"Americans may have limited knowledge of the details of North Korea's extreme repression of its people, but they know enough to bear responsibility if they do not take action," said Southern Baptist ethicist Richard Land.
Speaking at a Washington news conference sponsored by the Korean Church Coalition for North Korea Freedom, the president of the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission called for Americans and their government to accept responsibility for aiding citizens of the Asian dictatorship.
"We may not know the precise numbers, but we know [the atrocities exist]....
If we know what's going on, and we choose to do nothing, then we become morally culpable, we become complicit," Land said.
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Michael Horowitz, senior fellow at the Hudson Institute and a longtime
advocate for religious freedom, said the key to bringing change lies with
the Korean Americans, not with the U.S. government or the United Nations (U.N.).
"[W]hat I have learned about America living in Washington is that when
Americans speak out for their brothers and sisters in their home country,
the rest of America always listen, always," Horowitz told the audience,
which was dominated by Korean Americans.
"In America, you earn respect not by the wealth you have and the money you
get, but by standing up for others. There has not been enough of that ...
from the Korean-American community."
"You have more power than you understand, and American history teaches you
that."
The U.S. policy on North Korea "is a disgrace" under President Obama and was
under President Bush.
"Our policy is very simple: Kim Jong Il, if you promise not to have more
weapons, we'll give you money. If you promise not to use your weapons, we'll
make you legitimate," Horowitz said.
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