reason.com Open in urlscan Pro
75.2.24.81  Public Scan

URL: https://reason.com/2024/01/12/pol-pots-atrocities-still-matter-45-years-after-khmer-rouges-fall/
Submission Tags: trump gop republican right wing extremist maga eu europe european union election democrat Search All
Submission: On February 13 via manual from US — Scanned from US

Form analysis 3 forms found in the DOM

GET https://reason.com/

<form role="search" method="get" class="search-form" action="https://reason.com/">
  <label>
    <span class="screen-reader-text">Search for:</span>
    <input type="search" class="search-field" placeholder="Search …" value="" name="s">
  </label>
  <input type="submit" class="search-submit" value="Search">
</form>

POST

<form method="post" id="gform_0" class="recaptcha-v3-initialized"><input type="hidden" name="login_redirect" value="/2024/01/12/pol-pots-atrocities-still-matter-45-years-after-khmer-rouges-fall/">
  <div class="gform_heading">
    <h3 class="gform_title">Login Form</h3>
  </div>
  <div class="gform_body">
    <div id="gform_fields_login" class="gform_fields top_label">
      <div id="field_0_1" class="gfield gfield--type-text gfield_contains_required field_sublabel_below gfield--no-description field_description_below gfield_visibility_visible" data-js-reload="field_0_1"><label class="gfield_label gform-field-label"
          for="input_1">Username<span class="gfield_required"><span class="gfield_required gfield_required_text">(Required)</span></span></label>
        <div class="ginput_container ginput_container_text"><input name="input_1" id="input_1" type="text" value="" class="" aria-required="true" aria-invalid="false"> </div>
      </div>
      <div id="field_0_2" class="gfield gfield--type-text gfield_contains_required field_sublabel_below gfield--no-description field_description_below gfield_visibility_visible" data-js-reload="field_0_2"><label class="gfield_label gform-field-label"
          for="input_2">Password<span class="gfield_required"><span class="gfield_required gfield_required_text">(Required)</span></span></label>
        <div class="ginput_container ginput_container_text"><input name="input_2" id="input_2" type="password" value="" class="" aria-required="true" aria-invalid="false"> </div>
      </div>
      <div id="field_0_3" class="gfield gfield--type-remember_me field_sublabel_below gfield--no-description field_description_below hidden_label gfield_visibility_visible" data-js-reload="field_0_3"><label
          class="gfield_label gform-field-label screen-reader-text gfield_label_before_complex"></label>
        <div class="ginput_container ginput_container_checkbox">
          <div class="gfield_checkbox" id="input_3">
            <div class="gchoice gchoice_3">
              <input class="gfield-choice-input" name="input_3.1" type="checkbox" value="1" id="choice_3">
              <label for="choice_3" id="label_3">Remember Me</label>
            </div>
          </div>
        </div>
      </div>
    </div>
  </div>
  <div class="gform_footer top_label"> <button type="submit" id="gform_submit_button_0" class="gform_button button"
      onclick="if(window[&quot;gf_submitting_0&quot;]){return false;}  if( !jQuery(&quot;#gform_0&quot;)[0].checkValidity || jQuery(&quot;#gform_0&quot;)[0].checkValidity()){window[&quot;gf_submitting_0&quot;]=true;}  "
      onkeypress="if( event.keyCode == 13 ){ if(window[&quot;gf_submitting_0&quot;]){return false;} if( !jQuery(&quot;#gform_0&quot;)[0].checkValidity || jQuery(&quot;#gform_0&quot;)[0].checkValidity()){window[&quot;gf_submitting_0&quot;]=true;}  jQuery(&quot;#gform_0&quot;).trigger(&quot;submit&quot;,[true]); }">Login</button>
    <input type="hidden" class="gform_hidden" name="is_submit_0" value="1">
    <input type="hidden" class="gform_hidden" name="gform_submit" value="0">
    <input type="hidden" class="gform_hidden" name="gform_unique_id" value="">
    <input type="hidden" class="gform_hidden" name="state_0" value="WyJbXSIsIjVmZDk0MDRiMTc0NTYwODJmYTIwNGZlZDYxN2ViYzJjIl0=">
    <input type="hidden" class="gform_hidden" name="gform_target_page_number_0" id="gform_target_page_number_0" value="0">
    <input type="hidden" class="gform_hidden" name="gform_source_page_number_0" id="gform_source_page_number_0" value="1">
    <input type="hidden" name="gform_field_values" value="">
  </div>
</form>

