• Just finished re listening, in preparation for season 4 and it’s just so well told. Libs like to treat North Korea like some kind of comical yet existentially threatening pariah.

      They don’t see the modern DPRK as what is it: a product of the material conditions that the United States thrust upon out.

      Like ok libs, I don’t like the cult of personality around the Kim family either, but why do you think that’s the case? Hmm? Why??? Does bombing the entire peninsula to dust, occupying half of it, and constantly threatening the half that’s not yours, maybe have a little something to do with why a country might turn towards a centralization of power?!?!

      Anyway, I’m just yelling at the liberals in the walls now.

      • ClimateChangeAnxiety [he/him, they/them]@hexbear.net
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        1 year ago

        Exactly! I also find it weird, but I’d likely have different thoughts if I grew up in a world where one leader kept my grandparents alive and country intact against an apocalyptic force.

        Think of how Americans think of George Washington, and now imagine if instead of 250 years ago it was when your grandfather was a young man, and instead of the British wanting slightly higher taxes (or lower 😳) they wanted to flatten every inch of the new United States and kill every man woman and child in it.

        • I think that’s a fair point. I’ve also read some stuff about how, when the two previous Kim’s died, they split up their positions and diffused power. So, when Kim Il Sung died, he was President, which made him Head of State, Head of Government, and Commander in Chief, but they then made those three roles into separate offices, which is why he’s the “Eternal President”, because he’s the only president.

          I don’t have anything to back this up, it’s just a hunch and academic studies on the internal complexities of dprk politics are incredibly rare in the English language, but I get the impression that there’s a line struggle around the personality cult, with with certain cleavages wanting to diffuse that power, and others wanting to reinforce it.

          Even more of a hunch, so take this with an even bigger grain of salt, but I also suspect it’s possible that this might stem from the historic influence of anarchism in Korea. Lots of Korean anarchists went on to defect to the DPRK, and some even became pretty high ranking officials. That said, I couldn’t tell you if that influence is still there, this many decades on.

      • renownedballoonthief@lemmygrad.ml
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        1 year ago

        Famine in a poor African country: an unavoidable tragedy if it’s even noticed in the first place.

        Food insecurity in the DPRK: COMMUNISM IS A FAILURE, WE MUST ENACT MORE SANCTIONS!!!1!1!!

  • pH3ra
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    1 year ago

    For a moment, my dyslexic ass read “black cock”