North Korea (and Darfur and other humanitarian crises) - What can we do?

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how can any america invasion or war or occupation be seen as just, as liberating, as humanitarian, when the people being occupied are as scared of the americans, and of things like guatanamo bay, as they are of their own leaders (perhaps, more scared, as they know where they are with their own leaders).

charltonlido (gareth), Thursday, 11 August 2005 04:27 (eighteen years ago) link

and the readyness of the west to use military force to impose ethical change is the surest example of end justifying means i can see, a huge justification of violence as a valid political process

charltonlido (gareth), Thursday, 11 August 2005 04:29 (eighteen years ago) link

why does the world hate america?

charltonlido (gareth), Thursday, 11 August 2005 04:29 (eighteen years ago) link

why arent they begging for us to come save them?

why are they so ungrateful when we arrive in our big hats?

charltonlido (gareth), Thursday, 11 August 2005 04:30 (eighteen years ago) link

Your beret is on too tight hippy.

cunt, Thursday, 11 August 2005 04:37 (eighteen years ago) link

xpost You're asking a lot of rhetorical questions. What sort of policy do you advocate? Would you prefer an isolationist America? Would you prefer an America that withdraws and allows someone else to be the superpower (which some other nation inevitably would/will become)?

Citing Bush admin foreign policy is a red herring, as it takes human rights only as an afterthought, and that only where convenient. You're avoiding the moral issue at hand.

Hurting (Hurting), Thursday, 11 August 2005 04:39 (eighteen years ago) link

also, when one of our allies is israel, and we show absolutely zero interest in changing its repressive and racist policies, but actually support and encourage it, again the credibility falls. if we cant keep 'our own' in order, how are we to keep others in order?

israel, if we could be bothered, is a country where *we* could do something! but there is much less interest in that, obviously

charltonlido (gareth), Thursday, 11 August 2005 04:40 (eighteen years ago) link

Keep dodging.

Hurting (Hurting), Thursday, 11 August 2005 04:42 (eighteen years ago) link

Israel is actually a country where almost every American president has tried to do something. I don't really want to get into this here, but part of the problem might also lie in the "repressive" and "racist" Palestinian "policy" of massacring innocent Israeli civilians. That JUST MIGHT make things a little more complicated.

Hurting (Hurting), Thursday, 11 August 2005 04:46 (eighteen years ago) link

i dont prefer isolationist america no. but i think we need to be a lot more reticent about the actions we take, (eg iraq war was wrong, and a huge mistake, as will the iran war be, should it take off). bush may take human rights as an afterthought, but it is sold as a reason

the 2nd post in this thread might be a start, or, at the very least, more engagement with countries (i wonder how long NK would have survived if it had been able to isolate). the removal of leaders (esp iran in 1953, allende in 73 etc etc) has been tremendously counter-productive. certainly some bridge-building would be a start, and some PR! if we can improve american standing in the world, and not expect it to get better for a few years. certainly i dont think going to war for moral reasons is valid (neither does the US administration, hence the halfhearted attempts where there havent been other things at stake)

the current policy seems to be making us more enemies day by day

charltonlido (gareth), Thursday, 11 August 2005 04:47 (eighteen years ago) link

http://www.zombietime.com/breasts_not_bombs/IMG_1816.JPG

http://www.zombietime.com/breasts_not_bombs/IMG_1832.JPG

DEFEAT THE AMERICA WAR MACHINE!~!!!!!
w00t woot

cunt, Thursday, 11 August 2005 04:47 (eighteen years ago) link

the current policy seems to be making us more enemies day by day

-- charltonlido (...), August 11th, 2005.

Just to be clear, and for the second time, I'm not talking about current policy. I'm talking about what is to be done about humanitarian crises.

