Category: Uncategorized

What Happened to Norbert in Pusan?

I will print the nearly unedited correspondence between Rev. Douglas Shin and Dr. Vollertsen for you to add to your own mix of information. Clearly, however, the South Korean government is desperately worried that the nascent North Korean human rights movement has cost South Korea needed international support for its appeasement policy. It looks like that desperation has led them to the verge of what is either a colossal blunder or an ill-conceived bluff–banning Norbert Vollertsen from Korea. Here’s the...

LiNK Coverage Roundup

An unnamed LiNK correspondent from Seoul sent me some, umm, links to press coverage of the human rights symposium. I will put these into the blender with other comments I’ve received. The Joongang Ilbo gave the meeting generally favorable coverage; the South Korean students, however, seem disinterested by all accounts, even LiNK’s. I also smirked a little at this quote from Park Il-Hwan, one of the good guys: “Students in Korea look at the North Korean situation differently from Korean...

LiNK Symposium Update

I promised you a run-down of coverage and reactions to the LiNK symposium in Seoul, and I’ll keep my word, but not tonight. Work was crushing today. Undone tasks missed me too much over the long weekend. I even worked for nearly two hours on the train and another hour at home while Judgment at Nuremberg played in the background. My rest? A couple of hours wolfing down leftover turkey and a few minutes lying on the living room floor...

LiNK Symposium Update

I promised you a run-down of coverage and reactions to the LiNK symposium in Seoul, and I’ll keep my word, but not tonight. Work was crushing today. Undone tasks missed me too much over the long weekend. I even worked for nearly two hours on the train and another hour at home while Judgment at Nuremberg played in the background. My rest? A couple of hours wolfing down leftover turkey and a few minutes lying on the living room floor...

Fear and Loathing Update IV

Here is today’s list of unsubstantiated rumors and CIA disinformation about North Korea. Always happy to pass those along, in addition to chucking a little more gasoline onto the stove burners. First entry: In a sign of investor concern about North Korea, rumors swirled in financial markets in Tokyo and Seoul that leader Kim Jong-il had been shot dead. But a diplomat in Pyongyang said nothing out of the ordinary seemed to be happening, a view shared by a Japanese...

Pat Tillman for SI Sportsman of the Year

Vote here. And for G-d’s sake, vote carefully. I nearly voted for Michael Phelps accidentally. Scroll down through the pictures on the left side of the screen, then make your selection. Once you see his name displayed, you can vote. Early and often, as they say. For those of you who don’t know who Pat was, he turned down a multi-million dollar NFL contract to join the Army after 9/11. Pat Tillman was killed in Afghanistan this year. More here.

Pat Tillman for SI Sportsman of the Year

Vote here. And for G-d’s sake, vote carefully. I nearly voted for Michael Phelps accidentally. Scroll down through the pictures on the left side of the screen, then make your selection. Once you see his name displayed, you can vote. Early and often, as they say. For those of you who don’t know who Pat was, he turned down a multi-million dollar NFL contract to join the Army after 9/11. Pat Tillman was killed in Afghanistan this year. More here.

Blazing the Yi Sun-Shin Trail

Every Korean knows the name Yi Sun Shin. It is a shame that few outside Korea have heard of him. Yi Sun Shin was an ancient Korean admiral who changed naval warfare in Asia and defended the independence of his nation from a Japanese invasion. Koreans revere him for thwarting Emperor Hideyoshi’s invasion of Korea in 1592, when his small navy sank 73 Japanese ships despite overwhelming advantages in numbers, manpower, and finances. Yi’s innovative genius is such that his...

Blazing the Yi Sun-Shin Trail

Every Korean knows the name Yi Sun Shin. It is a shame that few outside Korea have heard of him. Yi Sun Shin was an ancient Korean admiral who changed naval warfare in Asia and defended the independence of his nation from a Japanese invasion. Koreans revere him for thwarting Emperor Hideyoshi’s invasion of Korea in 1592, when his small navy sank 73 Japanese ships despite overwhelming advantages in numbers, manpower, and finances. Yi’s innovative genius is such that his...