How North Korea Finally Made It Impossible to Escape

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 20 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 28 тыс.

  • @matthewchi5292
    @matthewchi5292 Год назад +36069

    My grandparents were both from North Korea, and they had an insane 6th sense of knowing what North Korea would become. They told me Kim Il Sung gave them nothing but bad vibes and didn't want to stick around. As soon as the Korean War ended, they, as well as my grandfather's little brother, escaped North Korea to the South when the borders were still being built up and defenses were nonexistent. They pretty much left the rest of their family behind and are presumably still in North Korea. It's kind of crazy to think that I, as well as the rest of my current family, could have been stuck in North Korea if my grandparents didn't go with their hunch and remained in the regime.

    • @VVe3
      @VVe3 Год назад +1461

      crazy

    • @BluuLili
      @BluuLili Год назад +694

      Wow

    • @Poliostasis
      @Poliostasis Год назад +2990

      Damn... can't imagine what the rest of your family is going through in North Korea, that's unfortunate to hear.

    • @-kenjo-421
      @-kenjo-421 Год назад +804

      Or maybe you werent born if they didnt leave

    • @Klnkykoala
      @Klnkykoala Год назад +917

      Wtf that’s insane. Living must be a trip knowing that. Hopefully the country falls honestly or the next generation of power takes all this down. Who knows but what a horrible living experience that must be in there.

  • @jsebmaestro
    @jsebmaestro Год назад +31585

    The worst part about this is that this isn't history, its happening right now.

    • @candicraveingcloude2822
      @candicraveingcloude2822 Год назад +889

      It's current yet historically big, making this history in the making

    • @Dayvit78
      @Dayvit78 Год назад +663

      Uh yea, that's how history happens. First it's news, then it's history, then it's archaeology.

    • @van3158
      @van3158 Год назад

      But… white supremacy

    • @namantherockstar
      @namantherockstar Год назад +44

      American inspires me.. My parents said if i get 40K followers They'd buy me a professional camera for recording..begging u guys , literally
      Begging...

    • @EonityLuna
      @EonityLuna Год назад

      Remember this, along with what’s happening in Xinjiang in China, what’s being done to Ukraine by the Russians, and more.
      If future generations manage to somehow exist, they will not look kindly upon this era of history.

  • @soljah37
    @soljah37 Год назад +18551

    I'm hoping that I get to experience the fall of NK in my lifetime. One of my friend's parents fled North Korea back in the 70's and made their way to the United States. Hearing the stories from my friend's dad really puts it into perspective on how lucky we are in the US.

    • @patoluis6349
      @patoluis6349 Год назад +1042

      I think we should appreciate more the way we live en Occident. I am from Mexico, and even though I don’t live in a first world country, I am thankful for not living In a country with no liberty

    • @katemaloney4296
      @katemaloney4296 Год назад

      Even if it fell tomorrow, the people of North Korea wouldn't know what to do. They would basically be useless for at least three generations.

    • @d.whillmar1740
      @d.whillmar1740 Год назад

      I don't think it would happen soon. NK hides behind China and Russia backs. That's kinda plenty of potential help for the regime.

    • @A.s.k008
      @A.s.k008 Год назад

      US ? Really ? The prostitution capital of the world.

    • @User-jr7vf
      @User-jr7vf Год назад

      The fall of NK will come with consequences for South Korea, Russia, and China. Mainly SK, they will have to deal with the aftermath, they will have to take care of the North Koreans and rebuild/integrate them into their own society. This is why SK tolerates, and even punishes those South Koreans who try to persuade North Koreans to revolt against the regime.

  • @Mahlaki-q7p
    @Mahlaki-q7p 3 месяца назад +1462

    I'm from Eritrea, a country known as Africa's North Korea. When you live in a country like this, escaping is the only choice you have left. Staying there feels like you're in prison and dying a slow and torturous death. Trying to escape doesn't seem as scary as it was when you first thought about it. You start to say "if I die trying to escape, then so be it"
    I know what they go through to some extent. My heart truly hurts for them. 💔

    • @anoon-
      @anoon- 3 месяца назад +193

      Luckily, Eritrea doesn't have the technology nor the allies to keep as much of a grip on its citizens like NK.
      I'm glad you made it out.

    • @Mahlaki-q7p
      @Mahlaki-q7p 3 месяца назад +29

      @anoon- Thank you!

    • @gigi9301
      @gigi9301 3 месяца назад +9

      At least you've got internet. Nobody in No Ko has internet; if you lived there and tried to say this online you would be gone in under a week. Be grateful for what you have. Shut it and be grateful

    • @55379_ancient_trees
      @55379_ancient_trees 3 месяца назад +257

      ​@@gigi9301wow. How rude. Who tf are you tell them to "shut it" ..I don't particularly get into banter in comments, but this one counts. They are describing their fears and also proclaimed that they did escape their experience. You didn't catch that part did you.
      Be a better human. Thank you.

    • @Octoanahatapus
      @Octoanahatapus 3 месяца назад +2

      Atleast when I know I am being like you (I am aware of me being ignorant, or arrogant), are you even aware?
      Narcissistic (I'm better than you, la,da,deladadaa? Bs)? I am 34 and I know better 😂

  • @blubirdds
    @blubirdds Год назад +10368

    I used to be neighbours with NK refugees and the PTSD they had was harrowing to listen to through the walls. We had to be careful to close our doors gently, because slamming them could trigger them into thinking that they were being shot at.

    • @myricn
      @myricn Год назад +1317

      God that sounds like hell for them. I can’t even imagine how they must feel like…

    • @Bxrben_Dr1p
      @Bxrben_Dr1p Год назад +729

      FUCKING HELL that shit is so fucking terrible, and that slamming door thing is tragic 😖

    • @censored4christ162
      @censored4christ162 Год назад +74

      Okay well thats not a good quality to have in a neighbor i hope they dont see me carrying my guns and get scared

    • @catdownthestreet
      @catdownthestreet Год назад +546

      @@censored4christ162 you’re in favor of the second amendment, yes?
      according to a study that was well-researched and reviewed, people carrying armed guns were more likely to be killed by police than those without the weapons. white men with guns were even more likely to die than black men with guns- but it’s important to note that most black people who were killed by police were unarmed.
      that gun is putting you in danger. please stay safe and do a little research if you want to confirm :)

    • @shoeofobama6091
      @shoeofobama6091 Год назад +848

      @@censored4christ162 why would you openly carry guns in front of a ptsd stricken neighbor

  • @PlutoIsntReal_
    @PlutoIsntReal_ Год назад +18362

    Those 210 people who managed to escape during the pandemic must have balls of absolute steel. I can't imagine feeling like you have no choice but to walk into certain death for a better life.

