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submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by imnotfromkaliningrad@lemmy.ml to c/effort@hexbear.net

*cross-posted from lemmy.ml

sources

on the dprk

on the rok

debunking of anticipated liberal comments

norf korea no food

malnutrition was in fact a thing during the 1990s, though the portrayals of this time period, the so called "arduous march" in westen media are usually exaggerated. mostly omitted by american-allied media is the fact that those difficulties were caused by the inhumane and terrorist western sanctions and embargo against the dprk, as well as the cia-backed illegal and undemocratic dissolution of the ussr. nowadays problems regarding food security have pretty much ceased to exist in the country.

hermit kingdom

first of all, the term itself is nothing but racist, orientalist nonsense, but whatever... the dprk is in no way a kingdom, its democratic model of governance, while obviously imperfect and worthy of (constructive) criticism, is explained in the constitution and infographic linked above.

furthermore, the county is neither "reclusive", nor internationally isolated. the dprk enjoys very friendly relations with fellow aes china, cuba, laos and vietnam, as well as anti-imperialist nations like iran, russia and palestine. the reason you dont hear much from inside the country is due to western press not wanting to report the truth.

no lights, no electricity

the famous "no lights"-photo is a photoshopped fake initially circulated by a southern far-right tabloid. here is an actual image of east asia, including the korean peninsula:

haircut police

unlike south korea, the dprk never had such policies. here is a very entertaining video debunking that myth.

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[-] GarbageShoot@hexbear.net 48 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

I think that being deceptive is counter-productive. The non-WPK parties in the DPRK are constitutionally limited, and any attempt to form an explicitly pro-capitalist party will land you in prison. Now, I think both of these things are not just fine but necessary measures, but pretending that it's only the RoK that imprisons people on grounds of being part of the wrong party or that the DPRK is multiparty in the way that people mean when they use terms like "multiparty". Just bite the bullet of explaining why having reactionary parties is bad.

I also think it's probably bad to exaggerate the quality of life the in DPRK when it still has a very high child malnutrition rate, and it's counterproductive to be exaggerating the RoK's suicide rate by saying "by the millions" when it is so high anyway. It's more like "by the thousands."

[-] Bedulge@hexbear.net 32 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

I lived in Seoul and I speak nearly fluent Korean

Photo on the right seems to be from like the 60s or 70s. Seoul does not look like that today, not even close. So that is a blatant lie number 1.

"many people too poor to afford housing' homelessness is lower in SK than in the US by a HUGE amount. So that is blatant lie number 2.

'slums like this are common' Absolutely not. There's only a couple remaining slums, and they don't look like the one in the photo there bc again, that photo is from like 60 years ago. There small number of slums (there's like 3) that still exist are currently being removed and the residents rehoused. So there is blatant lie number 3

'kill themselves by the millions' suicide rate is high but not that high and has been falling for over 10 years. Exaggeration

'only recently began to liberalize' 1988 is recent to you? That'd be blatant lie number 4, and to be honest it's quite disrespectful to the many south Koreans who struggled against the dictatorship for you to minimize their accomplishment like that

'the famous "no lights"-photo' there isn't a "the famous 'no lights' photo" there's many of them and its because NK often doesn't have fuel to keep the power running 24/7 due to sanctions so they practice energy rationing and shut down the power at night. blatant lie number 5

I'm not gonna get into your stuff on the left hand column abt the DPRK but suffice it to say, none of what you wrote there is known for certain to be true because of how tight the flow of information out of that land is.

Did you make this image? why do you feel the need to lie? Or do you just not know what you are talking about?

[-] imnotfromkaliningrad@lemmy.ml 18 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

first ever activity on this account

immediately assumes bad faith and uses language right out of chosun ilbo

completely unsourced

yeah thats not suspicious at all...

first of all, ive visited seoul in 2007 and saw the misery of gulyongma-eul with my own two eyes. ive seen that the bagkaseu halmeoni are in fact a real thing. and ive noticed the inescapable presence of western evangelical churches and other similar monuments of neocolonialism. even in more "economically fortunate" areas of the city most people did not seem happy. and i mean, ive been desensitized to a lot of shit due to my own countries utter economic collapse in the 1990s, but what i saw there was an incredibly sick and disgusting society that lacked even the most basic fundamentals of human dignity.

