"The most important scientific revolutions all include, as their only common feature, the dethronement of human arrogance from one pedestal after another of previous convictions about our centrality in the cosmos."   
- Stephen Jay Gould

"Glory is fleeting, but obscurity is forever."
- Napoleon Bonaparte (1768 - 1821)

There is nothing more difficult to take in hand, more perilous to conduct, or more uncertain in its success than to take the lead in the introduction of a new order of things.
- Machiavelli

Does it apply?  Can it apply?  Certainly there are techniques we can apply and lessons to be learned but it is not just a model that can be simply transferred.

Team Trump should get up to speed on South Korean model

msnbc.com · April 3, 2020
A few weeks ago, Surgeon General Jerome Adams suggested that South Korea's successes in combating the coronavirus  could not be easily duplicated in the United States.
"We are not an authoritarian nation, so we have to be careful when we say, 'Let's do what China did. Let's do what South Korea did,'" Adams said during an interview on "Fox & Friends," lumping South Korea's democratic republic together with China's unelected communist government.
Yesterday, Seema Verma, administrator for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), didn't go quite as far, though she said  something similar.
"If you look at these other countries -- if you look at China and South Korea -- they have very different approaches. We're a free country. We're giving recommendations to the American people and hoping that they're going to adhere to those."
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In fairness, Verma didn't explicitly make the case that South Korea  isn't a free country, but in context, she seemed to echo Jerome Adams in tying China's and Seoul's responses together.
It's probably worth pausing to note an important detail: South Korea is a free country. It holds free and fair elections. It has a large, dynamic, free-market economy.
South Korea didn't succeed in its efforts to combat the pandemic because it's authoritarian; it succeeded because it launched an effective, coordinated early response, relying on robust testing, contact tracing, an efficient national health care system, and public cooperation.
There's ample room for conversation about the differences between the United States and South Korea -- we're vastly larger, both in population and square miles -- the degree to which that creates challenges in responding to a crisis like this one.
But for anyone to suggest free countries face inherent obstacles to an effective response is wrong.

De Oppresso Liber,

David Maxwell
Senior Fellow
Foundation for Defense of Democracies
Personal Email: d[email protected]
Phone: 202-573-8647
Web Site:  www.fdd.org
Twitter: @davidmaxwell161
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FDD is a Washington-based nonpartisan research institute focusing on national security and foreign policy.


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"A democracy is only as resilient as its people. An informed and engaged citizenry is the fundamental requirement for a free and resilient nation. For generations, our society has protected free press, free speech, and free thought. Today, actors such as Russia are using information tools in an attempt to undermine the legitimacy of democracies. Adversaries target media, political processes, financial networks, and personal data. The American public and private sectors must recognize this and work together to defend our way of life. No external threat can be allowed to shake our shared commitment to our values, undermine our system of government, or divide our Nation."