Monthly Archive: February, 2005

A Chinese Miscalculation and Its Lessons

I have one final comment on today’s Washington Post story about North Korea, regarding a quotation from a Chinese academic. Bear in mind that in China, academics are often the voice of government policy and its internal debates. China’s rulers don’t discuss such matters through leaks to the media. In China, the media are smothered, the masses are powerless, and party leaders tend to be survivors of years of purges which have rendered their Darwinian selects into paranoid septuagenarian troglodytes...

The Sunshine Policy: More than a Flesh Wound

Do you suppose I’m the only commentator struggling with the loss of the words “fallout” and “bombshell” to describe North Korea’s nuclear declaration? Times like these certainly have a way of separating those who can live without their toolbox of cliches and those who cannot. * * * * * The Korean Left Calls for Its Smelling Salts I confess that I love running around tossing frags into the chat rooms at OhMyNews, whose journalistic incompetence, easily-exposed errors and biases,...

A Chinese Miscalculation and Its Lessons

I have one final comment on today’s Washington Post story about North Korea, regarding a quotation from a Chinese academic. Bear in mind that in China, academics are often the voice of government policy and its internal debates. China’s rulers don’t discuss such matters through leaks to the media. In China, the media are smothered, the masses are powerless, and party leaders tend to be survivors of years of purges which have rendered their Darwinian selects into paranoid septuagenarian troglodytes...

North Korean Human Rights Conference Returns to Seoul

For the past several years, these conferences has been held in other places, mainly Europe, which says much about the woeful Korean apathy about these issues. Here’s Claudia Rosett’s of last year’s conference, which took place near enough to Auschwitz to evoke an emotionally powerful comparison, something that should be required reading for all South Koreans who, in years hence, will try to say that they, too, did not know. This year’s conference is next Monday to Wednesday. Full details,...

North Korean Human Rights Conference Returns to Seoul

For the past several years, these conferences has been held in other places, mainly Europe, which says much about the woeful Korean apathy about these issues. Here’s Claudia Rosett’s of last year’s conference, which took place near enough to Auschwitz to evoke an emotionally powerful comparison, something that should be required reading for all South Koreans who, in years hence, will try to say that they, too, did not know. This year’s conference is next Monday to Wednesday. Full details,...

North Korea Declares It Has Nukes, Withdraws from Talks

On behalf of hard-liners everywhere, I would like to thank Kim Jong Il for making this day possible, for this is the day George W. Bush will make the decisions that will send Kim Jong Il off to the ash heap of history. Today, we get this double-whammy from Porky, starting in order of greatest significance: North Korea on Thursday announced for the first time that it has nuclear arms . . . saying it needs the weapons as protection...

Letter from a High-Level North Korean Dissenter?

That’s the claim about the letter I print below, via Suzanne Scholte (scroll down) of the Defense Forum Foundation. It requires no explanation, only the obvious caveats that (1) there’s simply no way to verify the source, (2) that this could very easily be something other than what it purports to be, and (3) the contents of the letter clearly serve the interests of those (like myself) who seek to destroy the North Korean one-party regime through increased economic pressure...

Claudia Rosett on North Korea

The indispensable Claudia Rosett is one of the few big media voices–maybe the only big media voice–giving the North Korean human rights issue the attention it warrants. Ms. Rosett, for those who don’t read her bi-weekly column in the Wall Street Journal, was probably more responsible than any other journalist for digging up the facts of the oil-for-food scandal. Here are just two excerpts from her column today: Short of war to remove the Kim regime, probably the best way...

Letter from a High-Level North Korean Dissenter?

That’s the claim about the letter I print below, via Suzanne Scholte (scroll down) of the Defense Forum Foundation. It requires no explanation, only the obvious caveats that (1) there’s simply no way to verify the source, (2) that this could very easily be something other than what it purports to be, and (3) the contents of the letter clearly serve the interests of those (like myself) who seek to destroy the North Korean one-party regime through increased economic pressure...

Claudia Rosett on North Korea

The indispensable Claudia Rosett is one of the few big media voices–maybe the only big media voice–giving the North Korean human rights issue the attention it warrants. Ms. Rosett, for those who don’t read her bi-weekly column in the Wall Street Journal, was probably more responsible than any other journalist for digging up the facts of the oil-for-food scandal. Here are just two excerpts from her column today: Short of war to remove the Kim regime, probably the best way...

Futuristic Liberal Conservatism?

If you can explain that one, I’d be much obliged. Still, I suppose it’s good that the GNP has cloistered itself somewhere to discuss its fuure. Maybe the politicos can feel each other for signs of a spine. From this report, it doesn’t seem to rise above the level of squabbling about cosmetic changes (another name change? puhleeeeaze), which is a lot like the Dems’ sudden and clumsy attempts to pander to religious voters ever since their three-point loss here...