you also for some reason decided to point out that the colonial masters you bootlick have an even higher rate of homelessness than your "country". but how is this of any relevance to the discussion? congratulations, the denizens of the system your society is trying to imitate are having it even worse. but this doesnt make your problems magically go away.

you then proceed to claim that the suicide rate in the rok has been falling recently. this is a lie: according to the world health organization and the korean national statistical office, the number of suicides in south korea since your supposed democratization in 1988 (a great "democracy" that allows for people like bag-geun-hye or yunseog-yeol to be president and for jaebeols to control domestic policy) is as follows:

  • 1988: 4,879
  • 1990s: The average annual number of suicides was around 6,000-7,000.
  • 2000s: The average annual number of suicides increased to around 10,000-12,000.
  • 2010s: The average annual number of suicides was around 13,000-15,000.

furthermore you somehow manage to accuse me of minimizing the accomplishments of the 1988 revolution. this is an absurd fucking accusation that you invented out of thin air while somehow wanting to accuse me of being dishonest. on the contrary! it is your government that is sweeping the role of certain leftist components of the protest movement under the rug, since they dont fit into the puppet regimes worldview. and yes, 1988 is recent compared to 1947. learn how time works, liberast.

the "no-lights"-photo in question
has long since been proven to bee debunked, hell ive included a photographic rebuttal in my original post. stop denying reality if it doesnt suit you. power outages are also a thing in eastern europe, yet there arent equivalent photos circulating online.

your assertion that nothing coming out of the dprk can be trusted, since the eeevil commies are supposedly restricting the flow of information just sounds like hilarious anti-communist cope to me. im really starting to question myself why i am even justifying myself in front of a moron like you.

[-] Bedulge@hexbear.net 10 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

first ever activity on this account

I've had this account since literally the first week this website was created, I just haven't been active for a long time. Part of the reason why tbh is that I dislike how many people on here like to tell distortions about Korea.

language right out of chosun ilbo

Where? Do you see me ranting and raving about how we need to bomb the North? Or do you see me stating facts about Korea which you yourself know to be true, like that the photo on the right is from the 60s or 70s .(which you tacitly admit is a lie bc you didn't mention it) have But ur right ig, prob Chosun Ilbo would in fact say that this photo is from decades ago, just like I did, and just like anyone else who has been to SK would say.

first of all, ive visited seoul in 2007

Ok, so you know that the photo on the right is from decades ago and that slums are not actually 'common' and you are in fact deliberately lying. Fantastic.

and saw the misery of gulyongma-eul with my own two eyes. ive seen that the bagkaseu halmeoni are in fact a real thing.

You should be glad to hear that half the population has since been relocated

https://www.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20220926000213

and ive noticed the inescapable presence of western evangelical churches and other similar monuments of neocolonialism. even in more "economically fortunate" areas of the city most people did not seem happy.

I'm gonna ask you to not bring up irrelevant points, please. Yea there are a lot of churches and yes quite a number of people are unhappy due to capitalist alienation, problems with sexism and toxic work culture etc. That has nothing to do with the false facts, exaggerations and misrepresentations in your post here.

but what i saw there was an incredibly sick and disgusting society that lacked even the most basic fundamentals of human dignity.

Really? free health care, fantastic public safety, complete lack of food insecurity, universal literacy + HS education, extremely low rates of homelessness, and some of the best urban design and public transportation in the planet. None of that has anything to do with dignity?

you also for some reason decided to point out that the colonial masters you bootlick have an even higher rate of homelessness than your "country".

I'm not Korean to be clear, I just speak Korean + lived there. 'even higher' lol. One of the things westerners often comment on when going to SK is how you basically do not see homeless anywhere outside of a couple places like Seoul Station. Very, very, very few people are homeless, many live in poor quality housing like goshiwons or ban-jiha (the half basements, like seen in Bong Joon Ho's parasite) but they are not homeless and slums are not common.

you then proceed to claim that the suicide rate in the rok has been falling recently. this is a lie: according to the world health organization and the korean national statistical office, the number of suicides in south korea since your supposed democratization in 1988

(a great "democracy" that allows for people like bag-geun-hye or yunseog-yeol to be president and for jaebeols to control domestic policy)

You have to keep bringing up irrelevant facts bc you know you are lying. Anyway President Park was forced out of office once her crimes became public knowledge. There are many many many problems in SK, but that is the system working as it is supposed to. The South Korean people are extremely proud of having forced her out of office. and for good reason.

