Anonymous ID: f3274d June 16, 2019, 12:57 p.m. No.6765633   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://mediabiasfactcheck.com/washington-press/

The Washington Press usually sources their information to credible mainstream media outlets, however they sometimes use poor sources such as SHAREBLUE, which has a mixed record with fact checking. The Washington Press has also failed fact checks that can be found here and here.

 

On 24 May, the Washington Press web site reported that President Donald Trump had “just begun forcing detained immigrants to wear yellow insignias,” a policy which some readers likened to Nazi Germany’s practice of forcing Jews to wear yellow Star of David badges:

 

A screenshot purporting to show a message posted by King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands directed at United States President Donald Trump was picked up by the Washington Press blog on 19 June 2018: This is not genuine. Washington Press later deleted their article, but this rumor continued to spread on social media

 

Hey thats what they said the RUSSIANS were doing

Anonymous ID: f3274d June 16, 2019, 1:10 p.m. No.6765694   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://www.newyorker.com/news/q-and-a/the-early-life-of-kim-jong-un

 

You write in the book, “Kim Jong Un was signaling to the outside world—but, most importantly, to his own people—that this was his vision. It was the clearest indication yet that the North Korean leader didn’t want to be a dull Stalinist dictator. He wanted to be a developmental dictator of the kind that has flourished in other parts of Asia.” What do you mean by that, and how does it fit into what you were just saying?

I think that he does recognize the need for his country to modernize and for him to try to keep up with some of North Korea’s neighbors. Every North Korean escapee that I have met has seen a South Korean or a Chinese film or soap opera or something, so they all know that life in the outside world is much better and that people elsewhere are much richer than they are in North Korea.

So I think Kim Jong Un knows that he needs to try to create a sense that things in North Korea are getting better; maybe they’re not catching up with South Korea, but they are not falling any further behind.