Search Results for: camp 22

Whoreblogging

OK, I really tried to resist. I thought I was stronger than my temptation. I believed my values would always protect me. But today, I gave in to my purient side and blogged about Korea’s great prostitution crackdown. Now, I don’t claim to have any particular expertise on this subject, but having prosecuted and defended cases in courts-martial in Korea for four years, the impact on the Uniform Code of Military Justice does have some serious literary and artistic merit...

Whoreblogging

OK, I really tried to resist. I thought I was stronger than my temptation. I believed my values would always protect me. But today, I gave in to my purient side and blogged about Korea’s great prostitution crackdown. Now, I don’t claim to have any particular expertise on this subject, but having prosecuted and defended cases in courts-martial in Korea for four years, the impact on the Uniform Code of Military Justice does have some serious literary and artistic merit...

URGENT NK Human Rights Act Update

The Chosun Ilbo is reporting that Congress will vote on the North Korean Human Rights Act this week. No, this bill is not as strong as the original North Korean Freedom Act, but great things have small beginnings, and a strong response from voters can help build toward better things later. In brief, this bill does the following: 1. Increases funds to broadcast to North Korea for more hours every day, and to find ways to get tunable radios to...

URGENT NK Human Rights Act Update

The Chosun Ilbo is reporting that Congress will vote on the North Korean Human Rights Act this week. No, this bill is not as strong as the original North Korean Freedom Act, but great things have small beginnings, and a strong response from voters can help build toward better things later. In brief, this bill does the following: 1. Increases funds to broadcast to North Korea for more hours every day, and to find ways to get tunable radios to...

South Korean Diplomacy . . . Like Tofu Mandu, But With Less Substance

Today, China sent seven North Korean refugees back to the death camps below the Yalu–er, make that, to the loving arms of their families–in its latest violation of the 1951 U.N. Convention on Refugees. China, of course, holds a Wonka golden ticket to the U.N. Security Council, giving it the power to confer international legitimacy and define righteousness itself. What exhausts you the most about this story is the sheer lying fecklessness of the diplomats who are supposed to have...

South Korean Diplomacy . . . Like Tofu Mandu, But With Less Substance

Today, China sent seven North Korean refugees back to the death camps below the Yalu–er, make that, to the loving arms of their families–in its latest violation of the 1951 U.N. Convention on Refugees. China, of course, holds a Wonka golden ticket to the U.N. Security Council, giving it the power to confer international legitimacy and define righteousness itself. What exhausts you the most about this story is the sheer lying fecklessness of the diplomats who are supposed to have...

Our Very Best Human Scum

Meanwhile, John Bolton needs no such transplants. When asked recently about how he would end the North Korean nuclear crisis, he held up a copy of “The End of North Korea.” You can hate Bolton’s directness, and you can even say that he’s out of his environment in Foggy Bottom (insert fogginess vs. clarity metaphor here). Bolton sees the North Korean situation for what it is and says so. His recent description of North Korea as “hell on earth” caused...

Our Very Best Human Scum

Meanwhile, John Bolton needs no such transplants. When asked recently about how he would end the North Korean nuclear crisis, he held up a copy of “The End of North Korea.” You can hate Bolton’s directness, and you can even say that he’s out of his environment in Foggy Bottom (insert fogginess vs. clarity metaphor here). Bolton sees the North Korean situation for what it is and says so. His recent description of North Korea as “hell on earth” caused...

Guess Chosun Ilbo Won’t Print This One!

The Chosun Ilbo, South Korea’s largest newspaper, has gone out of the business of printing angry letters from angry Americans–that much is apparent if you scroll through its “letters” page. In spite of the paper’s “conservative” reputation, it has not gone out of the business of printing columns taking unfair digs against the United States. This column by Kim Dae-Joong (similar name, different guy, no relation) blames the breakdown in the U.S.-Korea relationship on American “callousness.” I served three tours...

Guess Chosun Ilbo Won’t Print This One!

The Chosun Ilbo, South Korea’s largest newspaper, has gone out of the business of printing angry letters from angry Americans–that much is apparent if you scroll through its “letters” page. In spite of the paper’s “conservative” reputation, it has not gone out of the business of printing columns taking unfair digs against the United States. This column by Kim Dae-Joong (similar name, different guy, no relation) blames the breakdown in the U.S.-Korea relationship on American “callousness.” I served three tours...

Guess Chosun Ilbo Won’t Print This One!