Notice how I skipped past your line about how there is corruption in SK? there is in fact an issue with corruption in SK, so I didn't comment on that or call it a lie, because I have intellectual honesty and I like to tell the truth.

2010s: The average annual number of suicides was around 13,000-15,000.

I assume you know math well enough to know that the 2010s was ten years ago, and that I said the rates have been dropping (slowly, not fast enough) for ten years. The early 2010s was the peak.

furthermore you somehow manage to accuse me of minimizing the accomplishments of the 1988 revolution. this is an absurd fucking accusation that you invented out of thin air while somehow wanting to accuse me of being dishonest. on the contrary!

People who want to defend North Korea like yourself are constantly telling distortions and exaggerations about South Korea to make it look worse than it really is, to make the North look better by comparison. Defend North Korea on it's own merits, please, and with out telling lies about SK.

Yes I think it's disrespectful of their accomplishments and their sacrifices to say that the society they fought and died to create is "sick", "disgusting" and lacking "even the most basic fundamentals of human dignity." That is a fucking lie and you know it. Those people fucking died to get health care, they fucking died to get cops to stop carrying guns and to stop shooting protestors, they fucking died to get habeas corpus rights, they fucking died to get the right to criticize their government. The created a society where homelessness is low and nearly everyone has access to food, health care, education, and fair trials. There's a lot of work left to be done there, but to tell these blatant lies is very low of you.

They built that society out of their own blood and you are calling it disgusting. It literally disgusts me to see you say this shit, and if you said these bullshit lies about literally any other country in Asia, you'd get called an anti-Asian racist and for good fucking reason. But when its SK, you feel free to lie as much as you want.

EDIT: btw I really think it says something of your mindset here that you thought I was a Korean talking about my own home country, which I obviously would know more about than you, and you still felt free to insult me and condescend to me. Do you talk to other POC like that?

[-] GarbageShoot@hexbear.net 10 points 3 months ago

Yes I think it's disrespectful of their accomplishments and their sacrifices to say that the society they fought and died to create is "sick", "disgusting" and lacking "even the most basic fundamentals of human dignity." That is a fucking lie and you know it. Those people fucking died to get health care, they fucking died to get cops to stop carrying guns and to stop shooting protestors, they fucking died to get habeas corpus rights, they fucking died to get the right to criticize their government. The created a society where homelessness is low and nearly everyone has access to food, health care, education, and fair trials. There's a lot of work left to be done there, but to tell these blatant lies is very low of you.

They built that society out of their own blood and you are calling it disgusting. It literally disgusts me to see you say this shit, and if you said these bullshit lies about literally any other country in Asia, you'd called an anti-Asian racist and for good fucking reaso

Are you a socialist? I don't see why you'd bother to have a HB account if not, and yet I cannot reconcile that with your statement here. If you'd let me use America as a reference point, it's like that moronic conservative talking point that "men and women died for the flag, show some respect!" It's a touch better, because you can point to actual rights won by the martyrs of struggle against the dictatorship and their successors (and also they weren't colonial running dogs), but that does not mean that the society as a whole isn't fundamentally sick, and respecting them doesn't preclude acknowledging that because it's not like they drafted the current structure of SK society. Like, the US is diseased and needs to be destroyed, but that's no disrespect to people who fought for women's suffrage or abolition or whatever. They were trying to improve the material conditions they were met with and so am I.

You've basically talked yourself into a deeply conservative dogma on pure indignation.

[-] Bedulge@hexbear.net 6 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

It is not conservative. And yes I am a socialist.

They achieved real advances in human rights and human dignity in Korea. Work remains for them to do to move the country further along, but to talk like OP is talking here is basically to say that they accomplished nothing and that is simply false. I think spreading falsehoods and saying that leftist activists in SK have achieved nothing is disrespectful.

