Monday, June 4, 2007

N. Korean escapees

Freedom.


Such a bittersweet story. It's amazing how this family of four managed to survive a six day, 900 km (roughly 560 mi) journey in a small boat.

"It took a week for us to come here for freedom," they said. "We headed for Japan since South Korea and North Korea have strong security on their borders. We planned to kill ourselves with the poison if we were caught by the North. We want to go to South Korea."


Dude. That's what you call determination. I can't imagine...floating in a teeny boat on the sea for six days straight, with no real guarantee that I'd even make it to any safe shore. And then to carry a bottle of poison with me, in case I decided that my trip had failed.

Bittersweet.

Sweet because it makes me more grateful that I live here, where I have so many freedoms...even if my every action online is being watched, recorded, analyzed. That's so miniscule compared to fleeing for my life, compared to floating aimlessly in a small boat, not knowing if the rest of my family or I would make it out alive.

Bitter because the reality is that there are so many people left behind on the northern half of the Korean peninsula, so many more who will never live to see anything outside of North Korea, so many more who will die miserable deaths after having lived miserable lives.

Yet all I do is sit here and type away at my laptop...

Chinese journalist wins press freedom award

Yay for Shi Tao!


At least some good came of this whole issue. It's kind of ridiculous how the Chinese government claimed that "that the Chinese constitution protected press freedom." Haha. Hahaha. Good one.

We are not impressed by this argument," Brock said. "Such freedoms do not exist in China today. If they did, Shi Tao would not be in prison, nor would dozens of others."

-George Brock, World Editors Forum (WEF) president

Apparently "the WAN (World Association of Newspapers) and WEF would start a public campaign pressing for Shi's release." =)

He's already served two years--let's get him out of there ASAP.

Study Says Youth Less Interested in Politics

So this is in Russia.

But I've a feeling that it's applicable to the U.S. as well. Why is it that youth is so apathetic? Perhaps it's because we have been taught to be individualistic, to work for our own gain, to zero in on how to improve our own lives. I guess what we fail to realize is that politics, the government, plays a huge role in influencing our standard of living.

I have to admit, I'm guilty of this political apathy as well. I guess that's why I'm "politically clueless" in the first place. For a while there I'd forgotten that I'm of age now--I can actually vote. Thank goodness for this assignment, for this blog. Else I would probably have stayed in my state of political ignorance and complacency for a while longer.

Time to take a stand and actually start caring.

The Cost of Education...

U.S. Puts Limits on Lenders’ Ties to Universities

I wish the government was more active in helping students get through school. It's so darn expensive...and there are plenty of us who have loans that we do need to pay off--not all of us can afford to pay for our education up front. The UK seem to be a lot more in tune with the students' financial shortcomings and consequential needs.

The Government is reversing years of under-investment with an increase in funding for higher education averaging more than 6 per cent – over and above inflation – for the next three years. Funding for student support will rise sharply – including new grants for students from lower income families – and the science settlement is the most generous for a decade. This extra investment will boost access and enable universities to tackle many of their immediate problems.


It'd be great if the U.S. government was the same way.

Then again, maybe they are. Maybe I just haven't researched it enough...hm.

We learn from our mistakes, no?

Romney’s Political Fortunes Tied to Riches He Gained in Business

Mitt Romney owes his nearly $350 million fortune and his political career to a delicate negotiation with his boss in the summer of 1983.


Okay. So Romney can do what he's doing because he made bank back in the day. Nothing wrong with that, right? He used his skills of persuasion and logic to succeed in the business world--granted, he did make a couple of mistakes, as are pointed out in the article. But the article focuses in on two incidents--that's two incidents out of about fifteen years. If those are the only two screw ups that can really be picked at, I say Romney did a pretty dang good job. He's human, and people make mistakes. I think too often we forget that politicians were normal people before they became what we view them as today. Though...that's not to say that politicians aren't normal people. Actually, I guess they really aren't. But that's an entirely different story...