Hurting (Hurting), Thursday, 11 August 2005 04:48 (eighteen years ago) link

as long as we support israel, instead of maintaingin neutrality, our actions in the muslim world can never be seen as valid, and will always be viewed as being israels benefactor. any invasions, no matter how ethical, will always be viewed through that lens

surely, a global policeman must not be seen as biased to one side, or the other side will resist?

charltonlido (gareth), Thursday, 11 August 2005 04:49 (eighteen years ago) link

well, how would you say to the world "hey this new programme of war and regime change is different to the old one!" a period of backing away from this stuff might be the only way to convince nations we have changed our ways and can be trusted now

charltonlido (gareth), Thursday, 11 August 2005 04:50 (eighteen years ago) link

any invasions, no matter how ethical, will always be viewed through that lens

So even if an invasion was justified and required by all moral criteria you'd oppose it because some people might think badly of us for it?

Hurting (Hurting), Thursday, 11 August 2005 04:53 (eighteen years ago) link

a period of backing away from this stuff might be the only way to convince nations we have changed our ways and can be trusted now

-- charltonlido (...), August 11th, 2005.

I might agree with you here, from a pragmatic standpoint. It's Bush's fault though. I think under Clinton we still had some foreign policy cred, which helped our action in Kosovo.

Hurting (Hurting), Thursday, 11 August 2005 04:55 (eighteen years ago) link

definitely! if the target people (lets say iranians, or syrians) thought badly of it (which they almost certainly would),

or lets say libya (secularist leader americans dont like). thinking about the 'some people that might think badly of us for it' (also known as the islamic world), i'd argue that regime change in libya would be a total nightmare, for this reason. and fuelling islamic anti-americanism, and reinforcing the worldview that america is merely israels enforcer (rightly or wrongly) seems a bad idea yes. this is why no american invasion in a muslim country can work

charltonlido (gareth), Thursday, 11 August 2005 04:57 (eighteen years ago) link

As current humanitarian crises go, I doubt Palestine is even in the top 20 in severity, by the way.

Hurting (Hurting), Thursday, 11 August 2005 04:58 (eighteen years ago) link

perception though isnt it? we dont consider it to be one of them. but in large swathes of the middle east, it is considered to be one. it depends who makes the list. and yes i know there are probably figures and statistics to assert that it isnt, but since when do statistics and figures rule hearts and minds? it might even be the fact that we dont consider it that bad, that is a problem in itself?

charltonlido (gareth), Thursday, 11 August 2005 05:00 (eighteen years ago) link

It's talk like that which has made the UN into what it is today -- an appeasement organization that is useless when it comes to preventing or halting world conflicts.

You're wringing your hands and lamenting that the US or whoever can't get involved in Sudan without looking like the bad guy. That's the UN for you. The countries with the worst human rights records in the world hide behind "we don't want the West to lecture us about human rights" rhetoric and harp on Abu Ghraib in order to deflect attention from their own FAR WORSE human rights abuses (has there been a UN resolution condemning the massacre in Uzbekistan? Will there be one? Etc.). Meanwhile, the EU countries abstain from most contentious resolutions and don't have the balls to stand up and say, "hey, killing 70K people in Sudan is WRONG".

This just in -- killing 70K people in Darfur and causing another 2 million to become homeless makes you the bad guy. Pointing out that such things are wrong does not.

MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Thursday, 11 August 2005 05:04 (eighteen years ago) link

whoa, lotsa xposts there

MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Thursday, 11 August 2005 05:04 (eighteen years ago) link

xpost Apparently, propaganda rules hearts and minds, since that accounts for a lot of the "special" feelings for Israel, and Jews in general, in Arab countries. No thank you, I'd rather not let them be entitled to their opinions, when those opinions include me in part of a despicable "zionist entity" with its tentacles encircling the globe.

Hurting (Hurting), Thursday, 11 August 2005 05:04 (eighteen years ago) link

i agree! but there are a lot of steps between pointing out its a bad thing, and a full scale invasion

saddam was wrong. was the invasion right? morally? practically? perhaps it is one but not the other. if something is right morally, is it negated if it worsens the problem? how about 70K dead, but invasion sparks off much worse?

the need to do *something* is understandable, but we are getting involved in, and worsening situations, and we are also turning the entire muslim world against us (much more so in 05 than 00). is there any way to stop this?

charltonlido (gareth), Thursday, 11 August 2005 05:08 (eighteen years ago) link

In retrospect, though I still don't think we should have invaded Iraq at all (at least not when we did), I certainly think we could have done a much better job of it and could have prevented a lot of the problems we are now dealing with.