That country was one of the most brutal dictatorships in the world in the 60s with some of the lowest living standards in the world. They have archived a lot

[-] GarbageShoot@hexbear.net 8 points 3 months ago

Whatever you call yourself, you have argued yourself into a position of extreme, sanctimonious conservatism if you are claiming the present Korean society does not deserve harsh criticism. Nowhere did OP say that things are just as bad as under the military dictatorship which, as you say, was one of the most brutal dictatorships in the world. The thing about that being true is that you can make significant progress in the state of things and not even escape being under a military dictatorship, so I think acknowledging the current state as a deeply unwell bourgeois democracy is being borderline charitable when you look at the sordid state of Korea's electoral politics (which might be owning communism being banned, something the communists who were persecuted and slaughtered by the dictatorship certainly didn't fight for the preservation of).

[-] Bedulge@hexbear.net 7 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

if you are claiming the present Korean society does not deserve harsh criticism.

Criticize all you want. But do so with facts, not with lies. There are factual problems in SK like sexism, homophobia, corruption, poor enforcement of labor laws and more. Saying that shanty towns are common is a lie.

The only person who would say that SK "lacked even the most basic fundamentals of human dignity." quite frankly sounds like a privledged first worlder who does not understand how bad things can really get, and what a society that lacks human dignity really looks like. A society that is disgusting and lacking in human dignity looks like S Korea in 1960, or Alabama in 1860. Not like S Korea in 2024.

[-] GarbageShoot@hexbear.net 5 points 3 months ago

Criticize all you want. But do so with facts, not with lies

I was on this thread criticizing OP before you were, you don't need to tell me that

The only person who would say that SK "lacked even the most basic fundamentals of human dignity." quite frankly sounds like a privledged first worlder who does not understand how bad things can really get, and what a society that lacks human dignity really looks like. A society that is disgusting and lacking in human dignity looks like S Korea in 1960, or Alabama in 1860. Not like S Korea in 2024.

I don't understand why you're so ready to call tone a concrete statement with a truth value. I'm sure you'd agree that America today is disgusting and lacking in human dignity if we point out practices from one of its largest companies, Amazon, essentially forcing its employees to piss in bottles and shit in bags to make quotas on time, forcing employees to work around the body of their collapsed and eventually deceased coworker, demanding that they come in even when forecasts predicted the facility would be destroyed by a tornado (and it was). There is so much in America, even when we constrain our view, that we can use to support the country being disgusting and lacking in human dignity, and I'm sure we can find different but still comparable stories in SK. For example, check out their human-trafficking fueled "defector" industry where they hold N Koreans hostage by preventing them from leaving and trapping them in a society where they struggle to find work and can even starve to death in the middle of a city if they don't work as good little media puppets spreading lies about the North.

[-] Bedulge@hexbear.net 2 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Is Korea lacking in many respects? Yes and I've talked about them frankly itt. Does it lack 'even the most basic fundamentals of human dignity"? No. Frankly it does not. Those who think so frankly are privileged first worlders, as I alluded to before.

Basic fundamentals of dignity are things like clean water, food to drink, sewage, public transportation, education, healthcare, a warm place to sleep with a roof over your head, public safety, the right to an education, the right to join a labor union, the right to fair trials, and more. The exact qualities that we socialists praise in a place like Cuba or Vietnam. There are lot of places in the world that lack that. South Korea is not one of them.

to call tone a concrete statement with a truth value.

TBH I have no desire to be charitable about his 'tone' when he has said numerously blatantly untrue things about concrete statements with concrete truth values, like that slums from the 1960s 'are common in Seoul'.

can even starve to death in the middle of a city

Can you provide a citation about someone starving to death in Seoul? It is frankly nearly impossible to imagine how that could happen. There's numerous charities and such that exist like food banks and so on. And a lot of North Korean emigres also form churches for themselves and support groups and other kinds of communities like that. They have a pretty strong community amongst themselves there bc there's only ~30k so its really an 'everybody knows everybody' kind of situation for them there. I struggle to believe, unless you can give me a good source, that they would just let one of their own starve to death. Even in a complete worst case scenario, food waste is quite high and people just put their food waste in plastic bags that go right on the street no bin or anything. Not to say that eating out of a garbage bag is awesome or whatever but my point is that food is available to keep you going until tomorrow if you are **literally **dying.