Sunday, June 3, 2007

Does wealth really "breed violence and export terror?"

According to Bush...

"When we help lift societies out of poverty, we create new markets for American goods and new jobs for American workers. When we help reduce chaos and suffering, we make America safer, because prosperous nations are less likely to breed violence and export terror."


I don't think wealth is necessarily a good way to measure how likely a nation is to "breed violence and export terror." Going back to an earlier an entry, It seems that the UK and US are breeding grounds for rebellious, crime mongering youth. From the article from that entry...

While an ageing, ever more crowded Europe looks on anxiously at the stress behaviour currently being exhibited by its own dysfunctional young – be it Parisian car barbeques or riots in Denmark and Germany – our continental cousins can’t help but notice that many of these behaviours debuted in Anglo-American cultures.


The US and UK are among the wealthiest, the most developed...yet
According to the Unicef report, which measured 40 indicators of quality of life – including the strength of relationships with friends and family, educational achievements and personal aspirations, and exposure to drinking, drug taking and other risky behaviour – British children have the most miserable upbringing in the developed world. American children come next, second from the bottom.


Lovely.

"Prosperous nations are less likely to breed violence and export terror."

Hardly. We need to look past just wealth. Judging from personal observations, it seems that those with the most money and free time are the ones who cause the most trouble. Violence and terror don't stem from poverty; violence and terror stem from issues much deeper than just financial stability.

This is not to say that wealth and poverty have nothing to do with this issue at all--just to say thta they are not the only contributing factors.

Sex Sells

Porn Tycoon Offers $1M For Sex Scandal

Dude. Are you freaking serious? The article is short enough for me to post it here...

Hustler magazine publisher Larry Flynt is offering $1 million to anyone who can provide proof of an illicit sexual encounter with a high-ranking government official.

In a full-page ad in The Washington Post, Flynt asked for "documented evidence of illicit sexual or intimate relations with a congressperson, senator or other prominent officeholder."

He said he would pay up to $1 million for material that could be verified and published in Hustler.

Flynt ran a similar ad in October 1998, during the height of the Monica Lewinsky scandal that led to the impeachment of President Bill Clinton.

The publisher took credit for the resignation of House Speaker-designate Bob Livingston, who admitted he'd had extramarital affairs after word got out that Flynt was investigating him.



Is this what politics boils down to? I guess sex really does sell. Maybe this is what it'll take for some people to gain an interest in anything even slightly politically related.

What's the point of this, anyway? Oh dear...

Saturday, June 2, 2007

Silent Graduation

Diplomas Denied Over Graduation Cheers



The student eagerly rises from his seat, anticipating his turn to walk across the stage to shake the hand of his principal for the past four years, then to feel the smooth paper of his diploma settle into his hand--the piece of paper that declares he has struggled and succeeded through four years of high school madness. He wears a huge grin on his face, eager yet patiently waiting for his name to be called--and then he hears it. His name is called, and you can hear it reverberate through the auditorium as he proudly and confidently strides toward the principal to receive his certificate. But the reverberations of his name are swallowed by his equally excited family and friends, and along with the reverberations go his diploma.

How depressing.

Can you imagine what that student felt? The feeling of his heart dropping into the pits of his stomach, the feeling of rejection, the knowledge of a diploma denied.

It's understandable that adminstrators would want to keep this ceremony quiet enough for parents to hear the names of their children called out. But what is worth more: the sound of the student's name being called as a declaration of his success, or the tangible evidence of said success in the form of a diploma? Really now...can't we all just be happy for each other? Their children all struggled through four years of the same high school--let them all rejoice collectively, as the one body that they truly represent.

Another student who was denied a diploma, Nadia Trent, said: “It’s not fair. Somebody could not like me and just decide to yell to get me in trouble. I can’t control everyone, just the ones I gave tickets to.”


Good point. What if those cheering had malicious intents at heart? No good, no good.

