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[CTN Column] Will You Be a Dog Barking at a Train, or a Fighter Who Changes the Tracks?
By Dong-ho Shin, CTN Editorial Contributor
Shouldn't every citizen, regardless of political camp or faction, be outraged when their right to participate in democracy is taken away?
This is not an issue that matters only to those who lost an election while being irrelevant to those who won. It is an issue that concerns every citizen.
Have you ever seen a dog barking furiously at a passing train?
No matter how loud the barking, the hundreds of tons of steel continue down the tracks without moving even a single centimeter. To the dog, it may be a full-throated roar of defiance. To the train, it is nothing more than meaningless noise fading into the distance.
The public outrage over alleged election fraud in our society today is much the same.
Sitting in a room, typing angry comments on a keyboard, or venting frustration over drinks—coldly speaking, such actions are little different from a dog barking at a moving train.
Resistance that exists only in words poses no real threat to those who wield power unjustly.
Election fraud, if true, is a national crime that strikes at the very foundation of democracy. Feeling anger at the possibility that the people's sovereignty has been stolen is a natural and rational response.
However, if that anger remains confined to private conversations and online posts, those responsible for corruption and manipulation will simply laugh it off.
In fact, this is precisely the scenario they desire most: endless complaints that eventually fade with time.
The time has come to move beyond words and rise into action.
Stopping the train and changing its tracks requires more than barking. It requires determined people willing to step onto the tracks and act.
Action-oriented resistance does not necessarily mean dramatic or extreme measures.
Solidarity in Public Spaces: Leaving isolation behind and standing shoulder to shoulder with others who share the same concerns.
Institutional Pressure: Going beyond criticism by gathering evidence and pursuing legal and institutional remedies.
Everyday Civic Responsibility: Monitoring those in power, holding media and institutions accountable, and awakening those who remain indifferent.
Throughout history, no authoritarian regime and no force accused of election manipulation has ever surrendered simply because people complained.
What has always inspired fear in those who abuse power has been the organized action of ordinary citizens determined to defend their rights.
History repeatedly demonstrates that meaningful change occurs when citizens choose participation over passivity.
Silence is complicity, and anger expressed only in words is merely another form of spectatorship.
If you truly wish
½Åµ¿È£ ±âÀÚ jscar1004@hanmail.net
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