I imagine a number of poor North Korean emigres are malnourished or food insecure. Starving to death? maybe back in the 60s or something. If its happened recently, that is an extreme one in a million kind of situation, not common.

I'm glad to admit being wrong if you can cite me a source tho.

[-] GarbageShoot@hexbear.net 3 points 3 months ago

I mentioned it because it's quite easy to find. https://www.npr.org/2019/09/17/761156048/in-south-korea-anguish-over-deaths-of-north-korean-defectors-who-may-have-starve

I slightly misremembered, "starved to death" is speculation (and the most prevalent speculation!) but I personally think that severe malnourishment leading to succumbing to disease or something like that sounds more plausible from the description this and other articles gives, but also such a death is still referred to in many contexts as effectively being starvation (e.g. if you're counting famine deaths).

[-] Bedulge@hexbear.net 3 points 3 months ago

Ok thanks. I'm going to look into this deeper. Actually I just sent this link to South Korean leftist buddy of mine who I incidentally met over on the old CTH sub back in the day. I'm gonna see what he has to say, he is quite knowledgeable

I tried to google around for it, but any google search with keywords about 'starve' and 'Korea' and so on just brought up stuff about the Arduous March.

Anyways, this story is certainly very tragic and disturbing.

Here's my initial thoughts. This wld be a really extreme situation, very rare, which is why it's getting reported even all the way over here in the western press. The reason this kind of story is so incredibly shocking is because death by starvation in SK is just incredibly rare in the present age.

My impression is that this likely has less to do with actual lack of access to food and more to do with mental issues. What I mean is that looks something like a suicide. Obv starvation is an extremely rare form of suicide bc it is slow and extremely painful, but there are documented cases of people doing it

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Suicides_by_starvation

Notice how the people they interview talk about depressed she was, and how the North Korean emigre community were so distressed and shocked by it. There's just absolutely no way that the North Korean community there in Seoul would have allowed that to happen to one of their own if she had gone to them for help. There's also private (religious and secular) charities. This woman also came of age in the Aldous March. Those North Koreans who went thru that are some hard core people, they know how to find and get food if you are literally dying. Digging thru the trash in Seoul would have given honestly scrumptious meals when compared with the kind of nasty stuff they were forced to eat to survive in those days. She also could have given her son over to a government agency.

The fact that she didn't do any of that, combined with the well known fact that a lot of ppl in S Koreans struggle with mental illness and that she looked sad all the time supposedly all point to this being a woman with severe mental issues. That to me looks like a sort of murder-suicide. It's simply a fact that food would have been available to her, had she sought it out.

That's not to victim blame or say that this isn't tragic or its just her fault and thats the end of the story, North Korean emigres to the South face a lot of discrimination. Leaving North Korea is fucking hard, people don't do it unless they have a really good reason. She obviously lived a hard live, both in NK, in China and in SK. It is completely understandable how something like that could produce someone with mental issues bad enough that someone might just say "ok, fuck this life, I'm just gonna lay down and wait for death."

Unrelated note, but I can't help but chuckle at the guy trying to blame this on Pres Moon for not being sufficiently hawkish on NK. A lot of those groups are psycho and are kind of like cuban gusanos in their zeal for sanctions and hawkishness on their family and countrymen back home.

[-] GarbageShoot@hexbear.net 3 points 3 months ago

I tried to google around for it, but any google search with keywords about 'starve' and 'Korea' and so on just brought up stuff about the Arduous March.

I encourage you to work on thinking of keywords. "North Korea defector starves to death" yields:

https://abcnews.go.com/International/north-korean-mother-son-defectors-die-suspected-starvation/story?id=65777523

https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2023/03/28/asia-pacific/north-korean-defectors-lonely-death/

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-49408555

https://www.cnn.com/2019/09/21/asia/north-korean-defector-funeral-intl-hnk/index.html

And on and on. As I said, it's a story that is very easy to find.

I think mental health is a reductionist answer here, even if it was a suicide. Something the NPR article rightly puts some emphasis on is that she was dirt poor, dying after spending the equivalent of like $3 on produce after emptying her bank account. The same article also mentions:

Kim says Han applied to the government for welfare benefits last winter, but was rejected because she didn't have proof of her divorce. Defectors are eligible for benefits, but only for five years. Kim tried to persuade government administrators to help her, but to no avail.

