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- Organization: Vietnam Insight
- Editor: Chan Tran
- Address: PO Box 7826, San Jose, CA 95150, USA
- Phone: (408) 226-2261
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- Newsgroups: soc.culture.vietnamese
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1993 17:47:55 PST
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- USENET." <VIETNET@USCVM.BITNET>
- From: Vietnam Insight <vinsight@NETCOM.COM>
- Subject: VI: Editorial: The frog at the bottom of a well
- Lines: 86
-
- *******************
- The frog at the bottom of a well
- *******************
-
- Vietnamese folklore tells us that a frog at the bottom of a well can
- only see that part of the sky appearing through the mouth of the well,
- and for him, it is the entire sky. This proverb has taught the
- Vietnamese people a valuable lesson for thousands of years; that one
- must never be like a frog at the bottom of a well, refusing to learn and
- limiting one's vision. But to the Vietnamese communist leadership, this
- lesson has never sunk in. After eighteen years of communist rule, which
- has totally bankrupted the country, Hanoi's leaders still maintain that
- the socialist path is the only way to paradise.
-
- As this obsolete ideology is being abandoned around the world, Hanoi
- contends that communism is not wrong; it is only wrongly implemented, and
- that they will show the world how it should work (despite the cost paid
- by the Vietnamese people).
-
- Hanoi's temptation, however, does not stop at trying to prove right from
- wrong but to "liberate" the world, especially the United State, as revealed
- by its members' common belief. Their foolish goal as well as other
- arrogant convictions have been the target of ridicule by Vietnamese
- people everywhere, who are both witnesses and victims of the inept system.
-
- Typical examples of Hanoi's straight-faced arrogance are its misplaced pride
- in its leadership while the country slips to the lowest level of poverty and
- most severe social degradation, and its condemnation of capitalism while
- begging for aid and investments from the capitalist world. If it were
- not so tragic, it would certainly be quite comical!
-
- One of the accomplishments of Hanoi's so-called leadership is "rule by
- ignorance": a policy of promoting to key government and administrative
- positions people completely lacking in knowledge; feeding and brainwashing
- people, especially children, with idiotic ideas and lies; and discriminating
- against intellectuals (who were either imprisoned or eliminated in the
- past). Its purpose is to turn Vietnam into a well bottom where its
- citizens would know nothing else but to nod at Hanoi's orders.
-
- The resulting outcome of this policy is a bankrupt nation, both morally
- and economically; a disastrous consequence that will take generations to
- overcome. The rebuilding of Vietnam from this level of ruin, even with a
- free political system that nurtures people's initiatives and enthusiasm,
- will undoubtedly be a monumental task.
-
- Nevertheless, the regime will not admit its faults. It blamed the war,
- and the United States' embargo, for the country's poverty, and it now
- blames Western influence for Vietnam's social decays. Hanoi never blames
- the incompetent policies it implemented. To defend its chosen path, it
- blames the communist leaders in other countries for failing the course,
- leading to the collapse of communism -- a typical case of the egg being
- wiser than the chicken.
-
- The offspring, however, has reasons to be arrogant:
-
- So far, communist rule is still in power in Vietnam: its first lesson is
- that the oppressive system must be strong enough to quash the people's
- aspirations and will to resist in order to retain its power.
-
- Hanoi's economic reform, which followed the Soviet Union's foot steps
- in 1986, appears to be slightly more successful to that of its former
- patron: it has not brought the regime down yet and has vitalized
- Vietnam's economy to some extent. Yet the real contributing factors to
- this partial economic recovery is that Hanoi has never successfully
- transformed South Vietnam into a complete state-owned economy. The
- South's private market -- outlawed by the regime until recently --
- remains an active underground network that keeps the South alive despite
- the regime's effort to equate it with the North in poverty.
-
- The people's will to blossom in a free system -- demonstrated by
- Vietnam's flourishing economic activities when economic control is
- lifted -- is frighteningly ominous to a system that is based on brute
- oppression. Out of this fear, the Hanoi leadership has put more pressure
- on its political lid. The regime's lame excuse of "avoiding upheaval" to
- maintain its status-quo -- arresting citizens for their peaceful
- expression of different beliefs -- is nothing but a blatant violation of
- the people's rights.
-
- Until the Vietnamese communist regime shreds its arrogance and admits to
- its wrongdoings, Hanoi will maintain a prisoner of its fallacy --
- forever a frog at the bottom of the well.
-
-
- --
- Vietnam Insight (vinsight@netcom.com)
- Chan Tran, editor
-