February 23, 2005: Reading Room Mind
control By Louis Jacobson ’92
When Bradley K. Martin ’64 was at Princeton, virtually everything he read in Time and Newsweek about the war in Vietnam suggested that the United States was winning. But then Martin joined the Peace Corps in Thailand, and “it took me three weeks ... to realize what I’d been reading was wrong,” Martin recalls. “I had never even considered journalism as a career. But ... I thought, ‘I can do better than that.’ ” After his Peace Corps commitment ended, Martin, a history major, returned to the United States to climb the journalism ladder. In 1977, he went back to Asia as Tokyo bureau chief for the Baltimore Sun, and he’s spent most of the past quarter-century in Asia. Martin’s specialty became the Korean peninsula — an expertise that led to his book, Under the Loving Care of the Fatherly Leader: North Korea and the Kim Dynasty, published by Thomas Dunne Books in October. During his 1992 trip, Martin was riding a special train for government officials and their guests when he saw a public-transit train moving in the opposite direction. It was a sight that his tightly controlling government “minders” had never intended him to see: “Everybody looked like they were either covered in mud or had a skin disease. I learned later that trains in North Korea had little fuel, so they would take days to go short distances. There was no water on the train. People couldn’t wash.” In addition to the nation’s deprivation and the existence of grim forced-labor camps, the defining characteristic of North Korea is its degree of mind control, Martin says. For more than 50 years, North Korea has practiced political and social indoctrination. Children are effectively raised by the state and are taught to revere their leaders as virtual deities. The indoctrination continues through adulthood, reinforced by tight restrictions on information. Kim Jong-Il is best known in the West for his determination to build
a nuclear bomb and his odd pompadour. These traits generally have cast
him as a loose cannon. But Martin calls this characterization misguided.
He sees Kim Jong-Il as smart, but constrained by his father’s cultish
legacy. For Kim Jong-Il to admit that his father was wrong on economic
policy, Martin argues, risks imploding the foundation of his society.
Louis Jacobson ’92 is deputy editor of Roll Call, a newspaper covering Congress. Book Shorts
By K.F.G. For a complete list of books received, click here.
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