There are still serious structural elements here that caused it, especially since I'm sure you don't need me to tell you that getting hired for a normal job in SK as a N Korean can be very, very difficult.

Suicide or not, this was done by Seoul.

Leaving North Korea is fucking hard, people don't do it unless they have a really good reason.

Like many "defectors", she is a trafficking victim, albeit in this case she was sold to some Chinese man rather than the more modern trend of being sold directly to South Korea to fuel the "defector" industry (do the traffickers get a cut of the reward money? idk). Not that there aren't also defectors, whether they are people just fleeing crushing poverty or they're wanted for having committed some heinous crime. You know, a whole range of things.

[-] Bedulge@hexbear.net 2 points 3 months ago

I don't tend to spend a lot of time googling around for sources for someone else's claims, there's limited hours in my life. The person making the claim can do the googling imo. If i try two or three times and don't see it, I just tell them to cite their source.

she was dirt poor, dying after spending the equivalent of like $3 on produce after emptying her bank account. The same article also mentions:

Yea, being dirt poor tends to do a number on your mental health, she seems to have been dirt poor her whole life thru, both in NK, in China, and in SK.

There are still serious structural elements here that caused it,

Did I say there's no structural elements? You might have heard about this idea before but we do in fact live in a society. There's always a structural element.

Suicide or not, this was done by Seoul.

Someone starving to death in SK in the modern era is extremely rare, by which I mean that it is so rare that it is literally comparable to deaths by lightning strikes.

https://koreajoongangdaily.joins.com/2023/06/12/national/socialAffairs/korea-yangyang-surfing/20230612183746767.html "From 2013 to 2022, seven people in Korea died from a lightning strike, while 18 others were injured, according to the Ministry of the Interior and Safety."

A death by starvation is literally 1 in a million, and in fact, given as a deaths per year stat, it's probably less than 1 in a million, given that the pop is 52 mil, and it is truly impossible to believe that deaths from starvation could be as high 52 per year. I don't say this to excuse it, but merely for perspective. I mention suicide as the likely cause of death because deaths by suicide, unlike deaths by starvation, are common in Seoul. I'm not out here to say that Seoul is a utopia, as I have made abundantly clear in nearly every reply I have given.

Not that there aren't also defectors, whether they are people just fleeing crushing poverty or they're wanted for having committed some heinous crime. You know, a whole range of things.

I don't even even use the word 'defector' because it is loaded terminology. I also don't judge people for what reasons they might leave NK. I wasn't there, I don't know, and I can't judge.

Anyways, my buddy got back to me, said he didn't know much about the case, looked into it, commented that her inability to get welfare due to having a husband she had divorced in China seems to have been a "weird gap" in the welfare system for the emigres, said that his first impression is similar to mine, that she could have gotten food, but mounting psychological troubles from a lifetime of misery probably stopper her from doing so. He also sent me this video if you care to check it out, altho it's an hour long and with only automated machine translated English subtitles . https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C-BGhLoMJfE

Again im not out here to say SK is a wonderland. There's abundant problems to criticize and I have made that clear. I came in to correct the record about OP's bullshit, not to spread bullshit of my own about SK is perfect. And to return to the point, OP said that SK "lacked even the most basic fundamentals of human dignity." I don't think it is fair to take a single death from 5 years ago, even one as fucked up as this, and then use it as evidence to say that SK "lacks even the most basic fundamentals of human dignity."

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[-] imnotfromkaliningrad@lemmy.ml 3 points 3 months ago

ahh look my new favourite anti-communist rok apologist is bringing out the classics! dont you just love the pecking order misery olympics bullshit people broing out when somebody says that things are not as good as they should be? Oh you think things are bad? Try shoveling burning coal with your bare hands, like in mordor! :maybe-later-kiddo:

[-] Bedulge@hexbear.net 9 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

you are the ignorant child who made this entire fucking post comparing SK to NK. Now all of the sudden it is invalid for me to compare SK now to SK from a couple generations ago? good fucking lord the intellectual dishonesty from you is astounding. I hope that you are lying about having gone to Seoul in 2007 and that you are actually a teenager (or that you were still a child in 07), bc there might be hope for you to mature into a person who values facts above lies.

