"So did you just miss all the material conditions for that famine you’re so concerned about... or are you just ignoring those parts..."
No one is ignoring the shock of the Soviet collapse or the fact that the Korean peninsula's best farmland is in the South. But here's where the logic fails:
The System is the Condition: External shocks (like the USSR collapsing) expose the fragility of a system. When that system is designed around the Juche farming philosophy—which prioritized ideology (self-sufficiency) over sound agronomy, misallocated resources to the military (Songun policy), and was reliant on Soviet chemical fertilizers—the ensuing catastrophe is internal mismanagement. A competent state adapts to external shocks; a failing state collapses internally.
The Blame Game: You're arguing that because the terrain is bad and the Soviets left, the state is excused from letting millions starve. That's a moral and political failure, not just a weather problem.
"So did you just miss all the material conditions for that famine you’re so concerned about... or are you just ignoring those parts..."
No one is ignoring the shock of the Soviet collapse or the fact that the Korean peninsula's best farmland is in the South. But here's where the logic fails:
The System is the Condition: External shocks (like the USSR collapsing) expose the fragility of a system. When that system is designed around the Juche farming philosophy—which prioritized ideology (self-sufficiency) over sound agronomy, misallocated resources to the military (Songun policy), and was reliant on Soviet chemical fertilizers—the ensuing catastrophe is internal mismanagement. A competent state adapts to external shocks; a failing state collapses internally.
The Blame Game: You're arguing that because the terrain is bad and the Soviets left, the state is excused from letting millions starve. That's a moral and political failure, not just a weather problem.
"their “authoritarian state” is so brutal as to be “worse than the disease” that has more and more resulted in south koreans having so little hope for the future that they’re ceasing to bring children into the world."
You're trying to draw a false equivalence between two completely different types of suffering:
South Korea's Suffering: Financial, psychological, and existential stress driven by hyper-competition, inequality, and high cost of living. It leads to a demographic choice (not having kids).
North Korea's Suffering: Physical risk, poverty, chronic hunger, and total political repression. It leads to desperate, life-risking flight (defection) or starvation.
You cannot logically argue that a society where people choose not to have children because of economic stress is fundamentally "less hopeful" than a society where people starve to death or risk execution to leave. The South needs serious social reform, but the North needs systemic human liberation.
"Yeah, no possible way being cut off from trade could affect the food supply... Amazing how this basic detail escaped your genius mind."
Nobody said sanctions have no effect—that's a straw man. The point is that sanctions are not the primary cause of mass starvation. Sanctions reduce external trade, but when a regime prioritizes the military over its citizens and uses an ideologically rigid farming system (Juche) that fails regardless of external trade, that is mismanagement.
The Killer: The Soviet Union collapsed and cut off aid, which meant no more cheap fertilizers or fuel. That exposed the structural weakness of the North's internal system. The leadership decided to let millions starve rather than reform or appeal for help until it was too late. That's a political choice, not just a matter of "the US cut them off."
"[Food was hoarded for the military and elite...] [citation needed]"
Sure, here's the citation: Every major human rights report, account from defectors, and serious historical study of the famine points to the regime’s Songun (Military First) policy. Food was prioritized for the military and Pyongyang elite, leaving the provinces to starve. This is a consensus view among specialists.
"Except that north is no longer starving, while food insecurity is a real problem in the south..."
You've successfully compared apples to nuclear warheads. This is the ultimate false equivalence.
North Korea: Faces chronic, life-threatening food deficits every single year. The UN's World Food Programme regularly reports on the urgent need for aid. "No longer starving" means they aren't dying en masse like the 90s, but they are still malnourished and food insecure on a systemic level.
South Korea (Your link): Your linked paper discusses household food insecurity in a high-income country, meaning people worry about access to nutritious or preferred food due to cost. This is a poverty and inequality problem, a tragedy of capitalism. It is not comparable to the physical risk of starvation and widespread childhood stunting seen in the DPRK. Zero South Koreans have died of famine in the last 70 years.
"GDP is not a measure of quality of life as any economist would tell you. There are actual measures like PQL for that." "Economic output has fuck all to do with the standard of living."
You're swinging hard against standard economics here.
GDP is the Base: GDP measures the total value of goods and services produced. A high GDP means a country has the resources to fund better healthcare, education, and infrastructure. High economic output is a prerequisite for a high standard of living. South Korea’s massive GDP allows it to fund its universal healthcare system (one of the world's best) and its world-class infrastructure.
PQLI vs. HDI: You mentioned the PQLI (Physical Quality of Life Index). That index was mostly retired in the 1990s and replaced by the HDI (Human Development Index) because PQLI was too simplistic. As previously stated, South Korea ranks high on the modern HDI; North Korea ranks abysmally low. If GDP doesn't matter, why is North Korea's HDI so low?
"What the south doesn’t have is guarantees of access. You do not have a job guarantee and without a job you have nothing. That’s the elephant in the room that you artlessly danced around." "People in DPRK have guaranteed housing, jobs, food, healthcare..."
This is the central ideological fantasy: A guarantee of low-quality, insufficient welfare is better than the risk of high-quality capitalism.
North Korean Guarantee: The "guarantee" of a job is often meaningless labor in the fields or factories for zero pay, contributing to a non-existent pension, with substandard "guaranteed" food. The guarantee is a guarantee of poverty and subservience.
South Korean Safety Net: The ROK has unemployment benefits, welfare programs, and universal health insurance. The South doesn't guarantee you a job, but it does guarantee you access to essential services and the freedom to start your own business, organize, or pursue a better life, which is why people are flooding out of your guaranteed system.
You are confusing a piece of paper that says "guaranteed" with a functional system that actually provides a high standard of living.
"Sure little buddy. You keep on believing that."
I'll keep believing in the hard facts provided by the UN, the Bank of Korea, and 34,000 eyewitnesses who risked their lives to escape. You stick to the fantasy.