Assisted Suicides

Kevorkian Speaks After His Release From Prison

I must admit, I admire the man for his persistence, even after eight years of imprisonment. At the same time, it's just a little unnerving once I take into consideration what it is he's being persistent about.

Assisted suicides? It's almost like putting dogs to sleep. Is that what we have been reduced to? God made us the way we are for a reason--we actually are on a different level than mere animals, contrary to what people may want to believe. Though I don't understand why they would want to equate themselves to the likes of animals in the first place...

The guy may be a little extreme, but at least he has a passion for something. And he cares about the government that guides the country--even if he cares about it in a negative light. Too many people stumble through their lives, clueless as to what it is the government is doing to alter their very lives. So many people today lack passion; they have no motivation, no direction, no desire to do anything anymore. It seems that people like to settle for the mediocre, the lukewarm, the comfortable.

If only people like Kevorkian were passionate about the right things...if only.

Friday, June 1, 2007

California on Iraq

California Primary Ballot May Include Iraq Question
“He grew up during the Vietnam War and saw all those young people take to the streets,” Ms. Trost said. “He said, ‘Now they can go to the ballot box.’ ”


Too bad it seems like "young people" really don't care. In comparison to "young people" during the Vietnam War, at least.

I can't say that I've actively taken a stand on the war. Yet I can name four people off the top of my head who were relatively close to me who either fought or are fighting in the war. Why is it that we don't care anymore? I digress.

What does this mean for presidential campaigns?

Win or lose, the measure would be toothless, but pollsters and political scientists said it could change the dynamics of the primary race here, in part by making it difficult for presidential candidates to avoid the subject while campaigning in the state.


Good luck, potential Presidents.

Thursday, May 31, 2007

N Korea = full of

...excuses.

"Because of the intervention of foreign powers, the implementation of what is agreed upon between the two Koreas is being suspended, and the inter-Korean relationship is being edged out by foreign powers," the North's Korean Central News Agency quoted Kwon as saying in Seoul.

The North -- which staged a short-range missile test last week -- also took the South to task for its joint military exercises with the US, and urged it to repeal its tough National Security Law and reject outside interference.


Looking back at these past few decades, all North Korea seems to have wanted is for the United States to clear the peninsula completely. Thrice, I believe, did North Korea attempt to have peace talks with South Korea; thrice did they fail. But why? Why did these talks fail? Well. It was always on the part of North Korea to rough things up a bit.

I think that the North Korean government just wants to purge the peninsula of any US influence, to reach their ultimate goal of reunification. But their means of reunification is for the North to take over the South by force.

I think it'll be a long while before North Korea will ever become cooperative with South Korea and the United States, let alone the rest of the world.

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

The Watcher

Rise of the Internet Police State

“Quite often,” observes Lawson, “if you go in and actually read what you’re clicking ‘I agree’ to, it says ‘I agree to let you track my activities online and use that information for whatever you want.’”


Holy cow. I really should start actually reading those agreement things...oh dear. This article makes the government, or the "Internet Police State," sound a lot like the secret police or Gestapo of Nazi Germany. Okay, so maybe not a LOT like them, but enough to bring them to mind. Though we in America may fall victim to this Internet Police State and find that our every action is being watched and recorded, it's not half as bad as those perhaps in China.

Whatever the case, I don't know what this nation is coming to. I'm not even that surprised that our every move is being watched, but at the same time, it does make me a little nervous. And I don't want to become the over paranoid described in this article.


Ironically, the internet once promised a veritable democratic revolution of wide open communication. If current trends continue, we could well end up paranoid and close mouthed, afraid that everything we do will be recorded, forever available for use against us at at any time, in any way.


It seems that America is become less of a nation defined by its people, and more of a nation defined by its regulations.

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

China in Darfur


The world is dying...

The point of this article is that China is screwing the US over in terms of our attempt at helping out with the crisis in Darfur.

