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How many times have communists forcibly dissolved your government?How do you know a majority of Koreans would have chosen communism?But you dream/wish/fantasize that it would be the communist paradise you think it should be if only we had abandoned the South and let the dominoes roll on to Japan, right comrade?
LOL! Do you really think that's how communists work? You can't be that naive.
Chomsky is still a work in progressChomsky? Well, you just completed your portrait...![]()
Have you noticed any "murderous violence" or "ensuing oppression" in US History?Communist take over (and the ensuing oppression that follows) on a national scale always involves murderous violence. Hell, that's part of the idea.
Chomsky might argue the French started that war:Vietnam War? Sure.
Korean? That's some bubbly insanity burbling to the top there.
We didn't start the Vietnam War, the Việt Minh did when they rose up against the French, it was a french colony. Unfortunately we honored a treaty to come to the France's aid and unfortunately ended up stuck in what became an American war when the French pulled out. That's not to say we weren't complicit in creating the situation for our involvement, our "containment" policy at the time saw to that.
"The direct U.S. attack against South Vietnam followed our support for the French attempt to reconquer their former colony, our disruption of the 1954 'peace process,' and a terrorist war against the South Vietnamese population.
"This terror had already left some 75,000 dead while evoking domestic resistance, supported from the northern half of the country after 1959, that threatened to bring down the regime that the U.S. had established.
"In the following years, the U.S. continued to resist every attempt at peaceful settlement, and in 1964 began to plan the ground invasion of South Vietnam.
"The land assault took place in early 1965, accompanied by the bombing of North Vietnam and an intensification of the bombing of the south, at triple the level of the more publicized bombing of the north. The U.S. also extended the war to Laos and Cambodia."
Invasion Newspeak: U.S. & USSR, by Noam Chomsky
It seems to me the US invasions and occupations of Korea and Vietnam were just more "busine$$ a$ u$ual" for "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world:"
Who do you turn to for an "objective, informed, historical context" of US imperialism since 1945?Chomsky might argue the French started that war:We didn't start the Vietnam War, the Việt Minh did when they rose up against the French, it was a french colony. Unfortunately we honored a treaty to come to the France's aid and unfortunately ended up stuck in what became an American war when the French pulled out. That's not to say we weren't complicit in creating the situation for our involvement, our "containment" policy at the time saw to that.
"The direct U.S. attack against South Vietnam followed our support for the French attempt to reconquer their former colony, our disruption of the 1954 'peace process,' and a terrorist war against the South Vietnamese population.
"This terror had already left some 75,000 dead while evoking domestic resistance, supported from the northern half of the country after 1959, that threatened to bring down the regime that the U.S. had established.
"In the following years, the U.S. continued to resist every attempt at peaceful settlement, and in 1964 began to plan the ground invasion of South Vietnam.
"The land assault took place in early 1965, accompanied by the bombing of North Vietnam and an intensification of the bombing of the south, at triple the level of the more publicized bombing of the north. The U.S. also extended the war to Laos and Cambodia."
Invasion Newspeak: U.S. & USSR, by Noam Chomsky
It seems to me the US invasions and occupations of Korea and Vietnam were just more "busine$$ a$ u$ual" for "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world:"
The argument can be made for either the French or the Viet Minh starting the war, as for your "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world" comment...... pure, unadulterated bull shit that has no basis in an objective, informed historical context. This is evident by your reliance on Chomsky for your information, who is anything but objective or historically knowledgeable.
About 4 million people died for bullshit?
"At the Potsdam Conference (July–August 1945), the Allies unilaterally decided to divide Korea—without consulting the Koreans—in contradiction of the Cairo Conference.[44][45][46][47]
"On 8 September 1945, Lt. Gen. John R. Hodge of the United States arrived in Incheon to accept the Japanese surrender south of the 38th parallel.[30] Appointed as military governor, General Hodge directly controlled South Korea as head of the United States Army Military Government in Korea (USAMGIK 1945–48).[48] He established control by restoring to power the key Japanese colonial administrators and their Korean police collaborators.[13]
"The USAMGIK refused to recognise the provisional government of the short-lived People's Republic of Korea (PRK) because he suspected it was communist. These policies, voiding popular Korean sovereignty, provoked civil insurrections and guerrilla warfare."