POST /2024/01/12/pol-pots-atrocities-still-matter-45-years-after-khmer-rouges-fall/#gf_17

<form method="post" enctype="multipart/form-data" target="gform_ajax_frame_17" id="gform_17" class="puprf-signup-widget recaptcha-v3-initialized" action="/2024/01/12/pol-pots-atrocities-still-matter-45-years-after-khmer-rouges-fall/#gf_17"
  data-formid="17" novalidate="">
  <div class="gf_invisible ginput_recaptchav3" data-sitekey="6LeMnkUaAAAAALL8T1-XAyB7vxpOeTExu6KwR48-" data-tabindex="0"><input id="input_9ae663dc72ef42b46f2cf3a53ec042e1" class="gfield_recaptcha_response" type="hidden"
      name="input_9ae663dc72ef42b46f2cf3a53ec042e1" value=""></div>
  <div class="gform-body gform_body">
    <div id="gform_fields_17" class="gform_fields top_label form_sublabel_below description_below">
      <div id="field_17_1" class="gfield gfield--type-email gfield_contains_required field_sublabel_below gfield--no-description field_description_below hidden_label gfield_visibility_visible" data-js-reload="field_17_1"><label
          class="gfield_label gform-field-label" for="input_17_1">Email<span class="gfield_required"><span class="gfield_required gfield_required_text">(Required)</span></span></label>
        <div class="ginput_container ginput_container_email">
          <input name="input_1" id="input_17_1" type="email" value="" class="large" placeholder="Email Address" aria-required="true" aria-invalid="false">
        </div>
      </div>
      <div id="field_17_2" class="gfield gfield--type-honeypot gform_validation_container field_sublabel_below gfield--has-description field_description_below gfield_visibility_visible" data-js-reload="field_17_2"><label
          class="gfield_label gform-field-label" for="input_17_2">Comments</label>
        <div class="ginput_container"><input name="input_2" id="input_17_2" type="text" value="" autocomplete="new-password"></div>
        <div class="gfield_description" id="gfield_description_17_2">This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.</div>
      </div>
    </div>
  </div>
  <div class="gform_footer top_label"> <button type="submit" id="gform_submit_button_17" class="gform_button button"
      onclick="if(window[&quot;gf_submitting_17&quot;]){return false;}  if( !jQuery(&quot;#gform_17&quot;)[0].checkValidity || jQuery(&quot;#gform_17&quot;)[0].checkValidity()){window[&quot;gf_submitting_17&quot;]=true;}  "
      onkeypress="if( event.keyCode == 13 ){ if(window[&quot;gf_submitting_17&quot;]){return false;} if( !jQuery(&quot;#gform_17&quot;)[0].checkValidity || jQuery(&quot;#gform_17&quot;)[0].checkValidity()){window[&quot;gf_submitting_17&quot;]=true;}  jQuery(&quot;#gform_17&quot;).trigger(&quot;submit&quot;,[true]); }">Submit</button>
    <input type="hidden" name="gform_ajax" value="form_id=17&amp;title=&amp;description=1&amp;tabindex=0&amp;theme=data-form-theme='gravity-theme'">
    <input type="hidden" class="gform_hidden" name="is_submit_17" value="1">
    <input type="hidden" class="gform_hidden" name="gform_submit" value="17">
    <input type="hidden" class="gform_hidden" name="gform_unique_id" value="">
    <input type="hidden" class="gform_hidden" name="state_17" value="WyJbXSIsIjVmZDk0MDRiMTc0NTYwODJmYTIwNGZlZDYxN2ViYzJjIl0=">
    <input type="hidden" class="gform_hidden" name="gform_target_page_number_17" id="gform_target_page_number_17" value="0">
    <input type="hidden" class="gform_hidden" name="gform_source_page_number_17" id="gform_source_page_number_17" value="1">
    <input type="hidden" name="gform_field_values" value="">
  </div>
  <p style="display: none !important;" class="akismet-fields-container" data-prefix="ak_"><label>Δ<textarea name="ak_hp_textarea" cols="45" rows="8" maxlength="100"></textarea></label><input type="hidden" id="ak_js_1" name="ak_js"
      value="1707785086321">
    <script>
      document.getElementById("ak_js_1").setAttribute("value", (new Date()).getTime());
    </script>
  </p>
</form>

