Yeong Hwan Choi Choi The Purge Revolution: The Civil Park

The Purge Revolution: The Civil Park

von Yeong Hwan Choi

EUR 11,90

Buch in deiner Nähe kaufen


...oder deine aktuelle Postleitzahl eingeben:
oder

Beschreibung

On the Ground Where Ethics Were Trampled, How Does Humanity Survive? We live in an age when morality has become the language of power.The Purge Revolution: The Civil Park is a record of staying human in a world where ethics have been stripped of meaning.As a witness to the corpse of morality, I couldn’t just watch it rot. While people planned their holidays, the purge began.Property soared beyond reason. Police turned inquisitor.Special prosecutors served the throne and sent innocents to their deaths.The young gasped under taxes and spending, paying for promises that were never theirs.Corporations fled; jobs vanished; and in the void, the beasts fed.Even aboard a plane to Tokyo, the purge did not rest.The architects of a new constitution said, “The people will decide,” yet their tone echoed old dictatorships.The law changed color like a chameleon to match the ruler, and judges matched it. Chinese money seeped into markets, dressed as local produce.In the alleys of Phnom Penh, Koreans were kidnapped while their government bowed to Beijing.Military drills were cut back, yet the same leaders shouted “sovereign defense.”Political soldiers licked boots and were decorated for it.The press, too, played its part: when northern troops crossed the border, cameras turned away and new villains were minted—“extremists,” “haters,” “the far-right.” I watched morality die, day by day.China grew bolder; Korean leaders knelt lower; citizens, losing freedom, bowed deeper.New fronts opened across the world. BRICS pressed the West, and Europe shifted again.The wind changed twice: Eastern Europe, once buried under communism, regained a kind of reason, while Western Europe drifted toward a soft socialism that numbs the mind.In South America, politics swung between rebellion and dependence, unsure which master to serve. When law falls into the hands of beasts, how long can human speech survive?That question runs through every page.The beasts wear the masks of nations and go on trampling what is left of conscience.At what point did we choose survival over what is right? The Purge Revolution takes the form of a political diary—a record of those who refused to become beasts.Its language is raw; it dissects the collapse of ethics without apology or despair.Yet beneath the cold sentences, one question will not die: What is a human being? How fragile is conscience? Can morality return to life? It does not console; it exposes.It walks over the remains of ethics and holds the last warmth left in man. When morality falls into the hands of power, the beasts wear the mask of man.Some still tried to tear that mask away.They were the last humans who refused to kneel.
Unlike most political essays that analyze events from a safe distance, The Purge Revolution is written from within the collapse. It is both a personal diary and a moral autopsy of a nation turning into a controlled society—where propaganda replaces justice, and power wears the mask of virtue. The author documents how a democratic state drifts toward a Chinese-style surveillance regime, how public institutions become instruments of ideology, and how language itself is weaponized to divide citizens into believers and enemies. This book is not an abstract theory but a lived resistance — a record of one witness who refuses to kneel before the beasts that rule through fear and silence. Each paragraph presses a question that cannot be ignored: how much of our humanity survives when truth itself is punished? It forces the reader to stand where ethics fall, and choose whether to look away or to speak. The Purge Revolution: The Civil Park stands apart as a work of political conscience — written in the heat of witnessing, with the clarity of someone who has lived through what others only debate. It transforms outrage into reflection, despair into a question: What does it still mean to be human when morality itself is outlawed?

Autor*in

Yeong Hwan Choi
"Quit my job to embrace the fine art of doing absolutely nothing important. I specialize in overthinking, underachieving, and making wild, unnecessary daydreams my full-time occupation. Now in my 30s, I’ve mastered the art of ‘just winging it’—both in life and in writing. If you enjoy books that feel like a fever dream mixed with existential dread and caffeine-fueled nonsense, you’ve come to the right place."

Themen in »The Purge Revolution: The Civil Park«

Politische Ethik und Machtmissbrauch Überwachungsgesellschaft und moralischer Verfall Zeitzeugnis des Widerstands Moral Collapse and Political Power Witness Literature of Resistance Surveillance State and the Death of Ethics

Stimmen zu »The Purge Revolution: The Civil Park«

Details

ISBN: 9783384740182
Verlag: tredition
Erscheinung: 27.10.2025

Link teilen


Über buchnah.de | Die Buchhandlungen | Die Verlage | Impressum & Kontakt | Datenschutz | Presse


Auf dieser Seite kannst Du Buchhandlungen in der Nähe finden