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South Korean Priorities: Eight North Koreans have entered the Japanese School in Beijing. Perhaps they’ll use more of that “quiet diplomacy” that’s evidently insufficient when it comes to two uninhabited, guano-encrusted islands that are halfway to Japan, or the novel question of just where the United States can send its own soldiers. Meanwhile, the South Korean Human Rights Commission is as vigilant as ever about everything else that can keep its staff of busybodies occupied without saving any actual humans....

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North Korea Travelogue: I have strong reservations about encouraging anyone to travel to North Korea, but I also like reading what visitors have to tell about what they saw there. Ari has published an interesting travelogue, and has since blegged for a link, which he earned in my book by approaching his subject with appropriate skepticism, even if his conclusion don’t all match my own. Don’t miss his “Hotel California” vignette, or his observation that North Korea is whoring off...

Who Is Afraid of Liberation?

Yes, I think the triumphalism is premature, but optimism is another thing entirely. There are growing signs of uppitiness among the once-silent majority of the world’s ordinary people–those not represented in the coffeehouses of Brussels or in the General Assembly. There is nothing inevitable about the success of a revolution; the tyrants can delay the realization of those trends as long as they control the guns. But oppression inevitably breeds discontent and systemic inefficiencies. End caveat; pan to reality. Bloggers...

111043433285786680

South Korean Priorities: Eight North Koreans have entered the Japanese School in Beijing. Perhaps they’ll use more of that “quiet diplomacy” that’s evidently insufficient when it comes to two uninhabited, guano-encrusted islands that are halfway to Japan, or the novel question of just where the United States can send its own soldiers. Meanwhile, the South Korean Human Rights Commission is as vigilant as ever about everything else that can keep its staff of busybodies occupied without saving any actual humans....

111043304247925339

North Korea Travelogue: I have strong reservations about encouraging anyone to travel to North Korea, but I also like reading what visitors have to tell about what they saw there. Ari has published an interesting travelogue, and has since blegged for a link, which he earned in my book by approaching his subject with appropriate skepticism, even if his conclusion don’t all match my own. Don’t miss his “Hotel California” vignette, or his observation that North Korea is whoring off...

Who Is Afraid of Liberation?

Yes, I think the triumphalism is premature, but optimism is another thing entirely. There are growing signs of uppitiness among the once-silent majority of the world’s ordinary people–those not represented in the coffeehouses of Brussels or in the General Assembly. There is nothing inevitable about the success of a revolution; the tyrants can delay the realization of those trends as long as they control the guns. But oppression inevitably breeds discontent and systemic inefficiencies. End caveat; pan to reality. Bloggers...

111028281989597437

GNP Infighting: There is a nascent movement to challenge South Korea’s chief paleocon, Park Gye-Heun Park Geun-Hye, for the party’s leadership. Better late than never. The GNP will never have a chance at the polls unless it breaks from its dictatorial past and its unprincipled stand on the issues. They can’t beat Uri unless they first win the fight for their own soul. More here, from Kim Dae-Joong (the columnist, not Kim Dae-Jung, the ex-Prez). I’m not a fan of...

111028281989597437

GNP Infighting: There is a nascent movement to challenge South Korea’s chief paleocon, Park Gye-Heun Park Geun-Hye, for the party’s leadership. Better late than never. The GNP will never have a chance at the polls unless it breaks from its dictatorial past and its unprincipled stand on the issues. They can’t beat Uri unless they first win the fight for their own soul. More here, from Kim Dae-Joong (the columnist, not Kim Dae-Jung, the ex-Prez). I’m not a fan of...

YYYYYYYESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS!!!

Bush will name John Bolton as our new U.N. Ambassador! Not exactly a chastened administration in ideological retreat. From the perspective of the North Korean regime, which famously called Bolton “human scum,” you couldn’t do any worse than this guy: Undersecretary of State John R. Bolton, a controversial Bush administration figure whose strong statements on North Korea’s nuclear program irked the leaders in Pyongyang, is President Bush’s choice to be the next U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, a government...

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Freedom is Beautiful! The third installment. I simply had no idea of the depravity of imposing veils, burkas, chadors, and hijabs (granted, most of these women are probably Maronite Christians, but I’m unaware of any genetic differences among Lebanese religious groups). It’s ironic how similar the sex police in the Middle East can seem to in the “free” world. I suppose the analogy could be carried too far, but the congenitally joyless authoritarians of every culture often seem to share...