

Un Français Lambda perdu au Wokistan 🇫🇷(Parodie)
44K posts

@Francais2lambda
Ex-membre du patriarcat blanc cisgenre hétéro normé Aujourd'hui matrixé au progressisme Tweeter frénétique mais j'me soigne Promis j'arrête de tweeter sans 🕶





The Korean peninsula offers the most brutal natural experiment in economic systems the world has ever seen—identical people, identical culture, two radically different approaches to organizing society. In 1953, both Koreas started from the same devastated baseline. North Korea actually had the industrial advantage, inheriting most of Japan's heavy manufacturing infrastructure. The South got the farms. Any reasonable central planner would have bet on the North. And for a decade, they would have been right—North Korea's GDP per capita exceeded the South's until the mid-1960s. Then market forces unleashed their magic. South Korea embraced private property rights, foreign investment, and export-oriented capitalism. Entrepreneurs like the founders of Samsung and LG built global empires from nothing. The government stayed out of the way (mostly) and let prices signal where resources should flow. By 1990, South Korean per capita income was ten times higher than the North's. Today, that gap has widened to roughly 25:1. Meanwhile, North Korea doubled down on central planning, state ownership, and autarky. Same Korean work ethic, same Confucian values, same geographic advantages. But without price signals, profit incentives, or private ownership, their economy collapsed into chronic famine and technological stagnation. The regime now spends 25% of GDP on military while millions eat grass soup. You can't blame this on culture, geography, natural resources, or historical accidents. Two identical populations, two different economic systems, two radically different outcomes. And yet somehow Western intellectuals still debate whether socialism "works."










🇸🇴 Quand DJ Halal est aux platines, les étudiantes de Sarcelles se déchaînent ! C’est pas haram la musique en Somalie ?



Sarcelles (95) : Bassi Konaté s’impose face à François-Xavier Valentin avec 55,3 % des voix

