Yeonmi Park - North Korea's Black Market Generation

“Trade for yourself. Think for yourself,” Park says.

Via Libertarian Republic: North Korean defector Yeonmi Park‘s (박연미) speech at the Oslo Freedom Forum last month has been inspiring liberty lovers around the world. Park’s explanation for how the black market in her former country contributed to her understanding of freedom is an important lesson for why freedom to trade must be protected from government interference.

Park’s speech focuses on the timeline of her trades on the black market, beginning with her as a child. She talked about learning love from Titanic: “A turning point in my life was when I watched the movie Titanic. It wasn’t propaganda but a story about people willing to die for love. It made me realize that I was controlled by the regime. I was not aware, like a fish is not aware of water. North Koreans don’t know the concept of freedom or human rights. They don’t know that they are slaves.”

Park was horrified as a child to witness her friend’s mother being executed by the government for watching a James Bond DVD, a crime that she herself committed. Kim Jong Un once reportedly murdered 80 people in one day last November for watching South Korean movies and owning a copy of the Bible.

“When you grow up in North Korea, the only thing you know is what the Kim regime teaches you, so watching movies is one of the only ways to learn about the outside world,” Park explained to the Daily Beast.

The black market has begun to thrive in North Korea, where people trade DVDs, USB drives, food, clothing and money.

Yeonmi was able to escape to China at the age of 14 with her mother and father, but unfortunately life for them there was almost as bad as North Korea. She and her mother (her father died in China), crawled most of the way to South Korea. When they were captured in Mongolia, they threatened to slit their own throats rather than be sent back to China. “I told my mother I wanted to die with her,” she said. “I would rather have killed myself than be shot by this man.”

Still, when she put the blade to her throat, the guard lowered his gun.

Yeonmi was able to make it to South Korea, though she spent two months in a detention center before being able to go live in a small town in the country. Park endured the struggles of being an outsider at her school, and how when she read Animal Farm by George Orwell everything made sense. Her government was tyrannical and corrupt, but freedom would make her a new human being.

“This book set me free from the emotional dictators in my head,” said Yeonmi to the PanamPost. “Titanic opened my eyes to see that people can live differently, and there is something else out there; the black market gave me an opportunity to be exposed to the outside world, and Animal Farm set me free from brainwashing.”

“I was so used to having no free will, I wanted them to tell me what to do! It took me three years to realize that freedom is a choice and I have to be responsible for the consequences. I think this year I have finally understood it, that all human beings have [the same] rights.”

Park now has a Facebook and Twitter following, and is a media fellow at a think tank called the Freedom Factory in Seoul. She is also a Young Voices Advocate, which is an excellent libertarian blog run by Students for Liberty.
siftbotsays...

Promoting this video and sending it back into the queue for one more try; last queued Wednesday, November 26th, 2014 10:52am PST - promote requested by BoneRemake.

newtboysays...

Those draconian bastards, the damn government, keeping me from my business of selling endangered tiger gall bladders. Regulations are all evil, they must be, Little Kim and Hitler used regulations, so...evil. We must be free to do whatever we want because we all know that any regulations are the same thing as draconian totalitarian dictatorship.

Taintsays...

I've read a lot of glowing reviews for Titanic, but this is probably the first time I've heard it freed someone from mental slavery.

Say what you will about the plot of Avatar, but James Cameron really knows how to make a movie.

Jinxsays...

NK is an exceptional case. Trade is great, capitalism has given us great prosperity and freedom. I won't argue that. I think it's great that the black market allows unlocked mobile phones to pass into NK (mostly through China, somewhat ironically) to give the people there a window into the outside world. The suggestion that trade should be completely free from restriction because North Korea restricts trade to keep it's population ignorant and servile is obviously ridiculous. Nuance plz...

Interestingly Kim Jong Il was said to be a big film fan. He even kidnapped people to create a NK film industry.

Trancecoachsays...

"There is nothing that states can do that needs to be done that markets cannot do better. The current technology trajectory is proving the point, many times over. The result is political instability. A paradigm shift. Obsolescence of the public sector. The growing irrelevance of power. Ever less dependent on, and hence loyalty to, the coercive power structure and ever more cultural, economic, and social reliance on the structures that society creates for itself." via.

An example of this technology is Bitcoin which is now where the internet was in 1995. Back then, the confused mainstream didn't get it, but will soon find out why (the likes of) Federal Reserve Notes are to (the likes of) Bitcoin what the radio is to the internet.

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