    • @roach.with.a.tophat
      @roach.with.a.tophat Год назад +1416

      fr, i have nothing but respect for the people who escaped. cant even begin to imagine what they went through

    • @justinnieves7804
      @justinnieves7804 Год назад +78

      Will you are put into that kind of situation you do whatever it takes that's what Americans do all colleges are race religions color religion

    • @obscure.reference
      @obscure.reference Год назад +60

      lol what are you saying the pandemic was walking into certain death

    • @n0ttheglowyf0x62
      @n0ttheglowyf0x62 Год назад +90

      If i was in north korea, i would atleast try escaping, hell no im not living in that strict area.

    • @tru3sk1ll
      @tru3sk1ll Год назад

      but if you had no knowledge of the outside world it's even worse - they are censored, they are told they'll be killed if they leave
      @@n0ttheglowyf0x62

  • @KikoBean
    @KikoBean Год назад +8232

    My mother and (supposedly) father are defectors. I dont know them since my father disappeared and my mom decided to allow me to be adopted. I did a project on defection from North Korea and there has been a massive decline in defectors over the past few years due to massive crackdowns in the country. Its depressing to me to know that there are kids who wont be able to live civilized lives outside of the DPRK because their parents couldnt escape

    • @marcuz8278
      @marcuz8278 Год назад +52

      Have you met any other nk?

    • @KikoBean
      @KikoBean Год назад +510

      @@marcuz8278 none that grew up in North Korea. I have met other adoptees at the Korean heritage camps for adoptive fams, and they have brought other native Koreans in for various activities and stuff, but I haven't had the chance to go over to Korea proper.
      I hope I can meet my birth parents someday though. Would be nice.

    • @BEN-ys6gu
      @BEN-ys6gu Год назад +247

      @@KikoBean I don't know how they managed to do it, but to me it seems like they did the impossible. Out of thousands of people who tried, they were the winners. It's heartbreaking to know that even those few people who make it out don't get to enjoy their happy ending in the slightest. In fact, seems like it is the opposite, they are completely broken. I am very sorry...

    • @charliekelly735
      @charliekelly735 Год назад +95

      ​@@BEN-ys6guPeople who are free are much happier than before. Paranoid, sure. But much happier.

    • @Innomenatus
      @Innomenatus Год назад +112

      Fellow kinsman, I am glad you made it out alive. I pray for North Korea's fall so that our people can finally be free.

  • @jonnynochainz3284
    @jonnynochainz3284 3 месяца назад +1455

    How we as humans allow places like this to exist to begin with has always been insane to me

    • @CalebRoenigk
      @CalebRoenigk 3 месяца назад +293

      The nuclear weapons they have are pretty much the only thing that allows them to do this so unilaterally

    • @jjlnguess7354
      @jjlnguess7354 3 месяца назад

      And yet the slow incremental mentality of total authoritarian control is here in America, mostly from Leftists. That should concern you too.

    • @yoitsvenus616
      @yoitsvenus616 3 месяца назад +292

      ​@@CalebRoenigk nuclear weapons have got to be one of the worst abomminations that humanity has ever created

    • @raccoonsrundermybed
      @raccoonsrundermybed 3 месяца назад

      ​@@yoitsvenus616agreed, i guess its really just the way humans are, we could create power for the entire world with nuclear energy. But we'd rather use it to destroy it.

    • @inkandcaffeine
      @inkandcaffeine 3 месяца назад

      unfortunately they both have nukes & allies & at the moment and all out world war is not something the USA & Nato want to start & honestly i dont think we would win. the West has made the decision to allow North Korea to exist rather than lose millions & wreck the world economy forcing them to stop

  • @Salted_Fysh
    @Salted_Fysh Год назад +4245

    What you didn't even mention was that for many of the people who actually did manage to save up the money for a broker, they were immediately sold into slavery in China and Russia by the very brokers themselves. And if they did manage to escape slavery at some point, they almost immediately ended up in police custody and got deported back into NK where the only thing awaiting them was more slavery.

    • @seco_oces
      @seco_oces Год назад

      Even worse it is probably execution what is awaiting them in NK 😢

    • @SkyyKeiron
      @SkyyKeiron Год назад +9

      7:29

    • @Salted_Fysh
      @Salted_Fysh Год назад +246

      @@SkyyKeiron nah, that's a bit different. I'm talking about the slavery and unreliable brokers part in particular.

    • @iamdalibor
      @iamdalibor Год назад +322

      That's so focked up. How could you double cross someone and not feel bad about it? You basically killed them at that point

    • @Salted_Fysh
      @Salted_Fysh Год назад +261

      @@iamdalibor Money.

  • @victornguyen1175
    @victornguyen1175 Год назад +8525

    The craziest thing about stuff like this is that people who live there and don't hear about the outside world just assume it's like this everywhere.

    • @Capunderpants
      @Capunderpants Год назад +565

      As someone who was isolated from city life until adulthood that's horrifying.

    • @РаЫо
      @РаЫо Год назад +324

      No. They are sure they have it the best

    • @usernameisallfull
      @usernameisallfull Год назад +744

      They don't know that the outside world has changed drastically. People there dream of going to long gone countries because they think it still exists. It's very depressing to think about...

    • @NetBattler
      @NetBattler Год назад +1

      Kim really knows how to brainwash his people

    • @marsalah70
      @marsalah70 Год назад +39

      Maybe in the borders in China between NK. There's a lot of snuggling there.

  • @KarlRock
    @KarlRock Год назад +30666

    It’s good to hear that South Korea takes them in. If only getting out was easier!

  • @jetroar17
    @jetroar17 4 месяца назад +694

    You can always tell how crazy a country is by the bounciness of their military's parade march...

    • @Ijusthavealotoffeeling
      @Ijusthavealotoffeeling 4 месяца назад +24

      😂😂😂 omg stop

    • @Unsalted375
      @Unsalted375 3 месяца назад +13

      "The bounciness" hahahaha it's true tho

    • @CrashNTheBoys2002
      @CrashNTheBoys2002 3 месяца назад +2

      Emma and her two moms is already crazy enough 🙄🙄

    • @issabeganovic8822
      @issabeganovic8822 3 месяца назад +1

      So that's why they call them "boobs"...

