General South Korea President Yoon declares martial law

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vad

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Jun 24, 2022
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South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol on Tuesday declared martial law in a surprise late-night TV address, slamming domestic political opponents and sending shockwaves through the country.
Yoon said opposition parties had taken the parliamentary process hostage. He vowed to eradicate "shameless pro-North Korean anti-state forces" and said he had no choice but to take the measure to safeguard constitutional order.

Yonhap news agency cited the military as saying activities by parliament and political parties would be banned, and that media and publishers would be under the control of the martial law command.
Yoon did not cite any specific threat from the nuclear-armed North, instead focusing on his domestic political opponents. It is the first time since 1980 that martial law has been declared in South Korea.
 

CuddleBug

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Nov 18, 2023
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Imagine this. Biden quickly steps down, then Harris does the same thing and also suspends Trump from taking office. What we know is that the majority of the government would support it and a nauseating portion of the civilian population would also.
 

vad

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Jun 24, 2022
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I dont know enough about South Korea to fully understand what this means in the big picture. Trusting news reports is not something I am going to do. I think the same about Twitter posts, I dont feel they are any more trustworthy than MSM for the most part.

Hopefully someone here has some grounded knowledge about the region and its politics?
 

CuddleBug

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Nov 18, 2023
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This is all a bit surprising, but I found the statement that there are pro N. Korean forces in their country shocking. I never imagined that there were people living there that looked at the country on the other side of the DMZ and thought "we need to be more like them, they really have it figured out".
 

Ramon Maroni

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Aug 13, 2024
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This is all a bit surprising, but I found the statement that there are pro N. Korean forces in their country shocking. I never imagined that there were people living there that looked at the country on the other side of the DMZ and thought "we need to be more like them, they really have it figured out".
agreed

I thought that statement was puzzling as well
 

Greenbean

Posting Machine
Nov 14, 2015
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We have people here in America begging for socialism, so its not that big of a stretch.
This. It's probably the least surprising thing here. Other countries have their versions of our cia that Stokes divisions and warps young minds all over the globe. Not to mention it makes it harder for governments to enact measures against the countries who have their agents and assets working within.
 

MountainMedic

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Sep 28, 2017
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This is all a bit surprising, but I found the statement that there are pro N. Korean forces in their country shocking. I never imagined that there were people living there that looked at the country on the other side of the DMZ and thought "we need to be more like them, they really have it figured out".
Commie operatives

Remember, North and South Korea are still technically at war. Alls fair...
 

Tom_Cody

Active Member
Aug 13, 2024
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This is all a bit surprising, but I found the statement that there are pro N. Korean forces in their country shocking. I never imagined that there were people living there that looked at the country on the other side of the DMZ and thought "we need to be more like them, they really have it figured out".
I disagree and don't really find it all that surprising.

A common response to being confronted with decades of failed implementations, supporters of (insert marxist flavor here) is that it just hasn't been implemented correctly.

There needs to be a balance between both socialist & capitalist systems, because neither system is perfect.

On one hand, you have a system rooted in academia, which tries to solve a problem in a vacuum and is far too reliant on variable control to ever be implemented & maintained successfully.

On the other is a system rooted in the natural instinct to survive, which is based on strength (purchasing power, influence, force projection, etc.) and if left unchecked results in domination of the weak.

Ultimately, it's our collective retardation that leads us to impulsively believe that one approach is better than the other and then kill one another to prove it.
 

CuddleBug

Well-Known Member
Nov 18, 2023
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753
You make some thoughtful points, but...

" Ultimately, it's our collective retardation that leads us to impulsively believe that one approach is better than the other and then kill one another to prove it."

You think it's retarded to see a stark difference between North Korea and South Korea and to think one might be superior to the other?