Text Content

 * Latest
 * Magazine
   * Current Issue
   * Archives
   * Subscribe
   * Crossword
 * Video
 * Podcasts
   * All Shows
   * The Reason Roundtable
   * The Reason Interview With Nick Gillespie
   * The Soho Forum Debates
   * Just Asking Questions
   * The Best of Reason Magazine
   * Why We Can't Have Nice Things
 * Volokh
 * Newsletters
 * Donate
   * Donate Online
   * Donate Crypto
   * Ways To Give To Reason Foundation
   * Torchbearer Society
   * Planned Giving
 * Subscribe
   * Print/Digital Subscriptions
   * Gift Subscriptions

Search for:


LOGIN FORM

Username(Required)

Password(Required)

Remember Me
Login
Create new account
Forgot password


Communism


POL POT'S ATROCITIES STILL MATTER, 45 YEARS AFTER KHMER ROUGE'S FALL


LIKE MANY HORRORS THROUGHOUT HISTORY, THEY WERE ROOTED IN RADICAL IDEAS AIMED AT
IMPLEMENTING SOME UTOPIAN VISION.

Steven Greenhut | 1.12.2024 8:00 AM

Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on RedditShare by emailPrint friendly
versionCopy page URL
Media Contact & Reprint Requests
The museum of the killing fields of the red Khmer or khmer rouge outside the
city of Phnom Penh of Cambodia. Cambodia, Phnom Penh ( DPST/Newscom)

Forty-five years ago last Sunday, Vietnamese troops seized Phnom Penh and ended
Cambodia's 45-month reign of terror known as the "killing fields." Under the
leadership of Pol Pot, the Khmer Rouge government implemented policies—forced
labor, resettlements, torture, starvation—that led to the death of 1.7-to-3
million people, or at least 20 percent of the nation's population. The regime
destroyed the country, caused untold suffering, and left permanent scars.

Painful as it is, we should not let these grim anniversaries go unremembered.
For context, imagine a "political experiment" that obliterated our society and
left a quarter of our 331-million population dead. It's inconceivable. As the
son of a Nazi concentration camp survivor and grandson of peasants who fled
Russian pogroms, I've always been fascinated by a simple question: What are the
conditions that lead to such horrors?

The obvious answer is these horrors always are rooted in ideas, typically
radical ones that try to implement some utopian vision. They typically are the
work of governments. Large swaths of the population take part—some willingly,
others by force. The Cambodian revolution wasn't spontaneous. Its leaders honed
their philosophy while studying in Paris. And one usually finds intellectuals
behind crazy notions. As the saying goes, "Ideas have consequences"—and they're
often tragic.

Powered By

00:00/01:24
10 Sec


Two Israeli hostages freed as dozens in Gaza killed during IDF operation, AP
explains




Next
Stay





Cambodia's leaders sought to create an idyllic and classless agrarian society,
one that harkened to the Angkor Empire from the 800s. "They wanted all members
of society to be rural agricultural workers rather than educated city dwellers,
who the Khmer Rouge believed had been corrupted by western capitalist ideas,"
according to the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust. Their philosophy echoed Mao
Zedong, whose efforts to remake China led to unimaginable horrors.

For half of my life, the Cold War and the threat of communism was an
ever-present feature. Time moves on, so it's no surprise that fewer Americans
remember the widespread fear that totalitarianism might dominate. Communist
regimes at one point controlled 30 percent of the world's population. Despite
this history, a shocking 2019 poll found more than a third of U.S. millennials
approve of communism, with only 57 percent preferring the Declaration of
Independence to the Communist Manifesto, according to a report in the
Independent.

