments
[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 174 ms ] threadThose who forget the lessons of history, &c...
A hypothetical "worse regime" might become less interested in self-preservation than the current regime, and more interested in taking out as many people as they can before they fall. Right now the mass murder and slaughter seems to be largely a byproduct that they are not particularly concerned by, rather than their goal.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombardment_of_Yeonpyeong
That "weak and starving" North Korean army would cut through a town-ful of untrained militia like knife going through butter. Really, stop fantasizing about armed revolution just because it once worked for your ancestor 200 years ago. It fails more often than not, and with near certainty when someone foreign nation has the bright idea of arming insurgents.
I hardly think North Koreans would have a problem with democracy and freedom that feeds them than their leader which have failed them and forced to praise them at gun point.
It's funny because lot of left-leaning South Koreans have a naive view of their Northern cousins. News flash: North Korea is a time travel to Chosun Dynasty gone horribly wrong, nothing to do with communism. Some actually believe South Korea is under worse condition because of Uncle Sam that saved the country just as they were about to get overrun by Kim Il Sung, than under Japanese Imperial rule because of "democracy and freedom". I invite these people to defect to the North, and see why there's streams of North Koreans going the other way and staring at you like you are crazy.
Vive la revolucion!
So, what you propose offering to North Koreans is not in fact "democracy and freedom". With high chance, you're offering a civil war, followed by yet another dictator with horrible human right records, except that he would have close friends in Washington DC instead of Beijing, and the US will tolerate this dictator because at least he's fighting bad guys and giving a semblance of "stability" in the region. Honestly I don't think the US could make a better outcome even if it wanted to (which is another question).
[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Two_koreas_gdp_1950_1977.j... [2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bodo_League_massacre
North Korea had an edge in terms of economic power up until Park Chung Hee came into power and began revitalizing the economy. Again, apples and oranges when it comes to comparing North and South. The other is completely void of rationality.
Highly doubt a civil war will be allowed to go alone. United States and South Korea have clear interest to secure nuclear facilities as a top priority. Can't let that fall into another dictator.
The real problem is China, as it sees North Korea as a buffer.
There are groups though that do what you're suggesting with balloons. News does get into North Korea in small doses - but nothing like to the degree it used to get into the Eastern block. It's much more locked down.
I think US has done at least as much damage [1] as it has helped, which is why the situations need to very weighted very carefully, especially in the past decade or two, when it seems it has mostly used humanitarian excuses to get involved in new conflicts but with the main agenda of helping its economic interests, which is quite far from the goal of "helping others" for the sake of it.
[1] http://www.huppi.com/kangaroo/CIAtimeline.html
The opposition comes mainly from South Koreans themselves, they do not want a war, they rather enjoy the status quo and look the other way when their own countrymen on the other side of border are getting massacred. Economy is more important in this mindset.
North Korea sinks a South Korean ships and kills 50 sailors and then proceeds to shell an island. South Korea's response is to do absolutely nothing but look to United States for "what do we do now" because their capital is in the artillery firing range of North Korea. The difference is that this time South Korean president Lee Myung Bak ordered airstrike but the South Korean air force generals replied by saying they need American permission, essentially suggesting South Korean president is not really in charge of it's own military in the time of need.
It seems like whenever South Korea doesn't want to take action on North, United States is willing. When United States is unwilling, South Korea is willing. A stark reminder that two countries, although an alliance forged with blood spilled during the Korean War, cannot share the same national interests because in the end, they are two different countries, with different culture and perspective.
If you are not willing to pay the price for reunification now, you certainly won't be able to reap the benefits of a reunification when it inevitably happens.
I don't think it would be so bad. Both countries would still remain allies, and South Korea would still be under the US nuclear umbrella. The hope is that there wouldn't be any of this embarrassing vacillation in policy you just described.
Yeah,the US would totally be willing to launch nuclear weapons on behalf of the remains of South Korea.
I fail to see why you place such trust in the good intentions of the US if one of its protectorates tells it to fuck off.
And South Korea has slightly fewer people than France. It's not Minnesota.
That just makes libertarians bad, not you a bad libertarian. Libertarianism is marked by a lack of concern for others and a reticence to help them. Whether it's social darwinism, isolationism, or opposition to social programs to help the less fortunate, the defining feature of libertarianism seems to be saying "fuck you, help your own self" to anyone in need.
