I'm not burger.If you're American then the travel ban from 2017 would prevent you from ever going there.
I mean, i do think they would treat you different than a tourist, though, since you would be there to stay.How the hell do you intend to move there to begin with? I don't think they take in any foreigners, or if they do it's extremely rare. Even the tourism is kinda staged since you can't go anywhere other than the places they allow you to see iirc.
I'm brazillian, half-japanese, i don't think they like japanese people, though. I think that's one less reason to go there, i guess.Pyongang is where life is best, and that's a place only reserved for the goodest goys who are offspring of faithful comrades from way back in the days of the revolution. You will live your entire life either in some hyper surveilled hellhole town or just outright relocated to a forced labor camp and kept there for your entire life because they have no reason to ever trust a westerner
There were some American soldiers who defected during the U.S intervention in the war in the '50s or in the latter half of the twentieth century (I think the latest successful defector was in the 1960s, there was also that soldier named Travis King who ran across the border in the summer of last year because the military was about to discharge him for possessing 'p, assaulting people, and just being an annoying faggot, but he got sent back home some months later after the Koreans captured him) all of whom, if I remember correctly, ended up at first being heavily tortured when they first arrived there in order for the DPRK military to gather intel, only for them to then live the rest of their lives in relative comfort in Pyongyang with housing and amenities, at times being pulled for appearances in movies as actors portraying American characters. James Dresnok is the most famous one, he died some years ago, but the DPRK government gave him a lot of stuff, including a wife from Romania who he had two kids with and who still reside there today as adults. Besides the rare American defector, there've also been cases where diplomats from countries with good relations with the DPRK can live there in relative freedom. There's this Indonesian diplomat guy who has posted some stuff on YouTube, for example.How the hell do you intend to move there to begin with? I don't think they take in any foreigners, or if they do it's extremely rare. Even the tourism is kinda staged since you can't go anywhere other than the places they allow you to see iirc.
North Korea is not as bad as the media makes it out to be, but you will get tortured and executed as a non-North Korean if you end up going there. It's not the worst place in the world, but it is still a third world hellhole.Is it worth it moving to North Korea? Is it really bad as international media portray NK to be? Is it a /calm/core country? What do i need to have to move in there? Will they allow me to post in here or in the 'arty if i move there?
actually i have japanese friend who was in nk and he was very happy. It is overlied in the media in japan that are not true they are hell of nice.I'm brazillian, half-japanese, i don't think they like japanese people, though. I think that's one less reason to go there, i guess.
North Koreans only allow you to see the things they WANT you to see when you visit their country.actually i have japanese friend who was in nk and he was very happy. It is overlied in the media in japan that are not true they are hell of nice.
This isn’t really true. While Pyongyang is the most common destination in the country’s tourism program, tour companies like Koryo Tours provide tourism across North Korea. For example, this upcoming summer tour from Koryo goes through Pyongyang, two cities on the eastern coast of the country (Hamhung, the second largest city in the DPRK, and Wonsan, a port city) and through some scenic hiking trails on a mountain. It also goes to the beach on the coast. I think some smaller Chinese companies also allow sightseeing around the border to border-towns like Sinuiju, but I’m not as sure about the particular details surrounding those.And also it's only restricted to Pyongang.
It's /calm/coreapart from all the reasons why not to … why would you even want to?
You know, looking at some of their websites, like the DPRK international media site, Voice of Korea, you're actually right. A lot of the media they put out encompasses "/calm/core" rather well. The stuff they're playing on the Korean Central News Agency right now looks quite serene, too (the live stream is a bit buggy right now, but, if we're going by their usual schedule, they should begin a full-day broadcast in about four hours since it's the first day of the month. Some of the stuff on there is neat to watch).It's /calm/core
You know, looking at some of their websites, like the DPRK international media site, Voice of Korea, you're actually right. A lot of the media they put out encompasses "/calm/core" rather well. The stuff they're playing on the Korean Central News Agency right now looks quite serene, too (the live stream is a bit buggy right now, but, if we're going by their usual schedule, they should begin a full-day broadcast in about four hours since it's the first day of the month. Some of the stuff on there is neat to watch).
is it worth moving to north korea for sex?Is it worth it moving to North Korea? Is it really bad as international media portray NK to be? Is it a /calm/core country? What do i need to have to move in there? Will they allow me to post in here or in the 'arty if i move there?
Where do you even get this idea from? America isn't the only civilized country in the world. Nobody is going to torture and kill you for no reason, nobody is going to kill each other for no reason. Nobody is really starving right now eitherNorth Korea is not as bad as the media makes it out to be, but you will get tortured and executed as a non-North Korean if you end up going there. It's not the worst place in the world, but it is still a third world hellhole.