Many overenthusiastic tankies claim that LGBT people are accepted in the DPRK, while your average lib will tell you that Kim Jong-Un will shoot you out of a cannon if you hold hands with the same gender. The reality is neither of these.

First of all, homosexuality is socially looked down upon by the DPRK. A simple search on KCNA will show homophobic comments about Michael Kirby. However, any such article from KCNA should be taken with a grain of salt since it has crazy articles once in a while that don’t accurately depict the official position of the state. Rodong Sinmun is party-run while KCNA is more independent as a state-managed enterprise, so it’s a better way to judge the government’s position on a topic. Rodong Sinmun seems to be absent from any articles discussing this. However, this analysis from Kim Il-Sung university shows that being homosexual is frowned upon in academia; given the importance that social science academia plays in the governance of the DPRK we can understand this is likely reflected some degree in the policies of the government.

Another claim I hear is that while homosexuality is frowned upon in the DPRK, it is not legally punished. Indeed, the DPRK criminal code does not explicitly mention any punishment for homosexuality at all. However, the criminal code does have this rather vague article:

Article 194 (Conduct of Decadent Acts)

A person who watches or listens to music, dance, drawings, photos, books, video recordings or electronic media that reflects decadent, carnal or foul contents or who performs such acts himself or herself shall be punished by short-term labour for less than two years. In cases where the person commits a grave offence, he or she shall be punished by reform through labour for less than five years.

If being gay is considered a decadent act by the government, which it likely is, it is possible that one could face 2-5 years of jail time for this.

I am a big fan of the DPRK and consider it the best example and execution of socialism on Earth. But critical support is still critical, and we must be knowledgable about the DPRK’s shortcomings.

  • @darkcalling
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    1 month ago

    A lot to say without much actual proof. Those things COULD be used to persecute the LGBTQ+ community but that doesn’t mean they are. As could many things, a country could selectively enforce all kinds of much more neutral sounding laws exclusively on gay people as a means of persecution.

    I’m sorry but without any proof I’m not ready to go throwing them out and cede to liberals and reactionary anti-communist rainbow-washing forces that they are actually indeed so. There’s so much misinformation about the DPRK it’s not even funny.

    If being gay is considered a decadent act by the government

    That one IF is doing a huge amount of lifting, your argument falls apart when you take it out.

    which it likely is,

    Proof, we need proof, not “I feel like it is”. And yes all countries have persons in them, including those attached to the party who hold backwards views on a variety of things.

    In particular I’ll note Eastern notions of frowning on something are not the same as western active persecution. There are also issues of things lost in translation. China doesn’t criminalize being gay but they very much crack down on LGBTQ-CIA organizations (we need a Buttigieg rat emoji) that advance a western, liberal slant.

    I make no claims they are some bastion of rights for queer people as they’re likely not given their history and material circumstances but I think this whole post is making a mountain out of a molehill of evidence. You can’t just leap from one conclusion to another more severe one.

    At the end of the day cfgaussian’s take is mine but I think OP jumped the shark with a sweeping and unsupported by evidence alarmist proclamation.

    • Muad'DibberA
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      1 month ago

      100% agree. A few articles on KCNA and a vague legal reference is not enough evidence to make any claims about either the government or citizen’s stances on LGBT ppl and how they are treated and viewed.

  • @cfgaussian
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    1 month ago

    I’ve said it before and i’ll say it again, westerners just don’t do well with the existence of contradictions. We tend to have a hard time understanding that things can be both good and bad at the same time. For many of us, even for well-meaning leftists, it has to be either one or the other. If something has even one bad aspect to it then it cannot possibly be good, or conversely if something is good it cannot possibly have bad sides to it. There is a kind of infantile, Marvel comic book way of thinking that has infected far too much of western society.

    Perhaps it is because of the dualistic, (good vs evil) nature of western religions as opposed to eastern philosophies which more often consider two opposing aspects to be able to coexist in the same thing (Yin-Yang)…anyway, i don’t want to get distracted with metaphysics here. Point is we need to learn that it is possible to admire the many good aspects of a society like the DPRK while rejecting the problematic ones. The same goes for having critical support of other, even more problematic countries but which nonetheless fulfil an important anti-imperialist function and which do not deserve to be the target of western orchestrated hybrid warfare, coercive economic measures or color revolutions. Purity fetishes will get us nowhere.

    We have to accept that not all contradictions of a society can or will be resolved immediately, especially when that society is facing existential external threats and is still struggling materially. Yes there are also exceptions such as Cuba which has admirably managed to institute some of the most progressive social legislation in the world even while suffering under a brutal blockade, but in general we should expect that most societies need first to resolve their primary contradictions before being able to resolve their secondary ones.

