My daughter, my wife and I took a trip to Gwangju last autumn.
One stop was of course the May 18th National Cemetery, a memorial for those killed in the deadly attacks on citizens in 1980 ordered by then-president Chun Doo-Hwan to suppress dissent. This was the previous time South Korea was under martial law.
I'm watching closely after today's shocking executive order of emergency martial law by President Yoon and subsequent vetoing by parliament.
=> More informations about this toot | More toots from psc@mastodon.social
@psc Do you think there was a real reason for the martial law, or was it just the president who doesn't like the opposition?
=> More informations about this toot | More toots from greenCoder@functional.cafe
@greenCoder All I can do is speculate, but I think the wounds are still fresh so the president would have to be an idiot if it ends up being anything more than a symbolic gesture. The people will come out in droves the moment that any action is taken
=> More informations about this toot | More toots from psc@mastodon.social
@psc Meaningwhile, somewhere, a president-elect is taking notes on the idea that the martial law can be triggered so easily. :meowgiggle2:
=> More informations about this toot | More toots from greenCoder@functional.cafe
@greenCoder 😱😱
=> More informations about this toot | More toots from psc@mastodon.social
@psc just saw the reporting on this - do you have any insight on what triggered this? It seems out of the blue but I have very little awareness of the political situation
=> More informations about this toot | More toots from Conornash@mastodon.social
@Conornash Most reports I've seen seem to agree that it's a frustrated response to constantly feeling like progress is being blocked by the opposition party. Good thing they blocked this order too, which the president legally needs to respect
=> More informations about this toot | More toots from psc@mastodon.social This content has been proxied by September (3851b).Proxy Information
text/gemini