    • @lisanne3018
      @lisanne3018 3 месяца назад +12

      The presence of military parades is a major clue already. It's not as normal as some people think.

  • @youtubeuser6978
    @youtubeuser6978 Год назад +2926

    You'd also need to consider that it is very hard to even obtain all the needed information. Like, knowing which country is safe and which isn't surely isn't written in school books.

    • @findtheshuaibs3888
      @findtheshuaibs3888 Год назад +183

      Maybe some of the earlier defectors left clues in old school books or something in case they didn't succeed.
      Or they had to hire people for info (And as mentioned in the video that isn't as easy as it sounds)

    • @censored4christ162
      @censored4christ162 Год назад

      ​@@findtheshuaibs3888so theyre all zombies in a way.

    • @h0rriphic
      @h0rriphic Год назад

      For sure. They’ve also been lied to about the rest of the world since birth.

    • @gabrielarellano4117
      @gabrielarellano4117 Год назад

      I know at least 3 people who have visited the DPRK and your western propaganda is BS and the biggest issues facing the DPRK are western imperialism, I mean the US literally made world record of dropping bombs on the DPRK, and the CIA openly admits to running lies and propaganda to convince y'all they are your enemy, but reality is y'all have fallen for the lies of the real evil empire

    • @PlatoonGoon
      @PlatoonGoon Год назад

      There are no school books, at least not of maps I'd imagine. Education is basically null.

  • @redrevolver4272
    @redrevolver4272 Год назад +6387

    A friend’s dad was an interrogator in South Korea when he was in the army. He was sent in to interview a North Korean man who walked straight through the DMZ. As he put it, he just started going through the DMZ. Crossed tigers, saw guards, etc. The dude straight up just said fuck it and crossed the DMZ. WHAT A CHAD

    • @Shadowwind4
      @Shadowwind4 Год назад +758

      What’s the saying again? Live free or die

    • @realABN
      @realABN Год назад +209

      Based

    • @dramalover0203
      @dramalover0203 Год назад +71

      Hii if it's possible, do you remember the person's name?

    • @kaimojepaslt
      @kaimojepaslt Год назад

      its made up story.@@dramalover0203

    • @psyche_out
      @psyche_out Год назад +596

      My family knows this man! His story is so wild, he literally crashed a car into the wall and crawled over

  • @rarexrt
    @rarexrt Год назад +4368

    My grandfather from my dad’s side escaped from north korea during the 625 war at the age of 5
    He had to walk on corpses, leave his father behind cuz he was captured by the government and had to hide anytime he saw north korean soldiers
    Luckily he made it out but few of his family members had been either killed by the bombings or got captured
    He’s still alive and healthy at 78 years old but he still remembers that event clearly.

    • @namantherockstar
      @namantherockstar Год назад +25

      American inspires me.. My parents said if i get 40K followers They'd buy me a professional camera for recording..begging u guys , literally
      Begging...

    • @janakumer
      @janakumer Год назад

      @@namantherockstar Dude can you stop spamming this shit everywhare.

    • @zachgillen5872
      @zachgillen5872 Год назад +472

      ​@@namantherockstarno

    • @SomeLostInesh
      @SomeLostInesh Год назад +6

      Idk if it truly is impossible

    • @rileydeutsch9418
      @rileydeutsch9418 Год назад +123

      ​@@namantherockstartroll

  • @ruthreuter9813
    @ruthreuter9813 3 месяца назад +429

    It’s absolutely insane that we as humans know this exists and just go about our lives. This is literally crimes against humanity.

    • @joecobb5520
      @joecobb5520 3 месяца назад +38

      What should we do instead? it's good to know it's happening but other than knowing there is nothing the average person can do, getting depressed over it does the North Korean citizens nothing and it does you nothing.

    • @felix-xd4mx
      @felix-xd4mx 3 месяца назад

      we can't do anything bcs kim jong un has nuclear. war also is just going to have more victims and destruction. we are all powerless

    • @krischainz
      @krischainz 3 месяца назад +18

      ​@joecobb5520 i think he means more of our government and our people in positions of power who would shake his hand (trump)

    • @EmilyHoot
      @EmilyHoot 3 месяца назад +20

      with nk's nukes now, i doubt there's much any country can do at this point without triggering all out nuclear war 😥

    • @dominique8662
      @dominique8662 3 месяца назад +1

      ​@@joecobb5520 SEND THAT BALD EAGLE OF JUSTICE. 😂😂😂.

  • @thekwoka4707
    @thekwoka4707 Год назад +7931

    I volunteered with an organization that worked with NK refugees in Seoul. Talking with them was wild. The stuff they've gone through even as children was insane.

    • @benblakemore745
      @benblakemore745 Год назад +62

      What kind of stuff?

    • @Yes-Man
      @Yes-Man Год назад +279

      @@benblakemore745 a) you don't want to know b) there are interviews and documentaries out there

    • @komcomkat
      @komcomkat Год назад +279

      @@benblakemore745read The Girl with Seven Names! If you don’t feel like reading, I do remember one story where her brother had to bring his own feces to school for fertilizer because they didn’t have money to pay tuition. So fertilizer was the best they could do

    • @clairdeloona
      @clairdeloona Год назад +364

      @@davejenvey3598”haha i just insulted someone for helping people”

    • @StarPlatinum7912
      @StarPlatinum7912 Год назад +94

      @repentandbelieveinJesusChrist8this comment has nothing to do with what you just said

  • @cgibbs011
    @cgibbs011 Год назад +16385

    Imagine living in a country so terrible they have to build massive walls and barbed fences to keep people IN.

    • @Dayvit78
      @Dayvit78 Год назад +728

      I think over a billion people can imagine it, since China is doing the same thing. Complete wall across the whole border - didn't used to be there.

    • @guyuscoolius2326
      @guyuscoolius2326 Год назад +1

      american brainwashing is mighty powerful, the masses need to be saved from themselves

    • @longbottomleaf6918
      @longbottomleaf6918 Год назад +34

      @@guyuscoolius2326 dafuq

    • @lucaskp16
      @lucaskp16 Год назад

      wtf_@@guyuscoolius2326

    • @lucaskp16
      @lucaskp16 Год назад +567

      people in china can still leave and millions do compared to north corea where very few can make it out.@@Dayvit78 I live in the other side of the world and there is so many Chinese here that we all call the supermarket the Chinese. you can stop any person in the street ask them where is the closest Chinese and they will point you to the nearest supermarket. and has no racism associated with it. is just that like 95% of supermarkets that are not part of big franchises like wallmart are all Chinese own and run by Chinese inmigrants.