    • @amemorablename
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      261 month ago

      Good points. My mind has been on this exact subject recently and I’ve been trying to work out what it is I’m trying to say, though I think you said some of it. Regardless, I will attempt to put into words some of what’s on my mind about it.

      Namely that there is this moralizing view (that in my case, I see most coming from catholic upbringing, but it may be from western media as well) where the focus is on this idea that everyone is sort of at risk of becoming morally corrupt. And so there is this undue focus on the morality of an action in isolation and whether it moves the needle on driving you toward corruption, sometimes leading to a pathology associated with what we call “harm OCD”, but more often probably just causing people to be a bit warped in their thinking and attention paid.

      The moralizing view, rather than looking at what is effective toward the goal and the benefit and harm contained in it, it tends to look for purity very much so. The action that contains both benefit and harm is considered corrupted (which doesn’t make sense, as it’s virtually impossible for any action to contain only one or the other, purely) and must be faced with guilt and reassurance that it has no broader implications of the person becoming a corrupted being.

      Ironically, the moralizing view is more apt to cause you to have a mismatch in intent and result. Because you are viewing people as good or bad. So you are both unfairly accommodating and forgiving of the people in the “good” group and you are unfairly combative and unforgiving of the people in the “bad” group.

      As communists, this kind of thinking is impossible to work with and at odds with dialectics. We have to be able to do principled criticism of our own and we have to be understanding of the masses who are not communist, just as we work against the colonizer/imperialist and look out for those in need (which often go hand in hand). What is most effective is the order of the day and the moralizing view would tend to think this is somehow unfeeling and corruptive, that by focusing on what is effective over what is “the right thing to do,” you are losing sight of your moral center and becoming one of the “bad” ones. I think the mistake here, though this I admit is a component of it I’m less clear on because of the internalized strength of that moralizing thought process, is in thinking that being effectiveness focused means lacking compassion. Compassion is a critical element for us as communists and we have to figure out how to reduce harm with compassion at the helm, which leads us to scientific socialism theory and practice. The moralizing view, by contrast, is all about fear of the “animalistic nature” (a bizarre view of humans and animals as something only a few steps removed from brutality at all times); and it is focused on running from a negative rather than evaluating how to reach a positive.

      Curious to know if that makes sense. This is so long cause I’m thinking some of this through as I type.

      • @cfgaussian
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        191 month ago

        This is very well put comrade, and i fully agree! Compassion is what must always fundamentally drive us, but moralistic black and white thinking is antithetical to Marxist dialectics.

  • booty [he/him]
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    621 month ago

    If being gay is considered a decadent act by the government, which it likely is,

    Source: This was revealed to me in a dream

  • ButtBidet [he/him]
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    441 month ago

    If being gay is considered a decadent act by the government, which it likely is, it is possible that one could face 2-5 years of jail time for this.

    Everything was pretty decently evidenced up until this point. I’m not even defending the DPRK’s stance on homosexuality. I just don’t think that we have evidence that they’re imprisoning anyone for being queer.

  • @cayde6ml
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    371 month ago

    I won’t pretend or exaggerate the DPRK’s tolerance of LGBTQIA rights, from what I’ve seen and read from LGBTQIA individuals who have traveled to and written about their experiences, they almost all say that the country/people are surprisingly very accepting. I read an article recently about a polyamorous non-binary/bisexual woman in the DPRK who was accepted by their village and was the life of the party.

    • Red_Scare [he/him]
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      101 month ago

      But this is also a weak evidence of how the citizens are treated. I’m pretty sure western visitors don’t get up to 2 years in prison for consuming western propaganda either.

      • @cayde6ml
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        131 month ago

        I have extreme doubts that DPRK citizens get any major punishment for consuming western media at all.

  • The Free Penguin
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    151 month ago

    But why would the DPRK incarcerate someone for “listening to music that reflects decadent contents”

    • barrbaric [he/him]
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      161 month ago

      Presumably it’s meant for things that are counterrevolutionary, and many countries believe LGBT people are a group that the US/EU will use to foment counterrevolution. This could be solved trivially by just giving those LGBT people rights, but alas a lot of boomers are cringe.

    • GarbageShoot [he/him]
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      141 month ago

      Presumably “decadent” here means “glorifying capitalism” or wasteful excess more generally, which (not unlike what happened with Germany) is one of the main ways that South Korean media exports try to pander to people’s more base desires and these are used to try to exert soft power. It’s probably not the best way to go about things, but I’m not in or managing a country under siege.

  • D61 [any]
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    -61 month ago

    Conservatives gonna conservative, no matter what country they’re from.