Right now, no sane and unbiased person would be so stupid as to doubt that the North Korean state is very repressive. - Andrei Lankov
" "Right now, no sane and unbiased person would be so stupid as to doubt that the North Korean state is very repressive.
English
Collect this quote
About Andrei Lankov
Andrei Nikolaevich Lankov (born 26 July 1963) is a Russian professor of North Korean studies.
Also Known As
Native Name:
Андре́й Никола́евич Ланько́в
Alternative Names:
Andrei Nikolaevich Lankov
•
A. N. Lankov
Related quotes. More quotes will automatically load as you scroll down, or you can use the load more buttons.
Additional quotes by Andrei Lankov
North Korea is a problem, not only because of its fast advancing nuclear and missile program but also because of the sorry state of the country’s economy and its abysmal human rights record. It is a problem for us outsiders, but it is an even greater problem for the North Korean people themselves. As people are fond of saying in such situations that "something has to be done." But what exactly?
Objectively speaking, the history of North Korean state has been one of an ambitious social if brutal experiment that ended in a very ugly disaster. Essentially, the 70 years of the Kim Family's rule have been the wasted years. The Kim family did not merely build one of the world’s most “perfect” Stalinist dictatorships, but also managed to transform into a basket case what once, in the 1940s, was the most advanced industrial economy of East Asia outside Japan. However, one should not expect that such a pessimistic, if honest, view of North Korea’s past, is going to be enthusiastically embraced by those North Koreans who bother to care about such matters.
Try QuoteGPT
Chat naturally about what you need. Each answer links back to real quotes with citations.
The great famine of 1994-98 was to a large extent the inviolable result of the policies that Kim Il Sung had pursued for decades. The famine was brought about by Kim Il Sung’s fanatical belief in a hyper-centralized, state-managed agriculture, as well as an excessive reliance on (unacknowledged) foreign aid, not to mention militarization run amok. However, if the mine was planted (unintentionally, of course) by Kim Il Sung, it went off under the rule of his son. Hence, most North Koreans blame Kim Jong Il, rather than his father, for the economic disasters of the 1990s.
Loading...