  • @djukor
    @djukor Год назад +7126

    You can tell how great a country is by the fact it has to put in this much effort to keep its people from leaving.

    • @liquidsnakex
      @liquidsnakex Год назад

      Every communist country is always like this.
      The only people that deserve to be trapped in such places are the spoiled brats that still support the ideology even after knowing it never fails to lead to stuff like this.

    • @b2frblx
      @b2frblx Год назад +63

      Great? 🤡

    • @meitokenchop6037
      @meitokenchop6037 Год назад +862

      @@b2frblx comment meant that if a country is great, people would not have to escape from in in the first place.

    • @piinkmetal
      @piinkmetal Год назад +476

      @@b2frblxsarcasm.

    • @kingslayer4080
      @kingslayer4080 Год назад +310

      @@b2frblx You should talk with people more often.

  • @yolo7349
    @yolo7349 24 дня назад +73

    North Korean here, now living I’m Seoul for 5 months. Its nearly impossible, but I’m here

    • @fineapple9299
      @fineapple9299 16 дней назад +7

      how did u manage to get out? i cant imagine what it mustve been like, living there and leaving

    • @jjanggulane
      @jjanggulane 15 дней назад +7

      do you feel comfortable sharing your story? i would love to read it. i’m so happy for you 🥹

    • @MIZZKIE
      @MIZZKIE 8 дней назад +30

      @@jjanggulane Most likely fake. Do you really think a North Korean who's been through a strictly oppressive life for so many years suddenly speaks perfect English and goes by the name "yolo"?

    • @lediar7
      @lediar7 6 дней назад +3

      😂​@@MIZZKIE

  • @hunorhorvath3470
    @hunorhorvath3470 Год назад +4797

    Just imagine how incredibly difficult was it for the few people who successfully made it out of the country since 2020. Even just to plan a complete escape while constantly being inspected everywhere is challenging but managing to get thorugh the country’s heavily patrolled borderlines and then making a long journey through China or Russia without knowing any foreign languages and barely having any money… It is absolutely incredible that there are still several successful escape attempts with these circumstances.

    • @PyroboySCM
      @PyroboySCM Год назад +1

      Yeah... I can't even imagine it, MUCH respect to all those who made it, AND to those who tried it, but didn't make it...
      RIP to them (and their families)... 🤐😢
      It's such a shame that such medieval regimes like this still can be in power nowadays...
      The people in North Korea deserve SO much better than this shithole that their country is right now! 🙄😢

    • @ishaks8152
      @ishaks8152 Год назад +24

      I am not one of them.Sorry guys.

    • @ana_goncalves
      @ana_goncalves Год назад +220

      It's probably weathy people with connections in and outside. if not wealthy, at least well off enough to gather the money

    • @cdel4391
      @cdel4391 Год назад +395

      i suspect a good portion of the recent defectors are soldiers themselves who were already on guard duty in the dmz, i dont see how it can be done any other way

    • @xjcx6187
      @xjcx6187 Год назад

      Good for them, don't come to America

  • @charlieangkor8649
    @charlieangkor8649 Год назад +8329

    “Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own” - Universal Declaration of Human Rights

    • @TheManofthecross
      @TheManofthecross Год назад +646

      and yet due to politics and more they make an exception to the norks.

    • @intercakefederation
      @intercakefederation Год назад

      Rights are an illusion

    • @imlowkeygoated
      @imlowkeygoated Год назад +510

      @@TheManofthecross NORKS IS A NEW ONE LMAOOOOO 💀💀💀💀💀💀

    • @LHyoutube
      @LHyoutube Год назад

      ​@@TheManofthecross - WTF are you even talking about? The United Nations didn't "make an exception" for North Korea, due to "politics and more" or indeed for any other reasons. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights is like every other UN resolution - it only applies to countries who specifically chose to ratify them and who more broadly respect the authority of the UN (or the wider global community). North Korea don't respect the UN, nor does it care what most of the rest of the world thinks either. It's a totalitarian dictatorship in the most insular country in the world.
      What else exactly are you suggesting the UN could or should have done? Used its member nations to invade North Korea to bring universal human rights to its citizens? Because that would very clearly lead to World War III.
      Perhaps try actually thinking before you comment next time? 😂

    • @edgeflame8276
      @edgeflame8276 Год назад +288

      udhr isn't a legally binding document, it's just a recommendatory document written by countries after ww2 which countries follow to avoid conflict.

  • @dumdumfg8422
    @dumdumfg8422 Год назад +2924

    My grandpa was only 7-10 years old when he escaped NK with his brother and sister, he came to US not knowing any English and raised 3 very successful children (my aunt, uncle, and father) all ended up being doctors….On the other side of my family, my grandmother made it out of Vietnam and to the US by marrying a soldier from the US during the Vietnam war, they also raised successful children , my mother being one who became a dentist and started her own practice…I am very thankful that my grandparents on both sides of the family pursued freedom, and also my parents both worked hard and sacrificed time, allowing me to have the lifestyle I do today

    • @MrWayne6363
      @MrWayne6363 Год назад +108

      You are a perfect example of what immigrants should strive towards. Success like that of your family is rare, and admirable. It's what made America the country it was meant to be. Success is earned and can only be taken if you surrender your freedom. "Entitlements" and "rights" are awarded by the state in exchange for freedom. Which has more value? A juicy steak that you sweated and earned before eating, or one that someone gave to you "for free". Nothing is free and if you believe that then you are enslaved.

    • @anitacrumbly
      @anitacrumbly Год назад +167

      @@MrWayne6363 so what your saying is she is one of the "good ones" not like those other ones.🤨 Her story is one out of millions some aren't as lucky, they work just as hard but poverty is a hard hole to climb out of, especially now when everyone no matter immigrant or natural born citizen is in the same boat of working hard but the gap between the ultra rich and the working poor are the only two classes left in this country. When her grandparents came here a house cost 70k , my salary is the same as that house now in 2023 yet i can't even think of buying a home because saving money is laughable after rent, utilites, medication, health insurance, car insurance oh and i need to eat. I'm eating what some would consider a college diet because there isn't money for more. Do you think people enjoy living on the street, in their cars, without food, or paycheck to paycheck never able to get ahead NO, No one is expecting free, we all pay taxes, (well not the rich and not the mega churches) and we want our money to pay for healthcare, higher education, and for better services for homelessness, senior, and veterans not more money into the huge military budget. So no those things people want are not free but we sacrifice our time and bodies making some overlord richer and want at the very least our taxes to pay for what we need to live. We do not need people especially those in office spouting hate and false flags of grooming to distract people from them trying to take more of our rights away like the right to my own body and how i choose to deal it, or the right to not be discriminated against because of the color of my skin, my sexual orientation or gender. Freedom is not being scared that my own country will turn into a theocracy which it could if religon and politics don't stay seperate.

