Archive for April, 2009



Published April 19th, 2009 by Future Atlas

Social Revolution in Pakistan?

stability The New York Times reported this week on another potential driver of instability in Pakistan: the Taliban are harnessing the country’s severe social inequities to advance their Islamist cause.

Given that Pakistan is “largely feudal,” the authors write, this “carries broad dangers for the rest of Pakistan, particularly the militants’ main goal, the populous heartland of Punjab Province.”

Pakistan has the classic conditions for social revolution. After independence, notes the article, Pakistan maintained a narrow landed upper class that kept its vast holdings while its workers remained subservient…. Successive Pakistani governments have since failed to provide land reform and even the most basic forms of education and health care. Avenues to advancement for the vast majority of rural poor do not exist.

Poor government and corruption are key aspects of this; Pakistan is rated highly corrupt in Transparency International’s surveys — in 2008, it was 134th out of 180 countries, scoring only a 2.5 out of 10.

Such a revolution could be a disaster for anti-Taliban forces. Instead of chipping away at the state’s control piece by piece, the whole society could shift at once, and everything, including the armed forces and Pakistan’s nuclear weapons, would fall into the hands of the radicals.

This would greatly tempt both India and the US to intervene in some fashion, if only to destroy or seize Pakistan’s nuclear weapons.

Published April 12th, 2009 by Future Atlas

North Korea: Escaping the Cult

Poster for "Yoduk Story," a musical about N. Korean human rights abusesThe Washington Post provided further evidence that North Korea is so out of step with the South — and the rest of the world — that dealing with a regime collapse might require something like cult deprogramming.

On top of the North Korean claims that they have a satellite orbiting the Earth (when the actual payload fell into the Pacific after launch on April 5th), the Post details how bewildered North Korean defectors are by life in South Korea:

  • Life in the Stalinist North has left them paranoid and unable to trust anyone.
  • They have learning problems, and are often weak in basic reading and math.
  • The Korean of the South is puzzling, as it is infused with hundreds of words borrowed from English.
  • They are often unwell, with health problems such as hepatitis and drug-resistant tuberculosis.
  • They do not understand basics of consumer life such as credit cards.

These recent arrivals may be unrepresentative of the North in some respects, as they come from a particularly isolated and abject part of North Korea, but they still offer hints of what might come after change comes to the North.

This is also, it might be noted, an example of dyschronicity: in wealth, culture, and technology, the North is now 50 years or more out of sync with the South.