You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
China-Japan-Koreas
40,000 march against US beef in South Korea over fears of BSE
2008-06-08
South Koreans hatin' the US. Agitators got the schoolkids all wound up, too.
South Korean politics are on the brink of meltdown after spiralling public hysteria over “mad cow” disease in American beef unleashed a weekend of mass protests and pitched battles between demonstrators and riot police.
"spiraling public hysteria" sums it up neatly.
Police vehicles were today attacked by angry mobs armed with sticks and police lines were reportedly charged after the 40,000-strong crowd of peaceful protesters thinned-out to leave a smaller group of activists.

With the violence threatening to continue for another week, and the calls for his resignation being screamed by students on the streets of Seoul, President Lee Myung Bak now faces a series of potentially crippling departures from his immediate circle of allies.

Just a few short months since taking the reins of power in South Korea with pledges of stronger government, Mr Lee is expected within the next couple of days to receive letters of resignation from his Prime Minister, Han Seung Soo, half a dozen members of his cabinet and a number of his closest aides.

Government sources said that a “collective resignation” was a near certainty over the next few days because of the persistent failure of Mr Lee’s government to calm a population that believes its leaders are playing fast and loose with an issue of public health. The weekend’s violence was the culmination of rising fury over a government plan to resume imports of American beef after a five-year suspension.

The discovery of a case of BSE in a cow in the US in 2003 prompted several countries to suspend imports. Washington has slowly managed to persuade large former customers like Japan to resume their imports, but it was only in April that Seoul agreed to do so.

But many South Koreans – via some of the most active internet message boards in the world – objected strongly to that decision, arguing that this was an example of Mr Lee being too acquiescent towards the US.
ingrates
Sensationalist television documentaries involving questionable science and supposed footage of cows staggering around farmyards, further roused public suspicion in the face of repeated assertions by the US Department of Agriculture that American beef was entirely safe.
"Sensationalist" puts it mildly. Agit-prop in its purest form. NBC's Ford Bronco "expose`" pales in comparison.
Schoolchildren and university students have been especially vocal in their distrust of Mr Lee and his government, and could be seen waving placards bearing phrases like “Why must I die like a mad cow?”
Eat mor chikin
With his control over public opinion now in tatters, and his plan to resume US beef imports in limbo, Mr Lee received a phone call from George W Bush on Saturday in which the US President promised that only US beef from younger cattle would be sold to South Korea. It was not enough to calm the mood on the streets, however.

The scenes in the capital over the weekend, which were repeated on a smaller scale in towns across the country, deal a heavy blow to a president who has all but lost the support of the country. Young Koreans who were initially whipped into a frenzy over the issue of US beef imports on hundreds of internet message boards have become increasingly vocal and physical in the streets.

The rioting follows six weeks of demonstrations that have sent the approval ratings of KoreaÂ’s new president plunging below 20 per cent. Mr Lee was voted in by a huge landslide last December, but has had barely a moment to flex his political muscles. Even by the fickle standards of South Korean politics, say analysts, his fall from grace has been surprisingly hard and fast.
Reads like the Commies and the local beef industry have found common cause.
Posted by:mrp

#4  Well, SW, that's because Korea is Asia's Belgium, the crossroad of conflict between two large nations. There's a saying in Hangul [Korean], when whales fight shrimps backs are broken. For centuries its lands and people have been the collateral damage in fights between those coming from China and Japan.

And is their reaction any different than that of the American automakers and unions when fuel efficient and solidly made Japanese cars started to flood the American market in the 70s during that earlier gas 'crisis'? It's as old as Aesop's fable - depends on whose ox is being gored.

However, we should have been gone years ago leaving a Military Assistance Team for coordination and planning.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2008-06-08 22:41  

#3  Also, Korean xenophobia is not a recent occurrence - it is not for nothing that Korea was known for centuries as the Hermit Kingdom.
Posted by: Shieldwolf   2008-06-08 19:32  

#2  The SoKors ought to be careful what they wish for - if the US gets tired of this crap and leaves, they will be the ones that get to pay for North Korea all by themselves, once it collapses. And believe me, North Korea will collapse. The only "communist" survivor nations in the world are those that : 1) operate more like EU socialist police states; or 2) are politically valuable enough to earn the needed foreign aid from the anti-American bloc. North Korea has far too much of the Stalinist Cult of Personality running through its entire communist ideology and cadre to risk the EU police state approach, and it has lost its political value over the years.
Posted by: Shieldwolf   2008-06-08 19:30  

#1  This is the most stupid thing I've ever seen. It's the left, which got their asses kicked in the last election, having finally found an issue that will get some traction and they're pushing it with all they've got.

Korea is a xenophobic society to begin with and anything anti-American rings a loud bell with them. They've long since all but forgotten our part in the Korean War. Go to any of the monuments and memorials that depict that history and it's all about the brave ROKs that defended the country in the Korean Civil War. Funny how T.R. Fehrenbach and Clay Blair, the Korean War's most noted historians, both see the ROKs as damned near useless in fighting that war. Hewers of wood and drawers of water, yes. Fighters...not so much. As an indication of how much we're appreciated over here, I have yet to meet an American in Korea who doesn't strongly wish that the U.S. would pull USFK immediately.

If you really want to know more about this, check out www.rjkoehler.com. This guy writes a blog called "The Marmot's Hole" and he's covered this issue extensively. He's normally pretty pro-Korean but on this issue he's just calling it as it is: a bunch of racist, xenophobic garbage.

North Korea is what South Korea would be if it wasn't for the U.S. No good deed goes unpunished.
Posted by: Thaimble Scourge of the Pixies4707   2008-06-08 18:07  

00:00