Korean War - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
You should stop "thinking" like a slave and Get CrazyChomsky is a far-looney-tunes-left crank, and now we know, so are you.
If you seriously believe in some equivalence between US history - for all our flaws - and the death and destruction wrought at the hands of Mao, Stalin, Pol-pot, etc. then you are hopeless. Truly hopeless.
You've proven yourself beneath serious consideration. No wonder you've got all those red things - they fit you like a glove.
Vietnam War? Sure.
Korean? That's some bubbly insanity burbling to the top there.
We didn't start the Vietnam War, the Việt Minh did when they rose up against the French, it was a french colony. Unfortunately we honored a treaty to come to the France's aid and unfortunately ended up stuck in what became an American war when the French pulled out. That's not to say we weren't complicit in creating the situation for our involvement, our "containment" policy at the time saw to that.
Which version of Korean history are you ignoring?About 4 million people died for bullshit?
"At the Potsdam Conference (July–August 1945), the Allies unilaterally decided to divide Korea—without consulting the Koreans—in contradiction of the Cairo Conference.[44][45][46][47]
"On 8 September 1945, Lt. Gen. John R. Hodge of the United States arrived in Incheon to accept the Japanese surrender south of the 38th parallel.[30] Appointed as military governor, General Hodge directly controlled South Korea as head of the United States Army Military Government in Korea (USAMGIK 1945–48).[48] He established control by restoring to power the key Japanese colonial administrators and their Korean police collaborators.[13]
"The USAMGIK refused to recognise the provisional government of the short-lived People's Republic of Korea (PRK) because he suspected it was communist. These policies, voiding popular Korean sovereignty, provoked civil insurrections and guerrilla warfare."
Korean War - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
You completely ignore Korean history..which, demonstrates, that is the Koreans themselves that invite foreign powers in to fight adversaries.
In any case..South Korea is a shining example of an American success story. They've retained their own culture..and are extremely prosperous.
You should stop "thinking" like a slave and Get CrazyChomsky is a far-looney-tunes-left crank, and now we know, so are you.
If you seriously believe in some equivalence between US history - for all our flaws - and the death and destruction wrought at the hands of Mao, Stalin, Pol-pot, etc. then you are hopeless. Truly hopeless.
You've proven yourself beneath serious consideration. No wonder you've got all those red things - they fit you like a glove.
"Native AmericansÂ’ resistance to the westward expansion of Europeans took two forms.
"One was violence.
"The other was accommodation.
"Neither worked.
"Their land was stolen, their communities were decimated, their women and children were gunned down and the environment was ravaged. There was no legal recourse. There was no justice.
"There never is for the oppressed.
"And as we face similar forces of predatory, unchecked corporate power intent on ruthless exploitation and stripping us of legal and physical protection, we must confront how we will respond."
You've made it very clear how you will respond.
Like a gutless corporate tool...
Who do you turn to for an "objective, informed, historical context" of US imperialism since 1945?Chomsky might argue the French started that war:
"The direct U.S. attack against South Vietnam followed our support for the French attempt to reconquer their former colony, our disruption of the 1954 'peace process,' and a terrorist war against the South Vietnamese population.
"This terror had already left some 75,000 dead while evoking domestic resistance, supported from the northern half of the country after 1959, that threatened to bring down the regime that the U.S. had established.
"In the following years, the U.S. continued to resist every attempt at peaceful settlement, and in 1964 began to plan the ground invasion of South Vietnam.
"The land assault took place in early 1965, accompanied by the bombing of North Vietnam and an intensification of the bombing of the south, at triple the level of the more publicized bombing of the north. The U.S. also extended the war to Laos and Cambodia."