Morally, the world is dying. Mass murder, moral depravity, etc.

Physically, the world is dying. "Together the two nations' output of the harmful gases will surpass that of the United States by 2015 and Merkel, who is having trouble winning Washington's support on the environment, believes that without their help efforts to fight global warming will fail."

When will it end? Is there even a light at the end of the tunnel?

Monday, May 28, 2007

This just reinforces my last entry...

Generation F*cked: How Britain is Eating Its Young

This piece is mainly about how the UK is neglecting its young and focusing only on the older generation. Adults, parents, have placed their children under excessive amounts of surveillance, only to observe disgustedly from a distance.

It's almost as if consumerism has swallowed the minds of middle class parents, urging them to spend all of their money on their own comfort and to purge even the earth of all of its resources, to a certain extent. Yet it has also swallowed the youth, for it is no longer mainly those who live in poverty who wreak havoc among and throughout society by means of crime and chaos; it is the the children of those who have money, who can afford to buy their children what their greedy, twisted little hearts desire. These children, the youth, lack nothing physically. It is a lack of morals that runs rampant in the UK...but why does it even matter? Because this isn't just something that the UK deals with--it's something that we're dealing with here in the States.

Corporate America is eating everyone alive. And we don't even realize it.

Friday, May 25, 2007

Condi Raps



She's not bad. Hahahaha...

Condilicious.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Liberalism as a squirming, hairless creature.

The American Left's Silly Victim Complex

Before I comment on this article, let me tell you that for the time being, I affiliate myself with neither Republicans or Democrats--I'm still trying to figure it all out. I just found this article to be interesting enough to post about.


For a while there I'd forgotten that the Democrats were the ones who catered to the working class, those who were down to earth and realistic, those who really made an effort to see eye-to-eye with the average American. According to Bernie Sanders,

“Unfortunately, today, when you talk about the ‘American left,'...you’re not really referring to millions of workers who have lost their jobs because of disastrous trade agreements,” he says. “You’re not talking about waitresses who are working for four bucks an hour.” As often as not, he says, you’re talking about “sophisticated people who have money.”

“It’s also a cultural thing,” Sanders says. “A lot of these folks really don’t have a lot of contact with working-class people. They’re not comfortable with working-class people. They’re more comfortable with environmentalists, with well-educated people. And it’s their issues that matter to them.”

This is another dirty little secret of the left – the fact that, at least when it comes to per-capita income, those interminable right-wing criticisms about liberals being “elitists” are actually true. According to a 2004 Pew report, Americans who self-identify as liberals have an average annual income of $71,000 – the highest-grossing political category in America. They’re also the best-educated class, with over one in four being post-graduates.


Ouch. In terms of financial stability...well. The gap between the rich and the poor seems to be growing at almost an exponential rate. The rich are getting richer, the poor becoming poorer. And it seems that as this gap widens, the poor are being neglected in the political sphere. Politically, people seem to be coming together, even if they don't necessarily identify with the same political party.

American is increasingly becoming a nation driven by its wealth, not by its people. Surprise, surprise--this nation is supposed to be one of people, not of money.


But having rich college grads acting as the political representatives of the working class isn’t just bad politics. It’s also silly. And there’s probably no political movement in history that’s been sillier than the modern American left.

What makes the American left silly? Things that in a vacuum should be logical impossibilities are frighteningly common in lefty political scenes. The word “oppression” escaping, for any reason, the mouths of kids whose parents are paying 20 grand for them to go to private colleges. Academics in Priuses using the word “Amerika.” Ebonics, Fanetiks, and other such insane institutional manifestations of white guilt. Combat berets. Combat berets in conjunction with designer coffees. Combat berets in conjunction with designer coffees consumed at leisure in between conversational comparisons of America to Nazi Germany.

