What Fresh Hell Is This? A Dance Team Reenacted Renee Good and Alex...
Ilhan Omar Just Called on Democrats to Abolish This Agency
DHS Issues Memo Allowing ICE to Arrest, Detain Refugees
Utah Governor Lashes Out at Trump Administration Over Effort to Block State Gambling...
We Are a Nation of Too Many Laws – Some Congress Members Are...
Why Does 'Trans' Minnesota Politician Finke Oppose Restricting Adult Websites?
Here's What President Trump Had to Say About the Supreme Court's Tariff Ruling
Rep. Becca Balint Admits What We've All Known About Illegal Immigrants and Voting
Pennsylvania Principal Drops the Hammer on Students' Anti-ICE Protest
Wisconsin's Republican Gubernatorial Candidate Tom Tiffany Earns Two Big Endorsements
Gavin Newsom Wants to Run the Country, but He Can't Keep Track of...
Behold the Dumbest Attempt at Comparing Pretti to Rittenhouse
Will The Trump Administration Be Forced to Pay Back Billions in Tariff Revenue?
Justice Thomas Blasts The Supreme Court Majority for Striking Down Trump’s Tariffs
DeSantis Blasts Mamdani Over Proposed Property Tax Hike As Florida Moves to Eliminate...
OPINION

Socialist Utopia

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Socialist Utopia
Gavriil Grigorov, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP

Bizarrely, 62% of young Americans hold a "favorable view" of socialism.

How can they be so ignorant?

Socialism has been tried by lots of countries. It's failed. It always fails.

Advertisement

China prospered somewhat only after it legalized some private enterprises.

Perhaps today's kids are ignorant because they're too young to remember the fall of the Soviet Union.

They should look at North Korea -- the ultimate "socialist utopia."

I recently interviewed Charles Ryu, who escaped North Korea and made it to China.

"It felt like getting into a time machine and fast forwarding 50 years ... 24-hour running electricity ... All the food that I can eat ... It was life changing."

"We Americans think of China as a surveillance state," I point out, "They'll punish you if you say the wrong thing. But for you, it was freedom?"

"(The) Chinese government does watch your every move ... But in North Korea, it's 100 times worse."

He says North Koreans are so isolated that they believe even absurd propaganda. Ryu was taught that "(Dictator) Kim Jong Il ... got mad when he learned what Japan had done to North Korea. He grabbed a calligraphy pen ... and painted over Japan. As soon as he did, Japan started getting hurricanes and storms ... (We believed he was) some sort of God." 

Ryu's time in China was short-lived. Someone told the Chinese officials that he was North Korean. China sent him back. 

Advertisement

North Korea then punished him for escaping. "I was beaten ... fed only 150 kernels of corn. One morning I was marching ... I saw dry vomit on the road and was so hungry that I got on my hands and knees and began picking the rice out of the dry vomit. I didn't stop ... until the beating from the guards was too unbearable."

Nine months later, he was freed from prison labor because "I lost so much weight that I was a worthless worker."

Eventually, Ryu escaped again, sneaking past guards into the Yalu River. 

"I carried a bucket pretending that I was getting water. As soon as nobody was looking, I quietly waded in. In the middle of the river, I slipped on a rock and I let out a gasp. A flood of light was on my back. The guard was screaming at me to turn back. He said that he would shoot me if I didn't turn back, but at that point, I knew I was dead either way ... and I kept (pushing) ahead."

This time when he made it to China, Ryu avoided capture. He found a broker who secured him passage to Thailand where U.N. officials granted him political asylum. Then they sent him to safety in America.

Today, Ryu uses his experiences to try to educate Americans about North Korea and the dangers of socialism. On his YouTube channel he holds a sign that reads, "Ask a North Korean."

Advertisement

To Americans who praise socialism, Ryu says: "Just go to North Korea for 10 days and you'll know how bad it is ... You don't really know you have it good."

Ryu is only able to talk freely about his experiences in North Korea because he has no immediate family left there. Most North Koreans who escape the country cannot.

"If you talk bad about ... the regime, that's the highest crime you can commit ... Your entire three generations of your family will be sent to political prison camp where you will never get out."

Ryu is thrilled to be in America. Here he was able to go to school, find a job that he enjoys and marry.

"I feel like my life is complete now because all the choices that I can have ... I (can) travel anywhere I want ... eat whatever I want ... do whatever I want in America -- a capitalist country. In North Korea, that's not possible."

I'm glad I live in America. I can freely criticize our government. 

At least, so far.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement