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Trump’s dictatorial travel ban to North Korea
Global Village Space |
Jacob G. Hornberger |
Last Friday, President Trump issued a decree-law that prohibits Americans from traveling to North Korea. His justification for infringing on one of the most fundamental rights of man — freedom of travel — is two-fold: to watch over and take care of Americans by refusing to permit them to travel to a brutal communist regime that might do bad things to them and to punish North Korea by depriving the country of tourist revenue.
An ironic relationship
Under Korea’s socialist economic system, the government’s job is to take care of the North Korean citizenry, including by controlling where they travel. People who violate Kim’s decrees are punished severely.
It’s not difficult to see the irony. Here is a communist regime, one of the most brutal in the world, one in which the country’s dictator, Kim Jong-Un rules by decree. At the same time, under Korea’s socialist economic system, the government’s job is to take care of the North Korean citizenry, including by controlling where they travel. People who violate Kim’s decrees are punished severely.
Read more: Don’t be surprised to see Trump bomb North Korea
And here is the president of the United States, ruling by decree, watching over and taking care of the American people by controlling where they travel, and punishing them severely if they violate his decree.
Judicial proceedings are used to wrap preordained outcomes within a cloak of legitimacy.
Punishment of people in North Korea is arbitrary and capricious. There is no due process of law or trial by jury. Judicial proceedings are used to wrap preordained outcomes within a cloak of legitimacy. As a practical matter, North Korean officials wield the power to jail whoever they want for as long as they want and to torture and brutalize prisoners with impunity.
He was convicted by a kangaroo tribunal for stealing a communist poster from his hotel and sentenced to several years of hard labor. He was recently returned in a coma, which most everyone ascribes to torture at the hands of the North Koreans.
That’s what happened to former University of Virginia student Otto Warmbier. He was convicted by a kangaroo tribunal for stealing a communist poster from his hotel and sentenced to several years of hard labor. He was recently returned in a coma, which most everyone ascribes to torture at the hands of the North Koreans. He died soon after North Korea returned him to the United States.
Read full article:
Trump’s dictatorial travel ban to North Korea
Global Village Space |
Jacob G. Hornberger |
Last Friday, President Trump issued a decree-law that prohibits Americans from traveling to North Korea. His justification for infringing on one of the most fundamental rights of man — freedom of travel — is two-fold: to watch over and take care of Americans by refusing to permit them to travel to a brutal communist regime that might do bad things to them and to punish North Korea by depriving the country of tourist revenue.
An ironic relationship
Under Korea’s socialist economic system, the government’s job is to take care of the North Korean citizenry, including by controlling where they travel. People who violate Kim’s decrees are punished severely.
It’s not difficult to see the irony. Here is a communist regime, one of the most brutal in the world, one in which the country’s dictator, Kim Jong-Un rules by decree. At the same time, under Korea’s socialist economic system, the government’s job is to take care of the North Korean citizenry, including by controlling where they travel. People who violate Kim’s decrees are punished severely.
Read more: Don’t be surprised to see Trump bomb North Korea
And here is the president of the United States, ruling by decree, watching over and taking care of the American people by controlling where they travel, and punishing them severely if they violate his decree.
Judicial proceedings are used to wrap preordained outcomes within a cloak of legitimacy.
Punishment of people in North Korea is arbitrary and capricious. There is no due process of law or trial by jury. Judicial proceedings are used to wrap preordained outcomes within a cloak of legitimacy. As a practical matter, North Korean officials wield the power to jail whoever they want for as long as they want and to torture and brutalize prisoners with impunity.
He was convicted by a kangaroo tribunal for stealing a communist poster from his hotel and sentenced to several years of hard labor. He was recently returned in a coma, which most everyone ascribes to torture at the hands of the North Koreans.
That’s what happened to former University of Virginia student Otto Warmbier. He was convicted by a kangaroo tribunal for stealing a communist poster from his hotel and sentenced to several years of hard labor. He was recently returned in a coma, which most everyone ascribes to torture at the hands of the North Koreans. He died soon after North Korea returned him to the United States.
Read full article:
Trump’s dictatorial travel ban to North Korea