We all know where this stuff comes from. Anyone who’s ever been to a lefty political meeting knows the deal – the problem is the “spirit of inclusiveness” stretched to the limits of absurdity. The post-sixties dogma that everyone’s viewpoint is legitimate, everyone‘s choice about anything (lifestyle, gender, ethnicity, even class) is valid, that’s now so totally ingrained that at every single meeting, every time some yutz gets up and starts rambling about anything, no matter how ridiculous, no one ever tells him to shut the fuck up. Next thing you know, you’ve got guys on stilts wearing mime makeup and Cat-in-the-Hat striped top-hats leading a half-million people at an anti-war rally. Why is that guy there? Because no one told him that war is a matter of life and death and that he should leave his fucking stilts at home.


I'd always wondered, in passing, why it is that college students just don't seem to care anymore. I wondered why nobody takes to the streets like they did back in the 60s, why everyone seems to be so darn apathetic. I guess it's because, as addressed in this article, we don't have any new fights to fight. The issues that drove students to the streets and to be active are now things of the past, things we really don't have any reason to fight for as actively as they did in previous years. Times have changed; things are vastly different from what they were in the 1960s. Times have changed; why haven't we? It seems to me that I need to rethink what it means to be politically active, what it means to make a difference in this nation. Maybe I don't have to march around with a megaphone, crying out against the war; maybe that's not as effective as it was nearly 50 years ago.

I'll end it with this:

That, in sum, is why I don’t call myself a liberal. To me the word “liberalism” describes an era whose time is past, a time when a liberal was defined more by who he was fighting against – the Man – than what he was fighting for. A liberal wielding power is always going to seem a bit strange because a liberal always imagines himself in an intrepid fight against power, not holding it. I therefore prefer the word “progressive,” which describes in a neutral way a set of political values without having these class or aesthetic connotations. To me a progressive is not fighting Mom and Dad, Nixon, Bush or really any people at all, but things – political corruption, commercialism, pollution, etc. It doesn’t have that same Marxian us-versus-them connotation that liberalism still has, sometimes ridiculously. It’s about goals, not people.


It's about goals, not people. Well said.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Why Bush hasn't been impeached

Click here for the full article.



Whyyyy...politics. So confusing. Why am I even a Political Science major? Wow. This article was just really long and it was hard getting through it. Okay maybe not...I'm just feeling really restless and easily distracted right now.

Okay. So why didn't Bush get impeached? Because in actuality, Americans love war. At laest, that's what the point of this article seems to be. Americans love war. Bush loves war. But Americans hate Bush. But they love war more than they hate Bush. Sooooo Americans secretly love Bush. Oooh...the irony. Seriously, I think that's it. Right? That's all the article seemed to focus in on. What the heck is wrong with our freaking government...oh man.

George W. Bush, what are you doing?? Why do people hate you so much? How much of what I read is really true??? So confused...=(

Saturday, May 19, 2007

A Christian soldier in Iraq

As mentioned in my earlier post, I have a couple of friends in Iraq--one of whom updates a blog. The options are set so that only a select few can view it, but I'm going to post an excerpt from one of the entries here. I hope I'm not breaking any rules or...something.


what have I become? I first started this deployment wanting to make a difference; to show christ to at least one of my friends or may be an Iraqi? Now i find myself struggling to seek God on my own. I had no idea Iraq/deployment would be like this...but then again how could I have known? What this deployment has done to me...it worries me. Its like a diesease; I ask myself is it permanent? can I change back to who I was?

...To tell you the truth I am too weak. I do not have the faith to risk my life to befriend an Iraqi nor do I have the compassion. A strong Christian would go out there knowing God will protect him. WWJD? Jesus would go out there and He would teach them parables even if there was a suicide bomber. What do I do when I know i'm weak and I know I won't be changing my ways? Lets say I was to be Christlike, and surround myself with curious iraqis, but i end up getting me or one of my buddies injured or even killed? Because the only thing that would protect me from a suicide vest is distance. or am I just making excuses? Is there a different Christian walk for soliders???