In 1999, the "Black Book of Communism" tried to detail the number of civilian
deaths caused by the world's communist regimes—not deaths caused amid wars and
civil strife, but direct massacres from the kind of policies so efficiently
carried out in Cambodia. The authors came up with a figure of 100 million. These
deaths don't tell the entire story of fear, slavery, and repression. It's simply
unfathomable that any modern American could have a view of communist regimes
that were any more favorable than the views most of us hold of Nazism.

Then again, ideological narratives grab hold of people in ways that are hard to
understand. So many young leftists are nurtured in a university hothouse that
divvies up humanity into fixed groups of "oppressor" and "oppressed." They
learned to have an endless faith in the government's ability to reorder
humanity. They probably haven't been taught about what happens when officials
are given unlimited powers to launch a "Great Leap Forward," create "Year Zero"
or design a "New Soviet Man."



That's too bad because the reason we live such free and prosperous lives is
because we live within a system that limits the government's power to take our
property, throw us in prison, depopulate cities, execute us, force us onto long
marches and put us in re-education camps. History proves that many
people—including those who claim to have the best intentions—would do horrific
things if they had such powers at their disposal. We can even point to
horrors in the history of our own country, of course.

What lessons can modern Americans draw from the Cambodian nightmare? I'd suggest
we show no tolerance toward grandiose social experiments of any kind (such as
radically reordering society to avert a supposed climate doom) and focus instead
on incrementally improving life within our current system. People get excited
about big, transformative ideas even though they can upend society, yet lose
interest in the nuts-and-bolts of the slow-moving democratic process. The latter
can be hard work, so no wonder political radicals prefer dangerous shortcuts.

Back in Cambodia, the devastation from the 1970s still permeates the nation's
politics. After Pol Pot was deposed, the country fell into a civil war that
lasted until the 1990s, with an apparently unrepentant Pol Pot finally dying in
exile 1998. As Time reports, many former Khmer Rouge officials remain in power
and the country "still grapples with Pol Pot's brutal legacy." Cambodia's
population is young, so few remember the horrors—but it still casts a pall over
everything.

For the rest of us, all we can do is remember, or as author Elie Wiesel said:
"For the dead and the living, we must bear witness."

This column was first published in The Orange County Register.

Start your day with Reason. Get a daily brief of the most important stories and
trends every weekday morning when you subscribe to Reason Roundup.

Email(Required)

Comments

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Submit

Δ

NEXT: War With Russia Teaches Ukraine To Value Private Guns

Steven Greenhut is western region director for the R Street Institute and was
previously the Union-Tribune's California columnist.

CommunismCambodiaAsiaUtopiaMurderPolitics
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on RedditShare by emailPrint friendly
versionCopy page URL
Media Contact & Reprint Requests

Show Comments (202)


LATEST

SCOTUS IS TROUBLED BY THE CLAIM THAT STATES CAN DISQUALIFY TRUMP FROM THE
ELECTION AS AN INSURRECTIONIST

Jacob Sullum | 2.12.2024 1:35 PM

PROTECT ACT COULD REQUIRE REMOVAL OF ALL EXISTING PORN ONLINE

Elizabeth Nolan Brown | 2.12.2024 12:00 PM

BIDEN'S BIZARRE 'SHRINKFLATION' NONSENSE

Eric Boehm | 2.12.2024 11:15 AM

DELINQUENT COUNTRIES

Liz Wolfe | 2.12.2024 9:30 AM

JOE BIDEN'S NO GOOD, VERY BAD DAY

J.D. Tuccille | 2.12.2024 7:00 AM





 * About
 * Browse Topics
 * Events
 * Staff
 * Jobs
 * Donate
 * Advertise
 * Subscribe
 * Contact
 * Media
 * Shop
 * Amazon

Reason FacebookReason TwitterReason InstagramReason TikTokReason YoutubeReason
ItunesReason on FlipboardReason RSS

© 2024 Reason Foundation | Accessibility | Privacy Policy | Terms Of Use

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of
Service apply.



Notifications