I highly recommend everyone read Patriots, Traitors, and Empires: The Story of Korea's Struggle for Freedom by Stephen Gowans if you're curious about Korea's post-ww2 history and it's struggle for independence. it's a very good, very eye opening read.
World News
News from around the world!
Rules:
-
Please only post links to actual news sources, no tabloid sites, etc
-
No NSFW content
-
No hate speech, bigotry, propaganda, etc
Do Southern Koreans actually generally want the unification? After all, the North is effectively a pre-industrial wasteland even to the global standards. The people are hardly the same on both sides either.
South Koreans are effectively banned from taking positions that deviate very much from certain state lines. The state suppresses "sympathy" with the DPRK or its party, reading any books from the DPRK, discussion of certain histories out of line with the state, including the history of Japanese colonization and Korean comfort women, and media are widely censored.
The official state line is that the South wants "reunification", but as described it is really the South taking over the entire peninsula. This maximalist position gained steam after the fall of the USSR, when the US instituted harsh sanctions and eliminated their primary trading partner, turning the North, which had previously economically outperformed the South, into a depression with fuel and food scarcity. This is where mean-spirited jokes about poor North Koreans come from. It can be challenging to get accurate ideas of the sentiments of average South Koreans due to the censorship laws but historically the wider public has wanted a peaceful reunification, including the proposal of the DPRK to have one country with two systems. This has been repeatedly rejected by the ROK state.
Korea is clearly afraid of an invasion.
What are the elderly South Koreans going to do ? Go to their hospitals, hire them to take care of the garden ?
Probably do what everyone else does and make up some reason to call the US to come fight for them
The US is already occupying the south.
I think you have this relationship reversed.