I hope when I do return I can be me again. But is it wrong to want all that knowing that I almost shot a guy a couple weeks ago. That i despise and even hate the Iraqis. is it hyopcritical? Is it okey to go back to who I was and forget Iraq?


To see how much my friend struggles...it's disheartening. But at the same time, it's encouraging in that I know that God is always keeping watch, that God knows what He's doing. How do I know? Well. He hasn't let this soldier go; He hasn't let this soldier go astray. It's good to know that my friend is wrestling with this, and not just submitting to what comes naturally and easiest.

Press on, dear soldier. Press on.

Friday, May 18, 2007

Soldiers in Iraq

This entry isn't very politically loaded...not that any of my entries are, really.

I was just reading up on Iraq, and I must say--I miss my buddies.

I have a couple of friends over there right now...and I do miss them dearly. They keep us, their friends and family, posted by means of their personal blogs and what not, and to tell you the truth, I can't tell whether it's more comforting or stressful. They post entries about mortar attacks, about how they thought they were going to die, about how their friends almost died, about how they almost killed someone. But they're still alive and well-relatively speaking.

I really should write them...it still just doesn't seem real to me. I know you guys probably won't see this, but really--I really do miss you immensely. I know I promised I'd write, but I've yet to follow through with that promise. I'm sorry for being such a horrible friend; I'm sorry I haven't made more of an effort. I think it's just easier to push the thought to the back of my head, to convince myself that you're not out there risking your lives on a daily basis, for a war I'm totally confused about. Please...be safe. Please. My personal count is already up to four--I don't want that to go up any time soon.

I'm praying for you.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Romney the Polygamist



Does it really matter?

"I don't think in modern day America anybody is going to run against him because of his religion. I don't think his argument last week with al sharpton will be anything other than a sideshow, nor should it be. I think the real question is: Where does he stand on the issues? What's he going to do for America and how do his views match up with the Democrats?"


Well said. I didn't even realize people still thought that the Mormons were huge on polygamy anymore. I thought that was a thing of the past-gone and over with.

What the guy said in the interview is true--who's going to run against him because of his religion? Granted, we can't neglect his religion; we can't trivialize it and say that no one cares at all. It probably does and will have an affect on the voters. But that's from the point of view of the voters, not the candidates. I highly doubt the candidates would see his religion as a big enough weakness to explicitly run against it. Truly, it is the issues that he flip-flopped on that should be much more of a concern to anybody than his religion.

As for his charisma...

That most definitely is a force formidable enough that his opponents may have to deal with. During the presidential campaign and elections of 1960, Nixon practically got owned by Kennedy because of their televised debates. In a nutshell, Kennedy was more charismatic--and he won.

Religion? Not as much of an issue as is his charisma.

Monday, May 14, 2007

Japanese revising their constitution?

Asia worried by changes in Japanese Constitution

How legitimate are their fears?

Many analysts see constitutional change as a step toward a more assertive Japan that could rattle Asian neighbors still harboring bitter memories of Japanese imperialism during the past century.

"Although Japan doesn't have the intent of becoming a military power, revising the Constitution could be seen by neighboring countries as a move toward militarism," said Hiro Katsumata, a defense analyst at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore.

During Monday's vote, about 500 protesters - including Buddhist monks and students - rallied outside the parliament, accusing Abe of aiming to change the constitution to allow Japan to go to war.


Understandable. The Japanese literally and figuratively raped their neighboring countries in the past--why would anyone want to let them have any power ever again?

Then again, back then, their neighboring countries had little military power and were far less developed than they are right now. Take South Korea, for example--its military force is formidable enough. At least, much more so than it was however many years ago. South Korea is most definitely capable of defending itself from Japanese attacks and second occupation.

Besides...

Geographically, Japan is at a disadvantage. It's an island with very limited resources, and it's puny, to name a couple of drawbacks.

I don't think we have much to worry about...at least, not for the time being.

