Under The Marble Arch
“Seeing what isn’t there is half the job of being on the Left. The other half is changing what isn’t there through costly, intrusive, and ill-conceived initiatives (save 10 percent for keeping Charlie Rangel out of trouble).” -Abe Greenberg, October 9, 2009
Philosopher's Corner

"With their memories of the sixties, when to be young was very heaven, they still believe that an oppositional stance in pursuit of perfection is virtuous in itself—indeed, is the prime or sole content of virtue. And it is this belief that renders them interesting to Hollander, for it makes genuine moral reflection about the nature of various governments and policies impossible. It transforms merely personal discontents into matters of supposedly great general importance."

-Theodore Dalrymple on Paul Hollander: The Only Superpower: Reflections on Strength, Weakness, and Anti-Americanism

Envy the Stupid People
The Leper Colony
  • Peggy Noonan
  • Christopher Buckley
  • Nicole Wallace
  • Steve Schmidt
  • David Brooks
  • David Frum
  • Jeffrey Hart
  • Arlen Specter**
  • Olympia Snowe*
  • Susan Collins*

h/t Red State

*RINO Lepers

**Who says a leper can't change his spots?

Even The Lepers Don't Want Her

Kathleen Parker

Quarantined for Observation

Michael Steele

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« Kerry and the Khmer Rouge | Main | File Under 'Better Late Than Never' »
Friday
22Apr2005

Thirty Years Ago This Month

Great Moments in the History of Modern Totalitarianism

[This is another installment in Quid Nimis' ongoing series to present a more balanced view of 20th century atrocities.  Why should Hitler hog all the glory!]

camskulls.jpegThirty years ago, Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge evacuated Phnom Penh and sent two  million people to be 're-educated' according to Communist principles.  By conservative estimates, this evacuation cost 2o,000 lives. In the years that followed, more than 1.7 million people died at the hands of the Khmer Rouge, nearly a third of Cambodia's population. This first hand account describes what children went through:

While children elsewhere in the world watched TV, I watched public executions. While they played hide-and-seek with their friends, I hid in bomb shelters with mine; when a bomb hit and killed my friend Pithy, I brushed her brains off my sleeve. I will never forget the day they came for my father. They said they needed him to help pull an oxcart out of the mud. As he walked off with the soldiers, I did not pray for the gods to spare his life. I prayed only that his death be quick and painless. I was 7 years old.
Editorial pages of the major newspapers have featured similar accounts this week.  Yet, in our brief search for information to include in this post, we found a "scholar's" rendition:
“Oudong had been captured, and they had marched the citizens out into the jungle where some of them had been killed, those who were regarded as misfits, most of them intellectuals,” Short said.

 “One of Pol Pot’s aides told me when I did these interviews that to them there hadn’t been many problems, they felt that the evacuation of Oudong had gone well, that it had saved the Khmer Rouge forces from being contaminated by ideology, and if that had worked at Oudong, this was something that could be done in the whole country which meant in Phnom Penh,” he said.

Yes, Oudong went swimmingly, so on to Phnom Penh! However, Phnom was quite a bit larger and so posed some logistical difficulties:

The evacuation of Phnom Penh “was chaotic, it was highly disorganized, and in a way it was a paradigm… emblematic of everything that would follow, because it was extremely harsh, extremely brutal,” Philip Short, whose book “Pol Pot: Anatomy of a Nightmare” was published in February, said in an interview.

"Pol Pot decided [to] abolish the idea of the city," Short said. "And that’s what happened, everyone was sent out, [and] at least 20,000 [people] died during the evacuation as a result of a muddle of incompetence and inefficiency."

But no one died as a result of bullets? No one died because they shouldn't be force-marched in the tropical heat with no food or water?  Cause of death: inefficiency.
Time Photo Essay: Cambodian Genocide and the Legacy of Pol Pot

No Khmer Rouge leaders have yet been brought to justice. Pol Pot died in 1998, evading all efforts to bring him to justice. But his top henchmen—including “Brother Number Two” Nuon Chea, former Khmer Rouge president Khieu Samphan, and ex-foreign minister Ieng Sary—remain alive and free, though the United Nations and the Cambodian government have raised most of the U.S. $56 million for a full genocide tribunal.

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Reader Comments (1)

DAMN, LET ME ASK IT AGAIN...

Have you ever seen or heard or read where a Liberal or a Leftist, or even a Hollywood celebrity denounce the murders/executions by such regimes as those of Pol Pot, Chou en Lai or fidelito castro?

At the very least, they should condemn the seven hour speeches by fidelito on Cuban TV, condemning more people to death by boredom than even The West Wing on US TV.
June 19, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterHowarde

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