Invasion Newspeak: U.S. & USSR, by Noam Chomsky
It seems to me the US invasions and occupations of Korea and Vietnam were just more "busine$$ a$ u$ual" for "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world:"
The argument can be made for either the French or the Viet Minh starting the war, as for your "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world" comment...... pure, unadulterated bull shit that has no basis in an objective, informed historical context. This is evident by your reliance on Chomsky for your information, who is anything but objective or historically knowledgeable.
Have you ever heard of "The Grand Area?"
George F. Kennan??
At least 20,000,000 human beings have been maimed, murdered, displaced, or incarcerated by the greatest purveyor of violence in the world during that time period.
Can you name another country that has sent its military thousands of miles from its homeland to $laughter on that $cale?
Chomsky can.
Soviet forces invaded Korea in August of '45, advancing to the 38th parallel by August 10th.
At that time they agreed to a US proposal to stop their advance instead of taking the entire peninsula.
"The Red Army handed power over to the Korean Workers’ Party,(in the north) headed by Kim Il-sung, a legendary guerrilla leader who had fought the Japanese in Manchuria (where there is a large ethnic Korean population)."
Contrast that polcy with US reliance in the south with a majority of big Korean businessmen and landowners who collaborated with Japanese colonial rule. Those "free elections" you mentioned took place after USAMGIK outlawed the PRK Revolutionary Government and PRK Peoples Committees on December 12, 1945 and after a declaration of martial law.
What happened in North Korea between June, 1950 and July 1953 was very similar to what happened to Native Americans, civilians in Hiroshima and Nagasaki and Dresden, and "communists" in Italy and Greece after the WWII.You should stop "thinking" like a slave and Get CrazyChomsky is a far-looney-tunes-left crank, and now we know, so are you.
If you seriously believe in some equivalence between US history - for all our flaws - and the death and destruction wrought at the hands of Mao, Stalin, Pol-pot, etc. then you are hopeless. Truly hopeless.
You've proven yourself beneath serious consideration. No wonder you've got all those red things - they fit you like a glove.
"Native AmericansÂ’ resistance to the westward expansion of Europeans took two forms.
"One was violence.
"The other was accommodation.
"Neither worked.
"Their land was stolen, their communities were decimated, their women and children were gunned down and the environment was ravaged. There was no legal recourse. There was no justice.
"There never is for the oppressed.
"And as we face similar forces of predatory, unchecked corporate power intent on ruthless exploitation and stripping us of legal and physical protection, we must confront how we will respond."
You've made it very clear how you will respond.
Like a gutless corporate tool...
Your problem here is you think one size fits all.
What happened in Korea is not what happen to the American Indians.
In fact..it should be a template for the US when it actually does good work.
Like in Japan, Germany, Spain and Italy.
South Korea is a jewel and a shining example of just what America can do in terms of fostering a new nation to sovereignty.
Do you believe in the existence of the Council on Foreign Relations and its Grand Area?Who do you turn to for an "objective, informed, historical context" of US imperialism since 1945?The argument can be made for either the French or the Viet Minh starting the war, as for your "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world" comment...... pure, unadulterated bull shit that has no basis in an objective, informed historical context. This is evident by your reliance on Chomsky for your information, who is anything but objective or historically knowledgeable.
Have you ever heard of "The Grand Area?"
George F. Kennan??
At least 20,000,000 human beings have been maimed, murdered, displaced, or incarcerated by the greatest purveyor of violence in the world during that time period.
Can you name another country that has sent its military thousands of miles from its homeland to $laughter on that $cale?
Chomsky can.
Sorry, not interested in your, or his "agenda" based on twisted facts and partial truths, this agenda driven revisionist crap has no place in academia, it belongs in the same categories of conspiracy theory and propaganda.
