Retardfuel
An alcoholic
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I mean, you can either force them (both foids and children) to stay at home or you can have them working on construction sites for the glory of the nation. Easy choice tbh.They are having kids, but they keep dying from hunger and multigenerational work camps.
One way Kim said mothers bring their kids in line is to send them to experience difficult living conditions while working for the nation.
Military service and construction sites are “revolutionary universities which give the children valuable experiences of life that cannot be gained in the yard of their families and cultivate the spirit of loving their comrades and the collective.”
Earlier this year, state media promoted a story of an 18-year-old “virgin girl soldier” who died after working through a severe injury at a construction site as an example of patriotism.
I mean, I dunno. There's apparently nothing really stopping a woman from becoming a party official there, and I've read that it's apparently so common that men whose wives earn more than them are looked down at in NK.How does NK have this problem? It’s not like a foid could conceivably live without a man in that country.
The story ends there. There may be an epilogue stating that a few days later the family received several new appliances and pieces of furniture as gifts from Kim Jong-il. The father got rapidly promoted, and the younger daughter grew up to become a high-level party official.
Being an incel there makes you an actual hero tbh.I mean, you can either force them (both foids and children) to stay at home or you can have them working on construction sites for the glory of the nation. Easy choice tbh.
Send kids to hard labor to fight foreign influence, Kim Jong Un tells moms | NK News
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un declared an “intensifying” fight against foreign influence on kids on Monday, instructing mothers to send their children to perform hard labor for the state to correct bad behavior that is not “our style.” Kim made the remarks on the final day of a large-scale...www.nknews.org
I mean, I dunno. There's apparently nothing really stopping a woman from becoming a party official there, and I've read that it's apparently so common that men whose wives earn more than them are looked down at in NK.
Also, this:
Many North Korean women outearn their husbands, but still do the chores
Women trade; men do badly paid state jobswww.economist.com
Even their propaganda has females becoming party officials for example:
‘I repeatedly failed to win any awards’: my doomed career as a North Korean novelist
The long read: Before I fled south, I spent years as an aspiring fiction writer in the hermit kingdom. I worked hard – but literary glory kept eluding mewww.theguardian.com
Bro it's over humanity lostView attachment 1138169Reddit - Dive into anything
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Wow, NK has managed to f up the advantages authoritarianism has given themI mean, you can either force them (both foids and children) to stay at home or you can have them working on construction sites for the glory of the nation. Easy choice tbh.
Send kids to hard labor to fight foreign influence, Kim Jong Un tells moms | NK News
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un declared an “intensifying” fight against foreign influence on kids on Monday, instructing mothers to send their children to perform hard labor for the state to correct bad behavior that is not “our style.” Kim made the remarks on the final day of a large-scale...www.nknews.org
I mean, I dunno. There's apparently nothing really stopping a woman from becoming a party official there, and I've read that it's apparently so common that men whose wives earn more than them are looked down at in NK.
Also, this:
Many North Korean women outearn their husbands, but still do the chores
Women trade; men do badly paid state jobswww.economist.com
Even their propaganda has females becoming party officials for example:
‘I repeatedly failed to win any awards’: my doomed career as a North Korean novelist
The long read: Before I fled south, I spent years as an aspiring fiction writer in the hermit kingdom. I worked hard – but literary glory kept eluding mewww.theguardian.com