Things like the invasion and Abu Graib are especially bad because they erode the image of moral authority that we once at least somewhat carried in the world. They rob us of our ability to intervene for moral reasons because no one believes our justifications. But I'd certainly prefer that the US had that image back and started using it for the right purposes.

Hurting (Hurting), Thursday, 11 August 2005 05:13 (eighteen years ago) link

I remember a short letter to the editor from a WWII vet saying that part of what made our efforts in Germany successful is that soldiers were trained to be especially NICE to German POWs. They then went home with a favorable impression of the US and less resentment of our occupation.

Hurting (Hurting), Thursday, 11 August 2005 05:14 (eighteen years ago) link

im not sure of americas moral authority (pre bush) anyway. certainly in the middle east (iran 1953 is still important here, as is support for saddam in the 70s and 80s, support for israel above all other states), but also chile, nicaragua, vietnam etc. outside of america all these things are well known, and remembered. so i think its been eroding gradually over a long period of time (its just its completely eroded in the middle east and has been for many many years)

charltonlido (gareth), Thursday, 11 August 2005 05:18 (eighteen years ago) link

xxxpost That's exactly why the EU abstains on so many UN votes -- they don't want to take sides, turn the Muslim world against them, and so on. When the Sudanese govt's Arab cronies engage in 18 months of raids against their black Muslim brethren, it's not a time to worry about which countries' feelings are getting hurt. If anyone in the Muslim world thinks that, for example, Abu Ghraib and Darfur cancel each other out in terms of human death and suffering, then that's their problem, not ours.

MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Thursday, 11 August 2005 05:22 (eighteen years ago) link

Barry -- I just wrote out a long post to state exactly that point. But yours is far more articulate, and I just want to voice my agreement.

Remy (x Jeremy), Thursday, 11 August 2005 05:24 (eighteen years ago) link

Also, the gradual eroding of moral credibility *should* work both ways. It's justifiable for Middle Eastern countries to distrust the US for its human rights abuses. However, I don't see any of those countries saying, "maybe we don't have any right to criticise the US either, considering how terrible our human rights records are". Rinse, repeat, nothing ever gets done.

MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Thursday, 11 August 2005 05:26 (eighteen years ago) link

I remember a short letter to the editor from a WWII vet saying that part of what made our efforts in Germany successful is that soldiers were trained to be especially NICE to German POWs. They then went home with a favorable impression of the US and less resentment of our occupation

yeah, exactly. vets talked about playing horseshoes with Japanese POWs, etc.

kingfish completely hatstand (Kingfish), Thursday, 11 August 2005 05:27 (eighteen years ago) link

Amen, Barry.

Hurting (Hurting), Thursday, 11 August 2005 05:31 (eighteen years ago) link

again, was it justified for vietnam to invade cambodia to take out the khymer rouge? why or why not?

kingfish completely hatstand (Kingfish), Thursday, 11 August 2005 05:32 (eighteen years ago) link

(question directed at gareth)

kingfish completely hatstand (Kingfish), Thursday, 11 August 2005 05:33 (eighteen years ago) link

that's the bitch of it. at the end of the day, folks are still dying and somebody's gotta stop it. problems result when it's gone about like the current thing, which was to take a kinda fucked-up situation and then go about it in such massively incompetent & bad faith means that made things a lot worse...