    • @Kylirr
      @Kylirr Год назад +18

      ​@@MrWayne6363lol, lmao even

    • @Emmet_Bryan
      @Emmet_Bryan Год назад +2

      gross

    • @handlemoment
      @handlemoment Год назад +11

      ​@@Emmet_Bryanyou gay

  • @nairobi_girl5808
    @nairobi_girl5808 3 месяца назад +96

    The next time someone manages to defect, they should keep their route a secret. They tell their story but not where, how and when they escaped. That keeps the path open for other possible defectors

    • @flang0dubs
      @flang0dubs 3 месяца назад +5

      What makes you think theres not hundreds of people who did that already

    • @herb4n7egend
      @herb4n7egend 2 месяца назад +4

      thats pretty much what every defector does for that exact reason

  • @yli5531
    @yli5531 Год назад +2038

    I have been to the other side of DPRK's northern boarder. There are lots of Korean ethnic Chinese people living in villages near the boarder. Lots of people are willing to give defectors food, water, and shelter for free - the villagers are not wealthy, but they are very kind people.

    • @makeitpay8241
      @makeitpay8241 Год назад +28

      nice

    • @Ineverwannasleep
      @Ineverwannasleep Год назад +44

      Aww, that’s very sweet :)

    • @klemetsrudj
      @klemetsrudj Год назад +134

      Because in general, people are kind and human, governments, not so much...

    • @FilipPandrc
      @FilipPandrc Год назад +8

      @@makeitpay8241 *rice

    • @orangestoneface
      @orangestoneface Год назад

      kind..not sure. most refugees are female were cos many f are born in hunger and can be sold to marrage in china so profit is not kindness

  • @StormTalara
    @StormTalara Год назад +3624

    I remember when Kim Jong Il died and Kim Jong Un was stepping up. Many people even back then were commenting how much worse things were going to get for the poor people of NK, as Kim Jong Un was educated in the US, and so understands the outside world and how to crack down on things (what to look for etc). I feel so bad for all those stuck in the country.

    • @einomainen
      @einomainen Год назад

      Kim Jong-Un was not educated in the US, he was educated in Switzerland

    • @LimitBreakr424
      @LimitBreakr424 Год назад +440

      I remember reading it was a private school in Switzerland?

    • @elijahparks2417
      @elijahparks2417 Год назад +126

      @@LimitBreakr424that’s correct

    • @Lyu-Phy
      @Lyu-Phy Год назад

      The elite people all studied at the same places, they all know each other and are friends often. Not all, but a lot of them and it pretty much still is all connected. Some of them are even blood related, some presidents are related with each other.

    • @tessa63627
      @tessa63627 Год назад +213

      So an actual school for supervillians.

  • @josephfranzen9196
    @josephfranzen9196 Год назад +3942

    I’m a North Korean who as a toddler was smuggled into South Korea by either my aunt or uncle (I’ve been unable to confirm specific details) back in 1986. In 1988 I was adopted by my parents and have been an American citizen since 1995. I’ve gone onto serve 8 years in the 82nd 1st/504th and 3 years with Triple Canopy as well as pursuing a degree in network engineering. I consider myself quite fortunate and lucky and often reflect on what my life would have been like had I not escaped. I wonder what became of my biological parents and other family, although I’m fairly certain they died of famine. I did and still have quite a few relatives in the South but it’s been difficult to get empirical quantifiable data or metrics on my family due to numerous variables.

    • @TutTravelsVlogs
      @TutTravelsVlogs Год назад +231

      Your journey is incredibly moving and positions you uniquely to raise awareness about North Korean issues.
      Have you considered leading an awareness campaign? Your voice could be powerful in sparking change and honoring your heritage.

    • @SinanjuRED
      @SinanjuRED Год назад +171

      Well sir, if you're speaking truth then you very much are remarkably lucky and fortunate; also quite a badass.

    • @13Gangland
      @13Gangland Год назад +37

      Their dead my boy. It's best to not think about it.

    • @lacil8895
      @lacil8895 Год назад +78

      What an amazing story. Sorry about your family. The only thing you can do is keep moving forward and focus on your life there. All best.

    • @MASTEROFEVIL
      @MASTEROFEVIL Год назад +15

      What are you doing nowadays?

  • @loganpineda123
    @loganpineda123 3 месяца назад +83

    The VPN advertisement focusing on vacation and airfare pricing was WILD to put after this specific video lol

  • @NickRoman
    @NickRoman Год назад +3674

    Truely, the biggest prison on Earth. Born into prison. A doom you can only escape in death. The fact that such a horror exists on our world and we allow it is depressing.

    • @seasnaill2589
      @seasnaill2589 Год назад

      The war needed to help them would be too heavy a toll unfortunately. They got treaties with China, any army going in is gonna kick off WW3.

    • @missamethystmonkey9319
      @missamethystmonkey9319 Год назад

      Fear of nuclear warfare. The US would’ve raided it already if it wasn’t for the North Korean ruler now. He is an evil, evil man. It would’ve been all of Korea if the US didn’t help fight against communism with the south in the Korean War. It was the third largest war in American history and it was right after WWII. If we had another Korean War nowadays, it would be so incredibly ugly. Potentially causing a WWIII with nuclear bombs. 🤮

    • @thewildhealer541
      @thewildhealer541 Год назад

      Yeah, it's honestly making me feel bad. I don't know why we allow this to happen. Nukes made things impossible when they are in the hands of psychopaths

    • @nrg6245
      @nrg6245 Год назад

      It’s more proof god isn’t real and that strong humans need to set aside personal delusions and rise up and fight evil corruption and communism. The US needs to start stepping up like the old days or the future of the world is truly doomed. North Korea is just the start of evil regimes winning

    • @waltermh111
      @waltermh111 Год назад

      "Allow it" you go die on the front line and hope they don't blow up the nearby countries at the same time. Have fun...

  • @konrados9596
    @konrados9596 Год назад +3767

    it's just terrible. I've always wondered how much mistreatment a person can take before taking any risk to improve what's going on in their life. In this case, it is a country with a population of over 20 million. But the government manages to control them. This level of isolation is a terrifying weapon.