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[-] GarbageShoot@hexbear.net 13 points 3 months ago

"many people too poor to afford housing' homelessness is lower in SK than in the US by a HUGE amount. So that is blatant lie number 2.

Homelessness in the US is pretty high. A country having lower homelessness than the US is an extremely low bar. Compare with the DPRK, which has near-zero homelessness.

to be honest it's quite disrespectful to the many south Koreans who struggled against the dictatorship for you to minimize their accomplishment like that

lmao what concern troll bullshit is this? The dictatorship is still easily, easily within living memory, it doesn't insult the people who struggled against it to acknowledge that obvious fact.

[-] Bedulge@hexbear.net 7 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Homelessness in the US is pretty high. A country having lower homelessness than the US is an extremely low bar.

It is VASTLY lower to be clear. 1.7 out of 10k, vs 19.5 out out of 10k in America

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sovereign_states_by_homeless_population

1.7 out of 10,000, obv that number should be zero, but does it sound like it's true to say that 'many people' can't afford housing and that slums from the 1960s are still around and are numerous? Or does it sound like a distortion made to make it seem like SK consists of acres and acres of shanty towns like Rio?

I compare with the US bc most of us here live in the US and I dind't want to bother with finding the exact stat bc I was getting ready for bed when I wrote that.

The dictatorship is still easily, easily within living memory,

OP is obv using that line to make it sound like SK is still basically a dictatorship. It's a distortion of the facts at best, outright lie at worst.

[-] imnotfromkaliningrad@lemmy.ml 5 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

you keep acting like the 1988 upheaval made the south a nearly perfect utopia and pretend like any criticism of the south is now unwarranted and only done by bad-faith actors.

you didnt source any of your claims btw and still expect to be hailed as the harbinger of truth, while pretty much all of your argumentation has been a mix of shifting the goalposts, concern trolling and outright falsifications of what others are saying. fucking tsargrad tv has more intellectual honesty than you.

:PIGPOOPBALLS:

[-] Bedulge@hexbear.net 10 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

lmfao

a nearly perfect utopia

I've been exceptionally clear in EVREY fucking reply I have given that there is plenty to criticize in the South. Are you so goddamn dishonest that you feel the need to lie to people when the evidence that your claim is false is present right here on this exact fucking webpage? Here's what I said

There are factual problems in SK like sexism, homophobia, corruption, poor enforcement of labor laws and more.

yes quite a number of people are unhappy due to capitalist alienation, problems with sexism and toxic work culture etc.

Work remains for them

many live in poor quality housing

There are many many many problems in SK

Do you just lie like this all fucking day in real life too? Anyone on this webpage with a high school level of reading comprehension can see that I don't think SK is 'nearly perfect'. I'm talking about the positives because you are misrepresenting the facts to make them look like dystopia. When I talk to some dumb lib who wants to use Korea as an example of how America is awesome bc we helped the south and they build a perfect capitalist society, or a Kpop stan who thinks its perfect, I will talk about the negatives. It's because I care about the facts and I do fact-based materialist analysis.

shifting the goalposts,

Good lord, you are the one throwing out random shit that has nothing to do with anything I said, like that they have a bunch of churches. And just to show how honest I am, I will acknowledge that yes it is of course true that they have a problem with a lot of people belonging to insane right wing reactionary churches. Happy? I'm fine with shit talking the parts of Korea that deserve to be shit talked. I'll throw in another for good measure, they have a serious problem with bigotry and colorism against those from south Asia, as well as against those who are not """pure blood""" Korean, and racial discrimination is not illegal. Toxic beauty standards against women also does serious damage against the psychology of women there, esp growing teenage girls, many of whom still wear covid masks, not bc they are afraid of the virus, but bc they are afraid they are not pretty enough to show their real faces. I bet you didn't know all that, did you? Because you don't know shit about South Korea (or you do know but lie anyway, either way doesn't look good for you)

And btw, pls give me a citation, a real fucking citation not 'prolewiki' for these claims (the fact that you are old enough to have traveled to SK in 2007 but not mature enough to realize that 'prolewiki' doesn't qualify as a reliable source does not reflect well on you) You are the one who made these claims in the first place, you are the one who needs to demonstrate that they are true with real sources.

