User:Zuhui//Drafts/Position Liberty
Liberty
Yoon's public address
(Liberty-loop)
translated excerpt
Dear citizens of our nation,
...
The administration is paralyzed, and the people’s sighs grow deeper. This tramples upon the constitutional order of liberty
in the Republic of Korea, disrupting legitimate state institutions established under the Constitution and the law. Such acts are blatant anti-state activities that plot insurrection.
The lives of our citizens are disregarded, as the government remains immobilized by incessant impeachments, special investigations, and protective measures for the opposition leader.
The National Assembly has become a den of criminals, wielding legislative dictatorship to paralyze the judicial and administrative systems of our nation while conspiring to overthrow the system of liberty
and democracy. The very institution that should be the foundation of liberty
and democracy has become a monster that threatens to destroy it. Today, the liberty
of Republic of Korea stands on the brink, at the edge of collapse.
Dear citizens,
To defend the liberty
of the Republic of Korea from the threats posed by the North Korean communist regime and to eradicate the shameless, pro-North anti-state forces that rob our people of their liberty
and happiness, I hereby declare martial law. Through this martial law, I will rebuild and protect the liberty
of Republic of Korea, which has been driven to the brink of ruin.
To achieve this, I will eradicate the anti-state forces that have engaged in malicious acts until now. This measure is unavoidable to ensure the liberty
and safety of the people, the sustainability of our nation, and to leave a better country for future generations. I will act swiftly to eliminate anti-state forces and restore the nation to normalcy.
I understand that this may cause some inconvenience to the good citizens who have upheld the values of the Constitution. However, I will do my utmost to minimize these inconveniences. Such measures are essential for the perpetuity of liberty
in the Republic of Korea and do not alter our commitment to contributing to the international community and fulfilling our responsibilities.
As President, I earnestly appeal to you, the citizens. Trust me as I dedicate my entire being to defending the liberty
of the Republic of Korea. Please believe in me. Thank you.
some context
'Liberté' by Paul Eluard (translated)
On my school notebooks
On my desk and on the trees
On the sands of snow
I write your name
On the pages I have read
On all the white pages
Stone, blood, paper or ash
I write your name
On the images of gold
On the weapons of the warriors
On the crown of the king
I write your name
On the jungle and the desert
On the nest and on the brier
On the echo of my childhood
I write your name
On all my scarves of blue
On the moist sunlit swamps
On the living lake of moonlight
I write your name
On the fields, on the horizon
On the birds’ wings
And on the mill of shadows
I write your name
On each whiff of daybreak
On the sea, on the boats
On the demented mountaintop
I write your name
On the froth of the cloud
On the sweat of the storm
On the dense rain and the flat
I write your name
On the flickering figures
On the bells of colors
On the natural truth
I write your name
On the high paths
On the deployed routes
On the crowd-thronged square
I write your name
On the lamp which is lit
On the lamp which isn’t
On my reunited thoughts
I write your name
On a fruit cut in two
Of my mirror and my chamber
On my bed, an empty shell
I write your name
On my dog, greathearted and greedy
On his pricked-up ears
On his blundering paws
I write your name
On the latch of my door
On those familiar objects
On the torrents of a good fire
I write your name
On the harmony of the flesh
On the faces of my friends
On each outstretched hand
I write your name
On the window of surprises
On a pair of expectant lips
In a state far deeper than silence
I write your name
On my crumbled hiding-places
On my sunken lighthouses
On my walls and my ennui
I write your name
On abstraction without desire
On naked solitude
On the marches of death
I write your name
And for the want of a word
I renew my life
For I was born to know you
To name you
Liberty
.
Expandable, multi-dimensional and intimate
Liberty
people, places, things
Liberty
is implied asyou
in the repeated sentenceI write your name
.- The implied
Liberty
is repeatedly placed in various things--like the sea, trees, books, and lights and so on. - Repeating the same phrase
I write your name
creates a pattern both visually and meaningfully, which makes it expand across different contexts.
- ↳ So the implied word itself is continuously recontextualized, carrying semantic flexibility and interconnectedness.
- ↳ offers a reader a nonlinear experience, allowing for various sensory associations.
declaration at the end
Liberty
keeps coming through indirectly in different contexts and images, but it’s only explicitly declared once at the very end.
- ↳ When
Liberty
is finally declared in the last line, a reader can feel its meaning through the buildup of sensory experiences and sense of space that came before the declaration.- [ like a gradual shift occuring from an implied state to an explicit one. ]
- ↳ In that moment, the reader don’t just see
Liberty
as a word but experiences it as a fusion of images and sensations.