• Average PFLP Enjoyer
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    112 years ago

    The last guy who talks about how the DPRK has the best human rights in the world is such a chad

    “yeah the DPRK is a dictatorship, a dictatorship of the proletariat” 😎

    • blueberriesOP
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      22 years ago

      Seriously, that is such a great quote!

      I always wonder though, if it wouldn’t be better for communists to talk about proletarian democracy vs. bourgeoise democracy instead of dictatorship of the proletariat vs. dictatorship of the bourgeoisie. Talking about dictatorships is such an easy angle for capitalists to smear communism, as one can easily take this out of context and insinuate that communists want authoritarian hell holes.

  • @afellowkidM
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    72 years ago

    Great documentary for poking holes in the imperialist narrative around DPRK. One of the cases they mention in this is also talked about in the 2016 documentary Spy Nation (Korean title: 자백), about how the south Korean NIS forges documents, lies to north Koreans, tortures them, holds them in solitary confinement, etc. until they produce false confessions of spying. Spy Nation is mostly about false confessions of spying while Loyal Citizens is more about north Koreans being forced to stay in south Korea against their will by being denied passports and being put under surveillance and/or held in confinement if they express positive opinions about DPRK or show a desire to return.

    • blueberriesOP
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      2 years ago

      I didn’t know about Spy Nation yet, I will have to give it a watch. Thanks for the recommendation!

      For me it is just wild though, that the South Korean government denies passports to its citizens. Like the things western governments accuse the DPRK of doing, SK does as well. Do you by any chance know about how things are handled in the DPRK? From what I gathered on the internet, North Korean citizens generally get visas for work and study abroad, but it depends on the circumstances.

      • @afellowkidM
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        2 years ago

        I don’t know much about the process of issuing of passports within DPRK.

        I do know that upon an increase of international sanctions against DPRK in 2017, thousands of north Koreans who had been working abroad were forced to return home due to the sanctions.

        There’s a few videos I have seen here and there where people randomly run into north Koreans travelling/working abroad in Russia. This video has English subs but not a lot of details about work/passports, but it’s a fun video.

        This video from 2013 doesn’t have English subs but basically what happens is: Some south Koreans are on a road trip in Russia and their car has a ROK flag. A truck pulls over next to them and a north Korean guy comes out and basically says “Hey! We were driving past and our driver saw you were Korean so we decided to come see you!” They have a chat and the south Koreans ask if these guys are in Russia to work, and the north Korea guy is like “Yeah, we’ve got a guy who’s been working here for 1 year, someone for about 5 years, etc. Of course each year we go back home then come back here.”