this post was submitted on 05 Jan 2024
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For reasons relating to South Korean Law, there are no communist parties in South Korea. Any political party in the south should not be colloquially called a communist party.
The People's Democracy Party of South Korea for example calls itself a progressive party that calls for pacifism, increased national autonomy from American interference, women's rights and liberation, and a more democratic government that better represents the hard-working citizens and agricultural specialists of South Korea.
So let us be respectful of the PDP and South Korea's laws by not calling any progressive party a communist party. Because that would be illegal.
It signs solidnet.org statements.
Those are all ML parties:
Worker's Party of Korea in the DPRK
Workers party of Bangladesh
Workers party of Belgium
Russian Communist WP
Workers party Ireland
Still not a communist party.
It participates in the WAP as well which only has Marxist-Leninist parties.
obviously not because it contains Marxist-Leninist parties, and one progressive party.
it's 100% communist internally
They quite openly declare they are not communist internally or externally, because communists are illegal in Korea.
They call themselves "communalist" ;) ;) and reject social democracy http://pdp21.kr/?p=116863
Literally describing the transition of humanity from primitive communism to communism with a lot of winking.
Worth noting that the British SDP describe themselves as "communitarians" too, and they suck ass.
They aren't even leftist though
Were I to discuss the party in the future, I'd follow your suggestion regardless, but are the words of anglophones on the internet really what is keeping the occupation government from killing the PDP?
This is more to help keep unnecessary active awareness of non-state actors away from our work whenever members of the PDP travel abroad, in addition to avoid the stigmatization that comes with Koreans being communists in a world where the DPRK exists as one of the most propagandized AES states on earth.
Imagine being a Korean, and when telling someone about your ethnicity they without fail in the first sentence ask "North Korean or South Korean?" or some variant along those lines. Other than that being a part of my and many korean-american's lived experiences, it serves as a constant reminder that Communist Korea exists as a constant in the minds of nearly everyone in the West. It does pay to be careful sometimes lol.
Thank you for the explanation, that makes sense.