Showing posts with label Stalinist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stalinist. Show all posts

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Nuts, Nukes & Happy New Year


Fruit Cake for the Holidays Image (c) Matthew Bietz, 2007, 2011
Kim Jong-il having died, North Korea’s leadership recently confirmed its devotion to socialist scientific egalitarianism by searching through the entire population before its somber deliberation concluded that the best man to lead the country was none other than Kim Jong-Un, the “Dear Leader’s” son. Dad will be hard to replace. There are so few true Stalinists left, outside of the Weight Watchers Division of the State of Ohio’s Child Protective Services agency and the guys with the NCAA whose job is to make sure college athletes are never able to make an informed decision about their career options.

Kim Jong-Un follows in the path of his father, Kim Jong-il, who overcame enormous adversity in rising to the top from  humble beginnings as the son of Kim il-Sung, a dictator who spent roughly the last half of the last century as one of only nine men in North Korea able to eat on a weekly basis. The boy was born in the Soviet Union in 1941 where Kim il-Sung was fighting for Korea as a colonel in the Soviet Army, and he was named Yuri Irsenovich Kim.

Although his dad was an atheist, the child Yuri would later be born again, this time in 1942 as Kim Jong-il, on top of a mountain in Korea. His rebirth, taken as a sign that he was chosen for great things, was accomplished entirely on paper through the same sort of sympathetic magic the Fed practices on currency yet with none of the inflation.

Shortly after Born Again Kim rolled down the hill, Stalin gave half of Korea to his Dad and shortly after that passed over to where ever it is good Marxists bide the afterlife. (I have always assumed this to be the line at the Department of Motor Vehicles, where bureaucratic malaise meshes perfectly with eternity.)  His father frequently hinted that he thought the boy should succeed him and considered the expression of dissenting views as the best way to identify those individuals whose destiny was to serve on the army’s firing range as targets.

Kim il-Sung was called the "Great Leader" by his people as an expression of the love that filled them in place of actual food. He went on to build one of the world’s most impressive highway systems, albeit in a country where there are only nine cars on the road at any given time, eight of which are driven by somber men with hollow eyes masked by dark sunglasses, men gifted in making people wish they had never born.

Born-again Kim inherited this estate and by singular genius actually made the country worse, no mean feat in a nation that had already successfully deployed three of the four horseman of the apocalypse in a population control scheme resulting in the sort of menu the Donner Party enjoyed during the winter of 1846. Thankfully, pestilence, strife and famine covered the bases and he never had to saddle up the fourth horseman of war. God knows the boy wonder who became the “Dear Leader” was certainly prepared to do so.

His devotion to the arts was notorious. Or criminal, to be more precise. Kim Jong-il thought of South Korean actresses as his personal dating pool and dedicated substantial security resources to having them kidnapped and delivered to his chambers. It is unclear how this helped answer the problem of keeping people from starving to death in an economy where five grains of rice was a fat payday, but perhaps this is an example of the remarkable insight into social problems that made him “Dear.”

And now he is gone, this sterling rebuke against curmudgeons like myself who are skeptical of any sanguine ideal that world events are shaped by leaders of rational benevolence and caution. The press in Pyongyang has opined that his spirit was of such magnitude that it yet dwells upon the Earth, albeit invisible now, a thought that should strike terror in the heart of every South Korean actress alive, particularly if she’s seen that very disturbing Kevin Bacon - Rona Mitra scene in Hollow Man.

The Telegraph reports that the North Korean press has filmed birds gathered in mourning for the "Dear Leader;" the more astute observers suggest the silent chirp proves that all of nature is stricken with grief. One hopes this was based on the crows’ facial expressions and not a reading of their entrails or those of political prisoners.  In any event, this stunning miracle of birds sitting closely together in  trees has the world praying to the soul of the departed dictator that these magpies don’t go all Hitchcock on us before recovering their equilibrium.  The last time we saw anything like this was – hang on, let me think.

Thursday.

