On this day of the year, in 1446, the Hongul alphabet was published. That alphabet, commissioned by King Sejong the Great of Korea, was arguably the single most influential act by a government to level the playing field for its nation.
The consequences were rapid, far reaching and quite permanent. The Hongul alphabet led quickly to near universal literacy and more.
Korea had been a highly stratified society, with the aristocracy and priesthood on the top and everyone else — the peasants — far below. But once everyone could read and write, a thriving middle class quickly formed.
Ordinary people could now form their own businesses, buy and sell property, participate in education and government, even sue their aristocratic countrymen in court. It was perhaps the most successful act of universal enfranchisement in history.
During our own sad time, when the executive branch of the U.S. is trying its darnedest to disenfranchise its citizenry — and terrorize us all in the process — it is good to remember a moment in history when a government actually did something good for ordinary people.