This is prosaically brilliant. Turns out that Lidar can be more culturally useful than just for speeding tickets.
Anyone who hasn't visited Cambodia (or SE Asia in general) should go. At least once in your life. It's cheap, the people are kind (do not insult the king of Thailand though) and the incredible diversity of people streaming in from India, China, and later France has left behind an amazing cultural chronicle. Cambodia will, for better or worse, forcibly remind you of both the heights (Angkor) and the depths (the Khmer Rouge) of humanity.
Note that the KR almost certainly would not have come to power and killed 1/3rd of the population if we hadn't bombed the shit out of eastern Cambodia during the Vietnam war. (Henry Kissinger received the Nobel peace prize for these antics) Almost exactly like Isis, except the KR didn't see the point of destroying their own heritage. So in spite of the odd bullet hole, Angkor and surrounding sites are as awesome as they were when Mouhot stumbled upon them in ~1855. (The Frenchman could not believe that "savages" built such incredible temples and attributed them to the Romans.)
Amazingly resilient people with a glorious legacy that continues to grow as we learn more about it.
Whatever one thinks of the Viet Nam war, and there are many valid criticisms of the conduct of the western armies and their leadership, it is worthwhile to bear in mind that the West fought there to prevent communist organisations like the KR to come to power.
The KR would certainly not have come to power if not
1. The French communist party had radicalised Pol Pot.
2. The Soviet and Yugoslav communist parties had further schooled Pol
Pot in how to overthrow a regime.
3. The Soviet, Chinese and North Vietnamese communist parties had
supported the KR with weapons and other forms of logistics with the
explicit aim of instituting a communist regime in Cambodia.
While it is true that the Vietnamese and Cambodians didn't want to be colonies, the KR were vastly worse than being colonised.
KR were following the classic communist script that we have seen played out in many developing countries. The KR were created by communists, lead from Moscow and Beijing.
Hindsight is 20/20. While it's true that the Confederacy didn't want to give up slavery, the civil war and reconstruction were vastly worse for slaveowners then giving it up peacefully would have been.
The classic communist script hasn't always resulted in genocide. Much like how the classic imperialist script hasn't always resulted in genocide.
Besides, Moscow hardly had a monopoly on sponsoring and/or training political death squads.
No hindsight. Communist takeover plans were very well-know and public for a long time.
Moscow hardly had a monopoly
Nobody claims this.
The fact of the matter remains: the KR and Pol Pot were created
following the standard communist script for "liberation movements"
in the
developing world (i.e. thinly veilded preparations for communist takeover). All the ideological training was provided by the
Soviets and their allies, as were all the many weapons and other logistics. The US was
in East Asia primarily to counter the communist threat, not to prop up
French colonies.
All responsibility for the KR and their actions is with the communists
leadership in Moscow (and Beijing and Paris and Belgrade and Hanoi).
> we hadn't bombed the shit out of eastern Cambodia during the Vietnam war.
To put that in more concrete terms, the US dropped more 2.7 million tons of bombs on Cambodia. I spoke not too long ago with some Cambodian men in Kompong Thom, which is a central province, who related how as children they would disassemble unexploded ordnance and sell the scrap materials. This particular village didn't have much awareness of or contact with the KR regime as I understand it, but after the bombing they resorted to eating tree bark and leaves for a period of multiple years.
I didn't realize it until recently, but Laos was bombed even more heavily than Cambodia. Apparently, there are still 80 million unexploded US bombs littered across Laos. It's hard to even imagine that.
I recommend reading some of Kissinger's books to get a different perspective on that era than you find these days online. I'm making my way through "On China" right now.
Come on dude, he is saying read Kissinger for a different perspective, is wasn't endorsing it. It is narrow minded of you to mock reading things you disagree with.
Thank you. There are many armchair historians online. Getting the whole picture requires hearing from all sides. Kissinger also did a few Google talks which you can find on YouTube.
I believe he is generally respected among those who study foreign policy. I'm still learning more about the history myself. I don't think he is as evil as Hitchens would have you believe.
If you'd like to learn more about how the American bombing of Cambodia helped bring Pol Pot to power in a highly entertaining way, I'd recommend this section from Spalding Gray's monolog in Swimming to Cambodia.
Let's not blame Kissinger alone. Which government did the US support during the 1980s in Cambodia, the Vietnamese-backed one or the Khmer Rouge? <crickets>
This is very impressive finding and it highlights sophisticated planning and design done long time ago without any modern technology. Doing a Laser Scans not only help in creating a digital footprint but also digitize it for future generations in-case of any natural disaster.
Anyone who hasn't visited Cambodia (or SE Asia in general) should go. At least once in your life. It's cheap, the people are kind (do not insult the king of Thailand though) and the incredible diversity of people streaming in from India, China, and later France has left behind an amazing cultural chronicle. Cambodia will, for better or worse, forcibly remind you of both the heights (Angkor) and the depths (the Khmer Rouge) of humanity.
Note that the KR almost certainly would not have come to power and killed 1/3rd of the population if we hadn't bombed the shit out of eastern Cambodia during the Vietnam war. (Henry Kissinger received the Nobel peace prize for these antics) Almost exactly like Isis, except the KR didn't see the point of destroying their own heritage. So in spite of the odd bullet hole, Angkor and surrounding sites are as awesome as they were when Mouhot stumbled upon them in ~1855. (The Frenchman could not believe that "savages" built such incredible temples and attributed them to the Romans.)
Amazingly resilient people with a glorious legacy that continues to grow as we learn more about it.