Evan Dorkin wrote something in one of this comix along the lines of "one of the reasons that this planet sucks is because the only people in it are the people in it," but that fact shouldn't necessarily stop you.

kingfish completely hatstand (Kingfish), Thursday, 11 August 2005 05:48 (eighteen years ago) link

but there are ways to go about fixing these problems that don't always involve invasion. There's the old quote about "when all you have is a hammer, everything begins to look like a nail." of course, match that with my conservative draftee father's telling of how the informal U.S. Army solution to anything(circa 1965) was "to get a bigger hammer."

to go back to the threat title, North Korea and Darfur are dicey as shit and there aint really shit that any of us can do about, aside from letting more and more folks know about what's going on, and to try to apply pressure to elected officials to work peaceably(if possible) at it. oh yeah, and to also insure that the officials elected aren't the kinda folks to go off and invade at a multi-faceted whim.

when you have so many politicos who waver with whichever way the wind blows, then you can go about changing the direction of the air currents, as it were.

kingfish completely hatstand (Kingfish), Thursday, 11 August 2005 05:53 (eighteen years ago) link

Gareth!

You do seem to be avoiding (or maybe I missed your response to) the point that Iraq isn't a typical situation, that it's one where more or less everything that could be bungled has been.

Also, have you been drinking? You sound like you're moderately to quite drunk, but all the letters in your words are in the right order.

Andrew Farrell (afarrell), Thursday, 11 August 2005 06:27 (eighteen years ago) link

of course it works both ways, but we're not talking about what 'they' should be doing, here? we're talkign about what 'we' should or shouldnt be doing?

its getting dangerously close to us and them, on this thread isnt it? and thats the danger, going in for humanitarian reasons, doesnt really tally with "us and them", especially if 'they' dont think right? a

again, was it justified for vietnam to invade cambodia to take out the khymer rouge? why or why not?

well, we're now talking about non-american/western forces? also we're talking then about a threat on the doorstep. im not really arguing against war per se at all, and i'm sure the vietnamese went in there as much for security reasons as for 'humanitarian' reasons. but the crux of the matter is, this thread isnt really for condemning or praising the actions of other states, this thread is about the actions of our own nations

and as for iraq, i thought i had said i dont believe it to be a 'special case'. i think any action in iran would be equally disastrous, for the same reasons, and sudan, syria, libya all have similarities. although, yes, i agree, that in principle, all situations are special cases with unique circumstances

i'd be more inclined to argue that its actually north korea that is the special case though

charltonlido (gareth), Thursday, 11 August 2005 07:13 (eighteen years ago) link

and, its my view that even if everything hadnt been bungled, we'd be facing many of the same problems there as before. (saddam, in a way, is paradoxically an irrelevant, - the west put him in and backed him, the west took him out when they got bored of him, conflation of saddam with west among many, after all he was their stooge) - hardly a special case as the world is littered with western stooges we put there

charltonlido (gareth), Thursday, 11 August 2005 07:15 (eighteen years ago) link

has anyone read ignatieff's empire lite?

charltonlido (gareth), Monday, 15 August 2005 13:58 (eighteen years ago) link

seven years pass...

Dennis Rodman, in cap, and his traveling companions are now the only Americans known to have met the North Korean leader since he took power more than a year ago.

your fretless ways (Eazy), Saturday, 2 March 2013 06:54 (eleven years ago) link

five months pass...

whole thing is o_O but

Kim Chol was reportedly executed for drinking and carousing during the official mourning period after Kim Jong-il's death.

On the explicit orders of Kim Jong-un to leave "no trace of him behind, down to his hair," according to South Korean media, Kim Chol was forced to stand on a spot that had been zeroed in for a mortar round and "obliterated."

brownie, Friday, 30 August 2013 13:46 (ten years ago) link

North Korea: still hilarious

how's life, Friday, 30 August 2013 14:27 (ten years ago) link

I mean, this was probably the more appropriate thread....

how's life, Friday, 30 August 2013 14:27 (ten years ago) link

ten months pass...

Dear Leader by Jang Jin-Sung should be a compelling read, he is the former N Korean propagandist who defected to S Korea in 2004.

festival of labour (xelab), Monday, 7 July 2014 18:14 (nine years ago) link

Jang Jin-sung held one of the most senior ranks in North Korea's propaganda machine, helping tighten the regime's grip over its people. Among his tasks were developing the founding myth of North Korea, posing undercover as a South Korean intellectual and writing epic poems in support of the dictator, Kim Jong-il.

festival of labour (xelab), Monday, 7 July 2014 18:15 (nine years ago) link


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