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Recovering backpacker, Cornwallite at heart, political enthusiast, catalyst, writer, husband, father, community volunteer, unabashedly proud Canadian. Every hyperlink connects to something related directly or thematically to that which is highlighted.

Tuesday, 12 February 2013

North Korea





 
Doesn't matter how many people say "the enemy of my enemy is my ally" - it's still not true.  Ignoring the bad behaviour of allies doesn't make it go away; it makes you culpable.  By continuing to ignore the threat of the North Korean state not only to its neighbours and possibly the US, but to its own people.
 
I remember living in South Korea during the September 2011 attacks on the US; to my Korean friends, it seemed a tragic but distant "over there" problem.  They lived in the shadow of a much more present threat.  I had the chance to set foot in North Korea at Panmunjom and look North Korean soldiers in the eye - they are made of the same flesh and blood as are their Southern cousins.  The gap between them is less a matter of walls, landmines and flags than it is one of culture, experience and fear, but both of these chasms can be bridged.
 
Someone just has to see the path and be willing to lead people forward.  China could be that leader; their leadership could build some positivity into China's brand and increase their international respect quotient in the process.  To do that, though, they need to stop looking at themselves as a future umbrella and instead see themselves as drops in the ocean
 
There stands a train station in South Korea with a sign that says "To Pyeongyang;" everyone will be a little better off when that train can leave its station.


 

1 comment:

  1. This is not the entirely true . I've lived in Korea for many years, and I was in 2001 ( not 2011) in there, so I know many South Koreans knew this was a big deal , and will effect their lives too. There is also a difference (like it or not , see it or not) between South and North Koreans. Even though they speak the same language and they look the same, they do not think the same way. The "bridge" is very unlikely in a real sense very hypothetical IDEA that NO ONE will allow to happened. South Koreans, do not want to take the burden to fit another 40 Million for many years to come; the US will not let this to take place as for continue their presence they need to have enemies in the region. As for China "leadership" ...Well, I use to live there for five years and so observed people and their culture. I can tell you one think: the Chinese don't care for others - they don't have souls.

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