  • That your photo is of current day Korea (I notice you didn't address this claim at all, because you know you are damn liar)

  • That 'many people' cant afford housing

  • that shanty towns are common

  • that NK has enough energy to keep the lights on 24/7 and the numerous images showing them to be dark at night are fake.

EDIT:

And you know what, to further emphasize my honesty, I'm gonna walk back my earlier comment about suicides. While it is not literally 'by the millions' and it is still true that it has trended downward over the past ~10 years. It is indeed super high, one of the highest in the world and it's fair to bring it up. I was overzealous in criticizing that claim , I guess bc I wrote that comment right before bed last night when I was tired and cranky. I can admit when I was wrong, can you?

[-] heggs_bayer@hexbear.net 5 points 3 months ago

lemmy.ml has the pigpoopballs emoji now!?

[-] imnotfromkaliningrad@lemmy.ml 6 points 3 months ago

nah, i just happen to know the shortcut

[-] GarbageShoot@hexbear.net 5 points 3 months ago

OP is obv using that line to make it sound like SK is still basically a dictatorship. It's a distortion of the facts at best, outright lie at worst.

~~It's a colonial dictatorship of the bourgeoisie~~ OP is explicitly saying that it isn't something anymore and you're saying that he's using that to say it still is

[-] Bedulge@hexbear.net 6 points 3 months ago

Yea obviously they are lib and bourgeois.

OP is explicitly saying that it isn't something anymore

The phrasing 'spent it's first 42 years as a dictatorship and only recently began to liberalize' is a distortion. Very obviously so for 2 reasons I will enumerate

1 The country is going to celebrate 80 years of independence from the Japanese fascists on August 15 of next year. They liberalized about 36 years ago. They have spent roughly half of their existence as a dictatorship, roughly half as a liberal republic. The phrasing '42 years' vs 'only recently' was clearly chosen to imply that the 'recent' liberal period is vastly shorter. Why use an exact number for one but a wishy-washy and vague phrase like 'recently' for the other? bc if OP used the actual dates and exact numbers, it would not sound as bad as OP wants it to. 42 vs 36 doesn't sound bad enough for OP, so he has to be vague with his numbers. Why not keep it exact? It is a distortion of the facts meant to fool people who do not know when they gained independence.

2 'began to liberalize' is a phrasing clearly meant to imply that they have not yet achieved very much liberalization. They did not 'begin to liberalize' they have liberalized and they are a full fledged bourgeois liberal republic. (and obv that's not great but its far better than being a fascist dictatorship)

[-] newerAccountWhoDis@hexbear.net 6 points 3 months ago

the real effort post is always in the comments.

[-] CrookedSerpent@hexbear.net 18 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Bit idea: Yeonmi Park grifter guy, but it's a RoK defector

[-] Hexamerous@hexbear.net 10 points 3 months ago

yeonmi-park "In South Korea there so cold inside the houses that people are freezing their clothes in the winter because they will warmer covered in frozen clothing than living in the unheated house."

[-] Abracadaniel@hexbear.net 10 points 3 months ago

good post, typo in the food section

seized to exist

should say

ceased to exist

[-] imnotfromkaliningrad@lemmy.ml 6 points 3 months ago

thank you, fixed

[-] s_s@lemm.ee 9 points 3 months ago

If OP moves to North Korea, I'll move to South Korea and after a year we can compare notes.

[-] GarbageShoot@hexbear.net 11 points 3 months ago

I'd take you up on that offer in a heartbeat, but it's literally illegal for me to go there on account of US law unless I'm willing to get stuck without a passport. Maybe Cuba vs Argentina would be a fairer challenge

[-] LeylaLove@hexbear.net 8 points 3 months ago

Always appreciate Koreaposting

[-] newerAccountWhoDis@hexbear.net 4 points 3 months ago

Thanks for the effort. One question tho

no lights

Is this shopped too? And is NASA in on it? Where's the picture you posted from?

this post was submitted on 09 Sep 2024
88 points (78.9% liked)

effort

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