North Korea Human Rights
What is the track record of North Korea Human Rights compared to the United Nations Standard? Are there specific buildings that should be preserved but are not? What is the relationship between North Korea and the UN?
North Korea rejects UN human rights report
North Korea "Categorically and totally rejects" A report into its human rights record, which is due to be published by a UN Commission of Inquiry, it said in a statement sent to Reuters from its diplomatic mission in Geneva. Ref. Source 3
Brutal Infanticides in North Korea are Worse Than What Peter Singer Supports
A gruesome report on human rights abuses in North Korea was recently released. There are some things that pro-life people may be tempted to say about it that I think would be misguided.
Two weeks ago, Live Action News reported a story that I"ve been processing ever since: "Yesterday's United Nations Report on the human rights abuses in North Korea unveiled a level of depravity and cruelty unparalleled in modern society. The 36-page initial report and 372-page report of detailed findings also revealed the systematic murder and persecution of society's most vulnerable - the unborn and the handicapped." Ref. Source 3
In this video you can see how restrictive North Korea can be not only to its own people but anyone visiting. Basically, you have no freedom of movement and must be careful what you say or do or you can be arrested.
International Level: International Guru / Political Participation: 3231 100%
I didn't have time to watch all of this but I watched a significant portion. They are all brainwashed from birth. This brainwashing is reinforced through the terror of knowing you and your family could disappear due to the smallest transgression, whether real or imagined. Imagined brainwashing that starts at two years old through the songs you learn and is reinforced by your close family, like with the grandmother and granddaughter.
But that is the life in the capital. I saw a film clip recently smuggled out of that country at great cost. It's a film of children working along one of the nation's railroads. By children, they were very young. I don't remember how young exactly, but I think they were all ten and younger. And they looked like they were undernourished. This looks a lot like the Hunger Games world, where those in the capital are all well fed and privileged while those outside of the capital work to make the life of the privileged easier.
To think that something like that exists in our day and age is… well, amazing. But the thing is, I've seen similar to some degree in other places. Now, North Korea has taken this to the extreme and has had three generations to reinforce things. But thee are places in the Middle East, Africa, and Asia where the same thing exists to some degree. This is the reason we need a military. Because monsters that hid in the skin of people really exist and they want to inflict their will on everyone.
The military is here to stop them. And the great thing about the US military is that it is completely non-political and under control of the civilians… so the military will never try to do this and I doubt it would ever help a civilian to do this. At least it is my fervent hope that our military wouldn't do that knowing the orders to do so are illegal. Between that and the 100,000,000 guns in civilian hands I think we are pretty safe from this happening here at least.