    • @LogicallyBasedCommentator999
      @LogicallyBasedCommentator999 Год назад +108

      mind control and influence

    • @gavinwhite3871
      @gavinwhite3871 Год назад

      Even if you escape unharmed, the regime will still kill your family because of you

    • @WWZenaDo
      @WWZenaDo Год назад +231

      It WAS a country of over 20 million. I suspect that at this time their population numbers have significantly dropped. I wonder what their current birth rate, and infant survival rates are?

    • @sumredpillgaysian2090
      @sumredpillgaysian2090 Год назад +118

      ​@@WWZenaDoProbably astronomically low.

    • @WWZenaDo
      @WWZenaDo Год назад +78

      @@sumredpillgaysian2090 Yes, that's very likely. I suspect that cases of infanticide are higher there, too.

  • @CharliMorganMusic
    @CharliMorganMusic Год назад +97799

    Imagine sending a two-year-old to life because their parents read a book. It's almost literally unbelievable.

    • @TheChadD315
      @TheChadD315 Год назад +4753

      Right and thinking that seems reasonable.

    • @TricaGamer
      @TricaGamer Год назад +2671

      imagine believing it

    • @chaosXP3RT
      @chaosXP3RT Год назад +3281

      ​@@TheChadD315What are you implying?

    • @firehot427
      @firehot427 Год назад +1637

      @@TricaGamertankie

    • @jiraffe9600
      @jiraffe9600 Год назад +3186

      @@TricaGamerI don’t believe in god either, but sending some one to prison for reading it is fucking ridiculous. What they did was even worse, they sent someone to prison for someone else reading it.

  • @llkg9
    @llkg9 2 месяца назад +29

    NEVER take your freedom for granted! This is possible ANYWHERE if people don't pay attention.

  • @soyjoyy
    @soyjoyy Год назад +6278

    I'm very happy for people who have managed to escape, if it's 2000 or 30 people. Just the fact some people manage to do it means it's not impossible. You are heros and I hope you live a good life, if you are reading this.

    • @nifiga_prikolno
      @nifiga_prikolno Год назад +361

      Imagine how many have failed

    • @Flackon
      @Flackon Год назад +107

      But when you are one of these people, whether is impossible or not matters little. What matters is if it's possible for *you*.
      Sad to see they have cracked down so hard on escaping.

    • @howieewalt1322
      @howieewalt1322 Год назад +103

      For real. I've never met someone from NK, but if I ever do I will make sure they will be made to feel extremely welcomed by me and my piers.

    • @cvilla1944
      @cvilla1944 Год назад +86

      Those small amount of people are usually NK citizens who are allowed to leave for business reasons (usually to go to China or Russia) and they just don't come back.

    • @SamSitar
      @SamSitar Год назад

      each escape from North Korea weakens that country.

  • @stephenmartinez1
    @stephenmartinez1 Год назад +2874

    For anyone wondering, North Korea’s military and soldiers don’t actually leave the country to do battle. They are used within the country to act as local police. They are used as laborers to construct civil projects like road and infrastructure building. There are many military checkpoints all throughout the countries roads, where soldiers check for travel permits. They patrol the boarders with china and South Korea, as well as the ocean. China has even permitted the dprk soldiers to enter china to locate and bring boarder crossers back into North Korea.

    • @freedomdude5420
      @freedomdude5420 Год назад

      Proving china is the problem.

    • @CommonDaeze
      @CommonDaeze Год назад +123

      Sounds like the national guard, army core of engineers, and metropolitan police departments in the US

    • @nigstar1239
      @nigstar1239 Год назад

      @@CommonDaeze "sounds like police" 😐 man, your IQ is really really low or your extremely out of reality.

    • @sumayyahadetunmbi4347
      @sumayyahadetunmbi4347 Год назад +6

      oh

    • @NigerianCrusader
      @NigerianCrusader Год назад +6

      THEY ARE NOT MEAN

  • @kirara2516
    @kirara2516 Год назад +4654

    I feel so bad for the people in that country. Every single day is a struggle and no one knows if they'll be killed or arrested for something they didn't do, but a family member or a friend did. Who arrests a 2 year old child who barely knows how to speak let alone do a bad thing?

    • @anotherweasleymore
      @anotherweasleymore Год назад +228

      It’s about setting an example and promoting fear into the population

    • @limehawk4989
      @limehawk4989 Год назад +60

      Pretty sure it's a rethorical question.@@anotherweasleymore

    • @Songshare
      @Songshare Год назад +56

      Pure evil.

    • @sergeykish
      @sergeykish Год назад +21

      "Traitor of the Motherland family members" (Russian: ЧСИР: члены семьи изменника Родины, lit. 'members of the family of a traitor of the Motherland') was a term in Article 58 of the Criminal Code of Russian SFSR (as amended from the original wording of 1927). The amended Article dealt with the criminal prosecution of wives and children (kin punishment) of all people who were arrested and convicted as "traitors of the Motherland" in the Soviet Union during Stalinist purges of the 1930s and later.

    • @sicknessnfilth1616
      @sicknessnfilth1616 Год назад +15

      They have Kim's unconditional love and care. What more could one want?

  • @Khupmuansangsimte
    @Khupmuansangsimte 3 месяца назад +52

    it's really heartbreaking that this is not a history but rather an ongoing thing💀💀

    • @jctt3814
      @jctt3814 Месяц назад +1

      Right in the 21 century unreal

  • @yubjuli.h6894
    @yubjuli.h6894 Год назад +4857

    What isn't discussed, which should be, is the difficulty of even acquiring this information. Finding someone that has and is willing to share information about the rest of the world, let alone how to escape to it. It is very possible that many of those escapees had no idea that China was deporting back but Malaysia was not. North korea is the definition of a dystopia.

    • @nabanitadas2537
      @nabanitadas2537 Год назад +286

      Exactly my point. Just think about it tho...the many survivors who have managed to escaped without knowing that China was deporting back them in Nk. IT is sad to think that they got hope for an only amount of time and then again going back to that hell hole to being tortured to death.

    • @ot7biasedmashups
      @ot7biasedmashups Год назад +10

      That is so true.

    • @VITAS874
      @VITAS874 Год назад +5

      Because nk is china colony

    • @Chumbucket187
      @Chumbucket187 Год назад +8

      many bothans died to bring us the death star plans

    • @levitatingoctahedron922
      @levitatingoctahedron922 Год назад

      you only think this because you believe everything you hear about the country.

