Thursday, December 20, 2012

Dynasty: Why are so many Asian countries run by families?


I think Mr. Fish insults the Republic of Korea and President elect Park Geun-hye to place it anywhere near in the same category as north Korea and the Kim Family Regime.

Wonder why he left out the Aquinos in the Philippines?
V/R
Dave


Why are so many Asian countries run by families?
BY ISAAC STONE FISH | DECEMBER 20, 2012


In the United States, it's the Kennedys and Bushs; in South Korea, it's the Parks. On December 19, South Korea elected Park Geun-Hye as president -- but she's not just the country's first female head of state, she's heir to a controversial political legacy. Her father, Park Chung-hee, was South Korea's dictator in the 1960s and 1970s. And Park's not the only recent ruler with family ties. Across Asia, heirs of political dynasties have taken power.

Three days before Park's win, Japan chose as prime minister the right wing Shinzo Abe, son of a Japanese foreign minister and grandson of Nobusuke Kishi, who as a cabinet member in 1941 signed the declaration of war against the United States, and served as prime minister almost two decades later. (Abe himself was also prime minister from 2006 to 2007.) In China, there's a new princeling-in-chief, too. In November, Xi Jinping became Communist Party chairman, 30 years after his popular father Xi Zhongxun, respected for his principles and his decency, ascended to China's elite decision-making body, the Politburo. And when Kim Jong Un became supreme leader of North Korea in December 2011, he too was following a family tradition: two generations of Kims had preceded him.
(Continued at the link below)

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