Message from @Deleted User
Discord ID: 464633215785893908
It’s a sign of commerce taking place and uh ya know the population having electricity
is commerce not taking place in egypt
It is
Which is why there’s lot of lights
not all over the country
must be a bad country right?
Sigh no
It’s in the area where most the population lives
most of the population lives around Pyongyang
Dude
No
Posy Pyongyang has 2.5 mailings people
North Korea has 25 million people
well still north korea doesnt have a lot of big cities
nor does it have a need for them
Which is why it’s one of the poorest country’s in the world
Ya
Paradise over there I’m sure
that is because of western sanctions
Uh huh
Worst then south korea
And Kim would be richer
because south korea has the world's worst sanctions
I feel like it's strange that us leftists always gotta take a stance on every country ever. Like North Korea, might be cool might suck who knows . All i know is that I gotta try to improve my community and the place that I have the ability to take action in.
South Korea is a democracy that doesn’t have concentration camps
That tends to make most western nations play ball with you in some degree
Like yeah, no more imperialist wars and hell no invading north korea, but shit I feel like it's a waste of time to spend all day constantly defending a country that none of us probably will ever go to or whatever.
Saudi Arabia is a democracy that doesn't behead people like ISIS
I mean I care because people are starving over there
proof
"i heard it on the news"
Because one family what’s to hold onto his hermit kingdom
Like yeah, I'll stand in solidarity with whatever the Korean workers support but I'm not going to take an intricate political stance on something in which I can't take action on.
Lmao Robert have you actually done any research
Beyond “ebil west lie about based communist utopia”
mindblowing proof bro
I have a strange feeling this is going to be pointless but
> the World Food Program has reported malnutrition and food shortages, but not famine.[77] In 2016, UN Committee on the Rights of the Child reported a steady decline in the infant mortality rate since 2008.[78] An academic analysis in 2016 found that the situation had greatly improved since the 1990s and that North Korea's levels of health and nutrition were on par with other developing countries.[79] In 2017, the analyst Andrei Lankov argued that previous predictions of a return to famine were unfounded, and that the days of starvation were long since passed.[80]
>A survey in 2017 found that the famine had skewed North Korea's demography, impacting particularly on boy babies. Women aged 20-24 made up 4% of the population, while men in the same age group made up only 2.5%.[81] Chronic or reccurent malnutrition dropped from 28 percent in 2012 to 19 percent in 2017.[82]