Sunday, May 13, 2007

Hillary's Baggage



Hahaha.



What you gonna do with all that junk?

Clever...clever indeed.

Monday, May 7, 2007

Macaca



Can you say, "political suicide?"

Wow.

For those of you who don't know, "macaca" is a racial slur. And George Allen used it out of frustration...and it was recorded, posted on Youtube, and viewed by countless numbers of people.

Go here for the details.

Good riddance.

Saturday, May 5, 2007

Obama the Muslim Terrorist



Oh no! Obama is a terrorist!

Hahaha. Hahahahaha. Wow.

I'm not entire sure which party I align myself with, but I think my ideals are more in line with the Republicans. I'm still figuring it out, so yes.

But...this is just ridiculous. WOW.

Thursday, May 3, 2007

Simpsons Episode #1805



Anti-recruiting campaign?

Wednesday, May 2, 2007

Three lives = $3,000

At least, that seems to be the case in Laos.



These three, Hyok Choi, a 12-year-old boy, his sister, Hyang Choi, 13, and another girl, Hyang-Mi Choi, 17, were caught in Laos as they were trying to find safety after having fled North Korea. And Laotian officials are asking for $3,000 "to grease the wheels of their release."

Are you kidding me? That's absolutely ridiculous. I'm at a loss for words...

"If you don't help us, we will kill ourselves because we don't want to go to North Korea," Choi Hyok wrote on April 6.

Choi Hyang-mi told her uncle that the three had been interrogated and threatened by North Korean officials and urged him to send them the money being demanded in exchange for their release. "Don't count the number and please save human life! They can take our dead bodies to North Korea, but not us alive. I mean it!" she wrote.

Choi Hyang-mi wrote that her letter was "the last chance of a drowning person who will catch at a straw," according to a rough translation into English from the original Korean.

To tell you the truth, I can't believe the officials only demanded three thousand dollars. Not to say that it's right that they demanded anything at all--oh, I don't know. This whole situation is just disgustingly wrong.

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Inside North Korea (Part 2)



I think what people fail to realize is that for the most part, North Koreans are genuine in their worship and praise of Kim Jung Il and Kim Il Sun. Think about it-these people have never known anything outside of North Korea. The government makes sure that there is no outside influence, and they control every aspect of life. How can the people be discontented with something when they have no way of finding a measure of comparison? Most, if not all, North Koreans truly believe that their way of life is the best, and that it is their duty to educate and spread their way of life to the rest of the world. That's kind of what the Juche ideology is about as well.

North Korea...such a complicated nation. How can we help a peoople so far gone, so firm in their beliefs that they don't need any help? Hm...

Saturday, April 21, 2007

Inside North Korea

This is the first part of a National Geographic documentary about North Korea.

Part 1


Quite possibly one of the most depressing video clips I have ever seen.

Just one thing--according to Micheal Breer, "the juche philosophy basically means 'up yours' to the outside world. We can make everything ourselves, we don't need you."

The Juche ideology is much more than just that--it is a religion, a way of viewing the world. It is God's gift to the North Koreans, for them to spread throughout the world. They believe that they are some kind of Jerusalem of the East, that it is their destiny, their duty, their calling, to share with the world what God has blessed them with. And they want to start by dominating the South and indoctrinating them as well.

Part 2 to come later.

Friday, April 20, 2007

1984



A video I've watched several times, and one that I won't get sick of. =)

To be honest, I like it more for the technical side, not for the political implications. It's crazy how much creativity flows from some people's minds...

Thursday, April 19, 2007

www.challengeofthesuperduperfriends.com



HAHAHAHAHA.

Wow. That's pretty dang funny...

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

A New Generation of Politics


Citizen Tube

I must say this is pretty awesome, though some of it is kind of stupid. I'm glad they're trying to bring the candidates and the campaigns to the Net, to Youtube, to the people, to the youth. Now if only people tuned in more and did more than just sit, watch, and type responses. Let's take it to the next level, yes?

