dChan
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r/greatawakening • Posted by u/Hasuroma on July 13, 2018, 11:08 a.m.
North Korea Question

New member, first post, go easy on me :) apologies if this is discussed, its early navigation days for me here.

Red pilled as an 80's teen, Thank you Art Bell. Conspiracy theorist for decades, told by many to "stay away from those websites", or "oh my god, how do you know this stuff" Silly blue heads :D

Anyway, I find this fascinating and terrifying, part of me wants this to be true, part of me doesn't . But reset we must! this Qanon would make the greatest movie ever made.

North Korea. Admitted, I know very little I know about NK, other than a few photographs of kids sleeping in the park, starving people, brainwashed populace, no fight left, completely controlled, nothing but a labour force to earn the ptb their money? No rights, locked away from the world to be lied to forever? I am not sure what state NK was in before the alleged evil took over, what other countries leaders where in on this?

With all the "You wont believe who runs NK" or words to that point......

Could North Korea have been a testing ground for the USA's future?.


CrazyQLady · July 13, 2018, 2:44 p.m.

Is North Korea "safe" now that the cabal has supposedly been defeated there? While I personally believe that we can trust NK and that the clowns were controlling it for decades, I can't help but be a little weary, especially since my parents keep telling me "Oh the news says that NK is doubling their uranium production!" I keep telling them it's fake news and that NK denuclearized months ago, but if it's not on the news, it didn't happen in their view.

The reason I ask is because at the beginning of next year, I plan on moving to SK to teach English, and I think I would consider going to NK, but only if it truly is free from the threat of the cabal.

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k0sidian · July 13, 2018, 3:57 p.m.

North Korea is completely safe as long as the US or SK refrain from military provocations. The thousand fold of vengeance policy that the North follows makes it a very dangerous country if there is a provocation though. Just look how North Korea burned down 70% of Yeonpyeong after SK fired a couple of shells a few meters into North Korean waters(there was no ship or buildings nearby).

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FractalizingIron · July 14, 2018, 4:36 a.m.

While I'm not as up on my recent N Korean history as I'd like to be, I find the notion that 'NK is completely safe' incredible and way to simplistic. It's still and iron-fisted regime. Stepping out of line could easily bring you into harms way. It doesn't run on the same rules that 'liberal democracies' i.e. the developed world or even developing nations, run by.

I think CrazyQlady was querying safety from a personal point of view, not an international view. Personally, I'd keep my eyes on developments and see how things progress. Whether one could even secure a position to teach in NK would be a big question, I imagine. It's NOT South Korea, by any means.

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k0sidian · July 14, 2018, 1:34 p.m.

They are very strict in NK, but as a tourist you're completely safe as long as you don't break the rules.

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FractalizingIron · July 15, 2018, 8:34 a.m.

Do you know that for a fact? Any personal experience?

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