When Americans are determined (Lee Yee)
There are many things in the world that ordinary people find impossible to accomplish, yet if some put their heart into it, things may not turn out to be all that impossible.
I saw an essay on a mainland site two months ago that was titled “The World’s Most Powerful Parents, Two Against a Country”. It was quickly deleted, but relevant information could be found on overseas sites.
The parents here were the parents of Otto Frederick Warmbier, a college student who was imprisoned and tortured to death by North Korea more than four years ago. Otto went to North Korea on a short trip in December 2015. As he was leaving, he was accused of attempting to steal a political propaganda poster from a hotel in Pyongyang, and was sentenced to 15 years of hard labor. On June 13, 2017, North Korea suddenly released him on “humanitarian grounds”, he turned to the US in a vegetative coma. A week later, he died.
Otto’s father, Fred Warmbier, described the state of his son on his return to the US, and was determined that Otto was severely injured from being tortured in North Korea. His mother, Cindy, said that North Korea only released him because “they did not want him to die on their land”.
Otto’s parents filed a lawsuit in the US courts and demanded compensation from North Korea. The family ran a large-scale metal processing company that was on Forbes’ list in 2015. They were not short of money, and only wanted a revenge with the ask for compensation. In the US legal system, suing a country will be blocked by sovereign immunity, except when the country is classified as a terrorist country by the US. At that time, North Korea was not on the list. So the couple went onto media platforms, again and again, to speak about their son’s death, and the huge blow it was to their family. In the US where family values are cherished, they received great sympathy from the civilians, to the Congress, and to the White House. In November 2017, Trump added North Korea to the list of terrorist countries. In April 2018, the court accepted the lawsuit. On December 24 of the same year, the US Federal Court ruled that North Korea owed Otto Warmbier’s parents US$510.13 million.
This was great, but did it do anything? Would a rogue nation like North Korea acknowledge it? Many felt that this is an unenforceable ruling that was no different from a sheet of scratch paper.
However, the Warmbiers launched an operation to trace North Korea’s global assets. The media called it “the crusade of the Warmbiers”. The first installment of the compensation arrived soon enough. In April 2018, a cargo ship that belonged to North Korea was detained in Indonesia for violating the UN sanctions on the transportation of coal. In the year after, M/V Wise Honest, the second-largest single-hull bulk carrier registered in North Korea, was forfeited in the US, sold in September 2019 on orders of a US federal judge to compensate the Warmbiers.
On May 11, 2020, the US Federal Court ordered all relevant US banks to provide the parents with detailed information, including North Korea’s account number and holder’s address. While it is unclear the total amount of North Korea’s hidden overseas assets, what was discovered was that within the US alone was US$74.36 million.
The couple started a bank investigation into the deposits of senior North Korean officials in the US, and actually found three North Korean funds totaling US$23.89 million from three banks. The money will no doubt go to the Warmbiers.
Though a closed country, the Kim regime still has large deposits overseas. After all, North Korea still needs certain necessities imported from overseas.
It is highly doubtful that North Korea’s overseas assets would exceed US$510.13 million, but the couple persists and would not give up. Three years in, their determination for revenge has not diminished. They even make use of the global Jewish network to search for secret North Korean funds hidden around the world. “Our goal is to make North Korea pay for our son’s death,” the couple said.
One couple to bring this much headache to the whole country of North Korea. This is bigger than money, this is the dissemination of bad reputation.
The moral of this story is that if Americans are determined to pursue their trace for accountability, they would give it all and never surrender. If a country is listed as a terrorist country or criminal group, there will be no sovereign immunity for the country to be prosecuted; if any person is added to the US sanction list, tough luck to you. Some things that may seem unlikely, as long as one is determined, success may not be out of the question. Although justice is often no match for absolute powers, justice must be upheld, just like the Warmbiers.
同時也有10000部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過2,910的網紅コバにゃんチャンネル,也在其Youtube影片中提到,...
college ruled paper 在 Daphne Iking Facebook 的最佳貼文
This
To vote or not to vote in GE14.
Was reading a number of views on my timeline about six or seven youths saying they may not vote in the next general elections because they're not impressed with either side.
And in that very long article that featured these youths, my friend Ibrahim Suffian was quoted as saying that his polling outfit believes that demographic will have a lower turnout, perhaps by up to 8pct.
Some of the arguments made sense, others didn't. The reality is Malaysians have to register to vote. If you have gone through that, why then bother not to vote?
Yes, you can spoil your vote by even ticking both or more candidates. You can tear up your ballot paper too. But this voting right is precious, no? Only citizens get to vote in any country, so why diss the very notion of it because you're unhappy with both or all sides? You think they care?
A good example is Brexit.
The young who gained and will gain more from a UK in the European Union did not go out to vote in large numbers. The ones who felt disadvantaged by the influx of immigrants, migrants and such voted to exit. And came out to exercise their right and won the referendum. What use was the laments and anguish post-Brexit referendum?
The same in the United States presidential elections. Yes, Hillary Clinton won an extra 3 million votes but Donald Trump won because he got the votes in the right states for the Electoral College to elect him as US President. The Democrats didn't get enough voters out in the states with sizeable votes to tip it for her. Again, not enough votes.
Then again, it is just six or seven voices dithering over whether to vote, so what's the big deal right? They don't matter in the course of events because others will vote. These six or seven probably have an exit plan if the country goes pear-shaped in the near future too.
But not the other voters or citizens. They are here, some are informed and will make an informed choice, others will just make their choice based on whoever promises a better deal.
It is as easy as that. And these voters, who might not have an exit plan from Malaysia, will enjoy or suffer the consequences of their vote, just as those who didn't vote.
Here's the thing though. The possibility of 8pct of youths that includes first-time voters not casting their ballots can skew election results and provide Malaysia with a government decided by others with a different world view.
A world view that will not consider the views of the young, who have abandoned their right to vote. What kind of world is that, especially when the current system has enough political geriatrics and dotards, to borrow Kim Jong-un's phrase.
You want to be ruled by the same old, same old? You want to skip your responsibility of shaping your future and the nation's too? If that is the case, you deserve it.
This country belongs to the future, to the young, to those with ideas and philosophies that will make a better Malaysia - not the old, the decrepit, the conservatives and one-track minds.
But that can only happen if we educate the politicians and tell them what we want from them, not just their promises. It sounds idealistic but there it is.
You have to tell them what you want and scold them for what they are doing wrong. You have to let them know your support hinges on that.
You want a conservative country, tell them. You want a liberal country, tell them. At the end of the day, any nation is shaped by the majority, not the minority and definitely not by those who didn't cast their ballots.
Just a footnote, there are friends who occasionally express the desire to leave Malaysia but stop short of it. Because they know they can but they worry about those who cannot.
And this is their tanahair. They will go on to make sure it is the Malaysia that our founding fathers promised it to be. I don't worry if the founding fathers will be heartbroken if this isn't that Malaysia.
But I care enough that Malaysia does not break our hearts and become a nation divided by class, race and religion. And then by youths who decide that the options available isn't good enough for them.
Voting isn't a product available online at special price if you use Paypal or a credit card.
Voting is a right our founding fathers got for all of us when Malaya became independent and later when Malaysia was formed.
Use it. Or lose the right to shape your country's future.