Sunday, April 15, 2007

Nixon vs. Kennedy in relation to...

today.

In August President Eisenhower, who had long been ambivalent about Nixon, held a televised press conference in which a reporter mentioned Nixon's claims that he had been a valuable administration insider and advisor. The reporter asked Eisenhower if he could think of any Nixon advice or suggestions that he had heeded. Eisenhower responded with the flip comment that "if you give me a week I might think of one." Although both Eisenhower and Nixon later claimed that Ike was merely joking with the reporter, the remark hurt Nixon, as it undercut his claims of having greater decision-making experience than Kennedy. The remark proved so damaging to Nixon that the Democrats turned Eisenhower's statement into a television commercial criticizing Nixon.


I guess what we're experiencing with the Internet (ie. Youtube) these days is something that's been going on and has been kind of a big deal for far longer than I thought. I'm taking a class at school entitled Blogs, Politics and the Media, and the other day we were talking about how it's crucial that people are careful of what they say, because it can be recorded, posted on the Net, and repeated everywhere long after the act. On top of that, it can incite people who care enough to dig up things of the past, things you thought were long forgotten. I guess it was the same way with Nixon. That sucks...

That, my friends, is what you call a joke gone bad. Really bad.

Saturday, April 14, 2007

U.S. Says Macau to Release $25M in Frozen N. Korean Funds

Nuclear North Korea + Money = bad idea


(Photo from http://flapsblog.com/)


How wise is it, really, to trust the North Koreans? Yes, I realize that nobody has much of a choice and that we need to cooperate with the upper half of the Korean peninsula...but still. How can we even know for sure that they'd really stop production and what not? North Korea may be poor, and the people starving, dying and disappearing...but that doesn't mean that the government is stupid. In fact, the fact that this nation still exists goes to show just how smart the government officials are. They've managed to keep a dying nation alive for far longer than it should have been. We have a hard time finding any real figures and stats about this place, because it is so closed and so private. How can we rest assured that they would stop nuclear production? Even if they stop the physical production, we don't know that they would go and improve their technology on paper.

Then again, what can we do? Not much. I say we gather all the North Korean officials and send them off in a rocket up onto Mars. Maybe they'll figure out a way for human life to subsist on this planet, a mystery yet to be solved, simply as a result of their belief that they are superior than all others. And I'm half kidding. I suppose that the only way we can really deal with this insolent group is to just go about doing what we're doing--though we may trip, fall, and totally destroy ourselves in the process of groping around in the dark, there's actually a chance that we might find the light switch and be able to deal with this matter in a better informed and well guided way.

Until then, I say we put Kim Jong Il on a one way rocket to Mars.

Friday, April 13, 2007

Wow.



Seriously, people like to pick everything apart. Sometimes, we need to step away from such tiny details and take a look at what really matters. When you zero in on the pixels in a photo, you can't really see the photo as it was meant to be seen. When you nitpick and tear sentences from speeches apart, chances are you're not looking at the speech as a whole, what it really meant.

Let's take a step back, people. Let's look at the big picture.

Thursday, April 12, 2007

Yahoo helped Chinese to prosecute journalist

Dude...this sucks.

But I must say...perhaps it wasn't so wise of the journalist, Shi Tao, to post through Yahoo. Well, to post anything on the Internet, at least. Especially because he was and is living in China as he criticizes it. I know a few missionaries in China right now who are extremely careful about even the words they post. They refrain from posting any words with religious connotations, and are very roundabout in their explanations about the work they are doing, if ever they do mention it at all.

Aside from that, Yahoo could have been more careful. But maybe it was included in the user agreement somewhere, that all their information could be forfeited to the government. Ugh. I know this is slightly old news, but it still saddens me.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Welcome

So this is it--this is my political blog. Too bad I don't really know much about politics to begin with..

Bear with me. I'm still learning. =)