Who do I turn to? Piers Brandon, Matthew Cooper, Alan Clark, Stephan E. Ambrose, James Lucas, Christopher Browning, Martin Van Creveld, Lewis Henry Morgan, Eric Wolf, to name a very few, you know, accredited, recognized and in some instances acclaimed historians, historical sociologists and cultural anthropologists.
Do you believe in the existence of the Council on Foreign Relations and its Grand Area?Who do you turn to for an "objective, informed, historical context" of US imperialism since 1945?
Have you ever heard of "The Grand Area?"
George F. Kennan??
At least 20,000,000 human beings have been maimed, murdered, displaced, or incarcerated by the greatest purveyor of violence in the world during that time period.
Can you name another country that has sent its military thousands of miles from its homeland to $laughter on that $cale?
Chomsky can.
Sorry, not interested in your, or his "agenda" based on twisted facts and partial truths, this agenda driven revisionist crap has no place in academia, it belongs in the same categories of conspiracy theory and propaganda.
Who do I turn to? Piers Brandon, Matthew Cooper, Alan Clark, Stephan E. Ambrose, James Lucas, Christopher Browning, Martin Van Creveld, Lewis Henry Morgan, Eric Wolf, to name a very few, you know, accredited, recognized and in some instances acclaimed historians, historical sociologists and cultural anthropologists.
"When (WWII) war broke out, the Council (on Foreign Relations) began a 'strictly confidential' project called the War and Peace Studies, in which top CFR members collaborated with the US State Department in determining US policy, and the project was entirely financed by the Rockefeller Foundation.[12]
"The War and Peace Studies project had come up with a number of initiatives for the post-War world. One of the most important objectives it laid out was the identification of what areas of the world America would need to control in order to facilitate strong economic growth. This came to be known as the 'Grand Area,' and it included:
"Latin America, Europe, the colonies of the British Empire, and all of Southeast Asia. Southeast Asia was necessary as a source of raw materials for Great Britain and Japan and as a consumer of Japanese products.
"The American national interest was then defined in terms of the integration and defense of the Grand Area, which led to plans for the United Nations, the International Monetary Fund, and the World Bank and eventually to the decision to defend Vietnam from a Communist takeover at all costs.[13]"
The Council on Foreign Relations and the
Kim had a lot of help from the USAF in creating "the hell-hole" of North Korea. According to some accounts there were nine million Koreans living north of the 38th parallel in June of 1950. When the war ended one out of three was dead.Soviet forces invaded Korea in August of '45, advancing to the 38th parallel by August 10th.
At that time they agreed to a US proposal to stop their advance instead of taking the entire peninsula.
"The Red Army handed power over to the Korean Workers’ Party,(in the north) headed by Kim Il-sung, a legendary guerrilla leader who had fought the Japanese in Manchuria (where there is a large ethnic Korean population)."
Right. They handed power over to 'Great Leader.'
Yes, the Communist turned power over to Kim Il Sung, the insane dictator of North Korea that turned that part of the peninsula into the amazing hell hole that it is today. Large numbers purges and disappearances, constant political indoctrination, destruction of civil liberties, overwhelming censorship - if there's one place where Orwell's dystopia came true, it was North Korea. The society there is barely able to feed itself.
Tens of thousands of South Koreans have been swallowed up by his policy of impressment and kidnapping as well.
Though I hear he had good taste in Hollywood movies, so there is that.
Contrast that polcy with US reliance in the south with a majority of big Korean businessmen and landowners who collaborated with Japanese colonial rule. Those "free elections" you mentioned took place after USAMGIK outlawed the PRK Revolutionary Government and PRK Peoples Committees on December 12, 1945 and after a declaration of martial law.
You mean the creation of the thriving democracy in South Korea? Yes, lets contrast that, shall we? One of the Young Dragons with a great standard of living, freedoms and human rights, vs one of the most dysfunctional societies with the worse record of human rights in the world.
You didn't really think about that one when you posted it, did you? LOL.