“Today, when North Koreans are ordered by their state employer to take part in political activities, they know their time is being wasted. Fewer North Koreans show up for their state jobs. This growing economic and psychological independence among regular people is becoming the greatest thorn in the regime’s side. It is also the key to change. Instead of focusing on the regime and its agents as possible instigators of reform, we must recognize the power of the flourishing marketplace to slowly but definitively transform North Korea from the bottom up.”
Related posts:
The US Imperium, Coming Dollar Difficulties and Investing Abroad
Scheuer: Ten questions worth pondering on Obama, Syria, and Interventionism
Is the National Security Agency behind Bitcoin?
Making Sense of Bitcoin
Robert P. Murphy: The Economics of Bitcoin
Neofeudalism's Tax Donkeys and the Battle for Control of Resources
Happy Tax Freedom Day?
The War on Terror Is a War on American Freedom
A Guide To Understanding the Middle East, Syria, The West and Oil
Is America A Police State? Marc Victor @ Casey Conference
Abraham Lincoln and the Federal Reserve System: A Forgotten Connection
John Kerry’s Tender Sensibilities
Internationalizing in Chile
Is Your Portfolio Ready for this Coming Disaster?
Paul Craig Roberts: As Ye Sow, So Shall Ye Reap