  • @zenniththefolf4888
    @zenniththefolf4888 Год назад +5423

    I can't imagine something as petty and unjust as literally sentencing a 2 year old to life in prison.
    The more I learn about North Korea the more devoid of humanity and general morals or ethics I learn it is.
    And I always knew it was a corrupt dictatorship, it just somehow never fails to stoop even lower.

    • @ayoCC
      @ayoCC Год назад +117

      Humanity includes benevolence and good but it also includes malicious self interest.
      A free and fair world is fragile, and can only be maintained by standing against tyranny and separating powers to keep them in check

    • @juandp3862
      @juandp3862 Год назад +82

      There's also another piece to the puzzle, they wouldn't have got all of that without the help of a pair of countries to the north.

    • @youdontknowme3318
      @youdontknowme3318 Год назад

      Living in Haiti 🇭🇹 is just as bad , the government there is so corrupt and have associations with gangs that have overrun the country , imagine sleeping in your home at 1am and armed gangs invade your town and force you to have sex with your daughter at gunpoint force you to have sex with your mom dad have sex with daughters all at gunpoint brothers and sisters force to have sex , and imagine you’re lucky enough to flee that area running for your life and taking your kids with you you don’t have a chance to grab anything to take with and you don’t know where you’re going to spend the night or where you’re going to stay, and literally there are no police to help the police is also corrupt the few good police officers that are there are being killed and being set up by corrupt police , it’s just as bad in Haiti as it is in North Korea I pray for Haiti 🇭🇹 and North Korea 🙏🏾

    • @giggerchas1488
      @giggerchas1488 Год назад

      it’s unbelievable because it’s fake. You can’t trust the US State department

    • @T1Oracle
      @T1Oracle Год назад

      I mean there was Chattel slavery in the US where they made slaves impregnate their own mothers and then sold the children. I think NK is nicer than that...

  • @dearsirormadam20
    @dearsirormadam20 Год назад +3723

    I feel great sympathy for the people who were unfortunate enough to be in North Korea. 😔
    May I also remind you the fact that around 15-20% of innocent North Korean civilians perished due to indiscriminate aerial bombardment during Korea war.. Moreover, over a million innocent North Korean civilians also perished in famine due to never-ending Western sanctions. 🤷

    • @MayOdinGuideYou
      @MayOdinGuideYou Год назад +42

      Me too.

    • @kevinkevinkevin1909
      @kevinkevinkevin1909 Год назад +26

      If this is video is complete truth, absolutely.

    • @skylarleviosa9081
      @skylarleviosa9081 Год назад +127

      @@kevinkevinkevin1909 it is

    • @Yesna
      @Yesna Год назад +29

      ​@@kevinkevinkevin1909Are you seriously saying that reducing the crime for reading a book from 10 years to 9 would make north korea a good place to live?

    • @TheBrooklynbodine
      @TheBrooklynbodine Год назад +19

      I say this with all seriousness-God help anyone who lives in North Korea!

  • @thomasgreen4520
    @thomasgreen4520 4 месяца назад +57

    Really love all your work. Keep it up!!

  • @andmicbro1
    @andmicbro1 Год назад +979

    Also, a reminder that North Korea can only do most of what it does thanks to massive support from China. China sends regular supplies to North Korea, in direct violation of sanctions, to prop up the autocracy. Because the only thing worse to China than the shit happening in North Korea is having no buffer between themselves and an American allied country. Without this critical support, both official, and under the table unofficially, North Korea probably would have collapsed long ago. Or at least they'd be a minor player who would increasingly have little ability to enforce the oppression they have upon their population.

    • @burningphoenix6679
      @burningphoenix6679 Год назад

      It’s not even just about a buffer anymore. With how unstable Kim is, he might genuinely be using nuclear blackmail against China. If his regime was about to fall because of China cutting off aid, he just might nuke them.

    • @StarboyXL9
      @StarboyXL9 Год назад

      Perhaps thats why America is focusing so heavily on reforming China into a friendly republic through internal strife and revolution. Make China an ally, NK regime dies out. Two birds, one stone.

    • @issabeganovic8822
      @issabeganovic8822 Год назад

      Not to mention if NK collapsed right at this moment, who's to stop mercenaries and criminals from turning the country into another Bosnia or Syria?
      Only this time, there's Nuclear Weapons to steal and sell to the highest bidder, or even worse, they take everyone with them.
      No matter how you spin it, there's no real way to win here.

    • @slylover123
      @slylover123 Год назад +35

      It's a giant buffer country and it's so sad

    • @philsurtees
      @philsurtees Год назад

      What, no reminder about the people starving because of sanctions imposed by the United States, which it forces countries throughout the world to uphold? We're just going to maintain the delusion that the Americans are the good guys, are we? The Chinese have helped to prevent the North Koreans from dying of starvation, caused by the Americans, yet you want to twist things around and make China the bad guys? The brainwashing of people like you simply beggars belief!

  • @CinemaSteve
    @CinemaSteve Год назад +4716

    So glad my grandparents both escaped North Korea otherwise I wouldn’t be born in the USA. My grandma escaped during the Korean War along with many others, and my Grandpa got captured twice during the war but somehow made it out both times. I’ve thought about it a couple times like what if they didn’t make it out, where would I be now? Crazy to ponder that sometimes.

    • @du4lstrik3
      @du4lstrik3 Год назад +61

      'Murica.

    • @akizmetkat999
      @akizmetkat999 Год назад +29

      A couple of times? You must have misspoken.

    • @CinemaSteve
      @CinemaSteve Год назад +225

      @@akizmetkat999 nope. My grandpa told us he got caught twice by the North Korean army. So if he lied then sure I guess.

    • @Foprop1
      @Foprop1 Год назад +76

      Omg, thats honestly crazy, I honestly salute them

    • @CinemaSteve
      @CinemaSteve Год назад +103

      @@Foprop1 Pretty crazy for sure! One of the few lucky ones who could make it out. They still had family in North Korea for years until they were smuggled out and they told some harrowing stories as well.

  • @ripwednesdayadams
    @ripwednesdayadams Год назад +2287

    I read about a harrowing escape from North Korea. This girl and her elderly mother went on a long, nearly unsurvivable journey. It was only by sheer luck and the kindness of random border guards that they were able to get out. I feel so horrible for everyone who lives there.

    • @JLo83
      @JLo83 Год назад +271

      You're probably referring to Yeon-mi Park. Her story has been heavily questioned in the last couple years as her story kept changing and now she's a far-right podcast and interview personality.
      So.... Maybe take that story with a grain of salt.