Last Thursday, it was, during a light shower – but those black jays wound up trolling for soggy crickets in the grass. God only knows what these Kim-minded birds will do if any South Korean actresses hove into view.

Now the curtain rises to show us a quiet boy fiddling with that big red button marked Apocalypse. He has already had the savvy to out-maneuver his brother Kim Jong-nam in claiming the mantle of leadership by avoiding the spectacle the latter created when arrested by the Japanese for trying to sneak into the country with a fake passport in the hopes of seeing Disneyland, doubtlessly intrigued by the thought of mingling in crowds of people in which no one was expected to die from starvation or disease for at least two or three hours.  Japan could not have been more surprised by this turn of events from a foreign leadership whose hobbies have included kidnapping ordinary Japanese citizens and holding them for years at a time for questioning. That’s how hard up for conversation one gets in a worker’s paradise.

In a country of skeletal citizens devoted to feeding the various appetites of the Imperial Family, small wonder one of Kim Jong-Un’s prized endorsements came from the household chef, who noted that the lad was “a big drinker” who “never admits defeat.” The implications for a nuclear power that hates Japan and is politically committed to extending the wonder of mass starvation to the southern portion of the Korean peninsula suggest that Roland Emmerich may have one more blockbuster catastrophic thriller to make “based on a true story.”

As for the United States, we must first determine whether Kim Jong-Un has the same preternatural level of grace with which nature gifted his father. The former famously bowled a perfect 300 in his first trip to the lanes.  He also shot 38 under par his first time on the links, a score including eleven holes-in-one that he officially reduced to five out of modesty, the first and only instance of socialist accounting being used to discount rather than inflate actual productivity.

If the young Un comes anywhere close, we’ll need to get in touch with the folks at Dos Equis and negotiate diplomatic representation for America by that “most interesting man in the world” guy as he may be the only jasper that can face the Un-leader across the table.  

And we must fervently hope Kim Jung-Un is not easily over-burdened. The list of titles and grants of authority he has graciously accepted upon the demands of his grateful nation suggest that deciding whether to launch nuclear missiles at Seoul or Tokyo will be only one of his daily activities over the coming decades whereas it is something folks living in those cities would hope receives undivided attention.

Ever the pessimist, I find it only a mixed blessing that he’ll have less immediately destructive distractions like pushing his technicians to develop missiles capable of nuking Los Angeles sooner than the three to five years currently anticipated. I’d drop a footnote here about the 2012 election but I am loathe to digress again and certain the Dear Reader will agree.

As a reminder that they are awaiting orders, though, North Korea’s rocket forces lobbed a couple of missiles out into the sea the day Kim Jung-il officially went astral.  Careful parsing of the earliest notices, and word around the water coolers in Langley, Virginia, suggest he died twice. He died once in what we historically minded fools call objective reality, and then again at a later hour or day with the bureaucratically approved finality that contemporary news media find curiously comforting. This was, perhaps, in honor of the manner of his birth.

One thing we already know, thanks to the golden transparency of the North Korean press, is that the little braniac now in command  was born with political, social, economic and cultural knowledge far in advance of the best tutors a nation could buy – at one point, they must have cut the daily rice ration per household to three grains just to pay for the lad’s Swiss education that so befit a servant of the working class. He did well enough without paying attention that North Koreans cried out in one voice spontaneously demanding a national holiday to honor him and his father humbly obliged. Meanwhile, the UnLeader has spent virtually every waking moment since birth drawing intricate pictures of Michael Jordan, with whom he is obsessed, leaving the actress population finally at peace.

In this case, then, the persimmon has fallen pretty far from the table. There is a new fixation on which this Communist dynasty is focused. Given no reason to assume that his twice baked daddy’s secret service hospitality tour guide unit has been disbanded, it seems wise to triple Mr. Jordan’s security detail for now. Hopefully, somewhere in the recesses of the Pentagon, someone is drawing analogous conclusions with respect to the sanctity of the city of Los Angeles.