The Chosun Ilbo, South Korea’s largest newspaper, has gone out of the business of printing angry letters from angry Americans–that much is apparent if you scroll through its “letters” page. In spite of the paper’s “conservative” reputation, it has not gone out of the business of printing columns taking unfair digs against the United States. This column by Kim Dae-Joong (similar name, different guy, no relation) blames the breakdown in the U.S.-Korea relationship on American “callousness.” I served three tours...

Keynote Address by Suzanne Scholte, North Korean Human Rights Conference, Seoul, December 2005

I’d like to thank my friend Suzanne Scholte for forwarding the full text of her keynote address at Freedom House’s North Korean Human Rights Conference in Seoul. Keynote Speech for Seoul Summit: Promoting Human Rights in North Korea Remarks by Suzanne Scholte . . . December 8, 2005 I am deeply honored to be a part of this Seoul Summit: Promoting Human Rights in North Korea and thank the Organizing Committee and Freedom House for asking me to be one...

Statement by Rep. Ed Royce

WASHINGTON, D.C. – – On Monday, U.S. Rep. Ed Royce (R-CA-40) participated in a general meeting of the International Parliamentarians’ Coalition for the North Korea Refugees and Human Rights. The event was held in Tokyo and was attended by parliamentarians from the United States, South Korea, Japan and Mongolia. As a co-chairman of the group, Royce issued the following opening statement at the event: “I would like to thank our Japanese hosts, Representative Shu Watanabe, Representative Yoshihide Suga, Representative Akihisa...

Statement by Rep. Ed Royce

WASHINGTON, D.C. – – On Monday, U.S. Rep. Ed Royce (R-CA-40) participated in a general meeting of the International Parliamentarians’ Coalition for the North Korea Refugees and Human Rights. The event was held in Tokyo and was attended by parliamentarians from the United States, South Korea, Japan and Mongolia. As a co-chairman of the group, Royce issued the following opening statement at the event: “I would like to thank our Japanese hosts, Representative Shu Watanabe, Representative Yoshihide Suga, Representative Akihisa...

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Excerpts from The American Enterprise, July/August 2005 To read the articles in full, buy your own here. Just seven bucks. If you found this article interesting, consider that it caused South Korea to pull its funding for AEI (scroll down). I’m renewing my AEI membership as a small token of my disapproval of any foreign government trying to control what I read, especially this one, and also because the magazine is always interesting reading and well worth a hundred bucks...

The Sins of the Fathers: Japan’s Unresolved Historic Legacy Sixty Years After the War in the Pacific

Presented at Institute for Corean-American Studies (ICAS) 2005 Spring Symposium 2255 Rayburn House Office Build by Dennis P. Halpin Professional Staff East Asian Affairs International Relations Committee U.S. House of Representatives Presented at Institute for Corean-American Studies (ICAS) 2005 Spring Symposium 2255 Rayburn House Office Building May 19, 2005 ________________ This statement reflects my own views and not necessarily those of the International Relations Committee nor its Chairman Henry J. Hyde. _______________ Sang Joo, Members of ICAS, Distinguished Ladies and...

The Sins of the Fathers: Japan’s Unresolved Historic Legacy Sixty Years After the War in the Pacific

Presented at Institute for Corean-American Studies (ICAS) 2005 Spring Symposium 2255 Rayburn House Office Build by Dennis P. Halpin Professional Staff East Asian Affairs International Relations Committee U.S. House of Representatives Presented at Institute for Corean-American Studies (ICAS) 2005 Spring Symposium 2255 Rayburn House Office Building May 19, 2005 ________________ This statement reflects my own views and not necessarily those of the International Relations Committee nor its Chairman Henry J. Hyde. _______________ Sang Joo, Members of ICAS, Distinguished Ladies and...

The Sins of the Fathers: Japan’s Unresolved Historic Legacy Sixty Years After the War in the Pacific

Presented at Institute for Corean-American Studies (ICAS) 2005 Spring Symposium 2255 Rayburn House Office Build by Dennis P. Halpin Professional Staff East Asian Affairs International Relations Committee U.S. House of Representatives Presented at Institute for Corean-American Studies (ICAS) 2005 Spring Symposium 2255 Rayburn House Office Building May 19, 2005 ________________ This statement reflects my own views and not necessarily those of the International Relations Committee nor its Chairman Henry J. Hyde. _______________ Sang Joo, Members of ICAS, Distinguished Ladies and...