Instead, I read, "if you feel like helping someone it's good to do so, but you have no moral obligation to it", and "the problem with the poor is that we're not incentivizing them to get out of poverty", both of which display a profoundly alien concept of human morality and indeed human nature. Libertarianism is the conceit of the fortunate that they are deserving, and that the unfortunate are undeserving.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xtpgkX588nM
You have to judge based on the libertarian. Many political philosophies attract hoards of what I call "SWE Groupies." When you apply the Small World Effect to political philosophy, you will find that you can easily blame all the worlds problems on anything you want (the government, the patriarchy, the market, etc) because everything is interconnected. Based on purely anecdotal evidence, it seems that almost everyone who eventually wanders away from the political philosophy they were born into falls into the trap of blaming exactly one of these entities when the usual state of affairs is that they all hold blame to an uneven and debatable extent that changes depending on the issue in question. The worst result of such naivete is that it creates blind spots. Libertarians fail to propose measures to control market failures, socialists fail to propose measures to control bureaucracy, etc. In any case, most people are eventually confronted with enough counterexamples to shake them out of their blind faith and they move on to a mix-and-match philosophy that proposes systems more similar to real, proven governments (funny how that works).
This leaves the problem of finding a label for yourself, which can no longer be done in an absolutely precise manner. Milton Friedman, a "philosophically mature" libertarian, might agree with a devout socialist on a great many things (giving money to poor people), even though they identify with philosophies that look like polar opposites to the corresponding SWE Groupies. I bet that you show segments of the video I linked to SWE Libertarians and get them to swear up and down that this guy was a socialist.
People like Milton Friedman don't deserve to be lumped with people like Ayn Rand, and just because SV is infested with SWE Groupies of the libertarian persuasion (it's convenient to be a libertarian when the market is smiling upon your profession) doesn't mean that you won't find yourself on the wrong end of a political philosophy debate if you attack libertarianism as a whole rather than individual points raised in the argument.
I am not a libertarian anymore mostly because I believe people should be forced to help others, but I do understand what they believe.
Feel free to define "rescuing the entire country of North Korea" if you feel I've misinterpreted you.
And on the doorsteps of both China and Russia, just for added chuckles, too.
Of course, as eddie izzard says, it's all okay as long as you only kill your own people—just never step next door.
How many lives and injuries, (North Korean, South Korean and American/allied) would it be worth to free the survivors in North Korea? Even assuming China and Russia managed to stay out of it.
There is a cost in life that would be worthwhile but there are also costs that would be too high. I would like it to be possible but I'm far from convinced it is.
Practically any solution probably has to come through China or internal leadership succession.
That depends on whether you're referring to Party Line Libertarian or a "libertarian" who is actually pro-liberty. Regarding the latter, liberty definitely condones coming to the defense of another person's liberty, regardless of borders.
Sorry for the sarcasm, but just look at Iraq for the effects of "rescuing the entire country" (from the clutches of Saddam Hussein) - if you have a good idea how to do it "the right way", then go on. Tell us. Tell someone whose job it is to fix that country right now. I'm pretty sure everyone would like to hear an easy solution.
I don't know how to tell you this, but in the case of Iraq it was never about that.
Yes, of course. What do you think is the point of a no-hostage policy?
I honestly think it's because North Korea is the easiest thing to paint as "the bad guys". Lots of easy "evil bits" for the media to cling on to:
They starve their people! They make people participate in charades! They withhold technology advances from their citizens!
But did you know there are countries with higher rates of undernourishment? How often have you seen these countries in the news?
-Zambia -Ethiopia -Mozambique -Haiti -Eritea
http://documents.wfp.org/stellent/groups/public/documents/co...
Oh that's right. There's not as much "news worthy" crazy happening in those countries. Maybe that's on purpose?
http://www.rightsidenews.com/2013012931871/world/geopolitica...
Or maybe it's because we perceive the government is more "at fault" for the situation in North Korea as opposed to the above mentioned countries.
But is that fair? Aren't you equally liable for a starving population whether you've explicitly deprioritized it or not?
Let me wrap this up by saying 1) It's great you care about the situation in North Korea. It's terrible. 2) I hope that you'll consider caring about other countries facing similar humanitarian crises. I hope that you consider where to send your money weighing the facts as opposed to which is brought to your attention by the news.
2 - Just because NK is in the new a lot doesn't mean people don't care as much about other places, or have bad priorities.
3 - If you're going to rank countries by evilness of their regime towards their own population, NK would be probably be #1; you have to consider more than just whether people starve. Hell, if NK fed everyone it would still be an atrocity.
This sort of comment you have just made is total bullshit: If you are concerned that the situation in Haiti is not getting enough attention, then complain that the situation in Haiti is not getting enough attention. Don't complain that the situation in North Korea is getting too much attention. North Korea deserves all the attention it gets. We don't need to "deprioritize" our concern with North Korea to have some concern "left over" for Haiti. The situation with North Korea is not being exaggerated into being something worse than it really is.