    • @Leg0456
      @Leg0456 Год назад +23

      Yeon mi Park. He actually referenced her story in his previous video on escaping North Korea.

    • @nathen4021
      @nathen4021 Год назад +4

      Yes, dictatorships are rather nasty when it comes to human rights.

    • @aurexify
      @aurexify Год назад +181

      @@JLo83 She's not a far-right podcast. She's conservative, which you should know is different.

    • @juahl
      @juahl Год назад +127

      ​​@JLo83 Intresting how ALL defectors of ALL countries that find their way to free countries become conservative. 🤷🏻‍♀️ Also, as a child of parents also escaping persecution? My parents told stories that seemed to change, it wasn't that their stories were changing but that the journey was so vast that it sounded disintegrated. You heard how long her journey may have taken, many events can happen in this long journey, causing stories to overlap.

  • @REDDEVIL9269
    @REDDEVIL9269 3 месяца назад +7

    Crazy to even comprehend what life is like in North Korea to even imagine it is impossible I do pray one day everyone in this country gets a chance to live whatever life they want

  • @ffffffffffffffffffffffffffff5
    @ffffffffffffffffffffffffffff5 Год назад +2114

    North Korea is one of those countries where I feel the only way it could be freed is through rebellion that ends with the execution of the tyrants or through intervention of a much more powerful country and neither seems likely to happen. It's a tragedy.

    • @arisufizu5698
      @arisufizu5698 Год назад +39

      Intervention of foreign countries is too risky as it might kickstart WW3

    • @Red_Lion2000
      @Red_Lion2000 Год назад

      Lol, yea im sure North Koreans are begging for the US to come in and drop thousands of tonnes of "liberation" on them, just like when they "liberated" Korea after literally murdering a 1/4th of the entire population using more bombs than were used on Japan including the two nukes.
      Read a book.

    • @pineapplelollipop1074
      @pineapplelollipop1074 Год назад

      Personally I think the most likely is that china loses need for North Korea and stops funding it.

    • @theflashgirl2057
      @theflashgirl2057 Год назад +63

      @@arisufizu5698 well. Ww3 is already on the brink of starting and it is not with NK

    • @InnerAnimations
      @InnerAnimations Год назад +24

      @@theflashgirl2057pretty much its been goin on for ages now

  • @bryancollins6903
    @bryancollins6903 5 месяцев назад +2740

    A defector said when he escaped to S. K. He saw somebody wearing blue jeans sitting at an outdoor restaurant eating a big plate of food and he couldn't believe his eyes!! He knew nothing of reality outside of N.K.

    • @yushan4009
      @yushan4009 3 месяца назад +96

      That’s… really sad.

    • @pewdiepiee8033
      @pewdiepiee8033 3 месяца назад +9

      North koreans have restaurants too and they can afford them. Where tf youve taken this info from?

    • @lizlizbianrosethornsword
      @lizlizbianrosethornsword 3 месяца назад

      ​@@pewdiepiee8033A North Korean government agent detected spreading propaganda?

    • @greenwin01
      @greenwin01 3 месяца назад +199

      @@pewdiepiee8033 I don't want to argue with you, as you seem combative without provocation. But I will say that you have ignored the specifics of the original comment, specifics like "blue jeans" and "outdoor" and "[lots of] food", all things that he would never see in a North Korean "restaurant".
      I am also taking you at your word that there are restaurants that are widely available and affordable to North Koreans, which I *heavily* doubt is actually the case. Provide a source for your counterargument, or accept that you are a hypocrite for asking for one.

    • @pewdiepiee8033
      @pewdiepiee8033 3 месяца назад

      @@greenwin01 keep believing dumb stories on the internet about the poor north koreans. Soon enough people will talk like this about russia and china too. Cuz they dont support the US suddenly theyre a poor 3rd world country with people straving everyday

  • @diirt
    @diirt Год назад +4521

    Its heartbreaking to think about how many North Korean people actually get caught nowadays because of the tightened enforcement security. From over 2000 to less than 100 successful escapes is scary enough, but to think that behind those ~60 successful defections there's thousands of failed ones each year is truly heartbreaking to me.

    • @mrandmr8621
      @mrandmr8621 Год назад

      Can't forget that out of the successful defections, how many of them are North Korean spies sent out to recapture or harass legit defectors or other nefarous schemes.

    • @oliviasooooksk
      @oliviasooooksk Год назад +130

      It’s seriously heartbreaking. Like I cried during this video…. I can’t imagine how a single person there feels

    • @crimsonbehelit99
      @crimsonbehelit99 Год назад +5

      ​@@oliviasooooksk😂😂😂

    • @chrisg6492
      @chrisg6492 Год назад +167

      @@crimsonbehelit99explain what is funny, seriously explain

    • @Samookely
      @Samookely Год назад +119

      @@crimsonbehelit99 nothing is funny about this, these people practically live in real life hell

  • @mistergoodcitizen9914
    @mistergoodcitizen9914 26 дней назад +8

    23:56 it sounds completely unconstitutional but here we are

  • @simpleplanfan011
    @simpleplanfan011 Год назад +4164

    We are very lucky to not have been born into a country like this. I cannot imagine how hard these people have it there 🙁

    • @kariisawa_
      @kariisawa_ Год назад +34

      Imagine how hard it must be not having to worry about being jobless or homeless your entire life, what a disaster

    • @tobs_p9946
      @tobs_p9946 Год назад

      @@kariisawa_ ???

    • @reinhartdevera2644
      @reinhartdevera2644 Год назад +554

      @@kariisawa_north korean fed 😭

    • @carolinemendell1963
      @carolinemendell1963 Год назад

      @@reinhartdevera2644LMFAO

    • @Miichi5
      @Miichi5 Год назад +172

      not once will I say my life is shit again, imagine being born in a prison and living there until your death

  • @IslanderloverBKK
    @IslanderloverBKK Год назад +2319

    In 10th grade, I had a NK classmate. His family I believed escaped and at first we didn't like him. His ideology was so effed up! We were studying in an international school. He was really smart though. After 3-4 months, he started to loosen up and more open-minded because even if we didn't like him at first, we understand what he's been through. He changed for the better and we're happy he's happy:)

    • @Chafflives
      @Chafflives Год назад

      Indoctrination is insidious and hard to combat, like any political cult, or religion.

    • @zatzu
      @zatzu Год назад +83

      What are his ideologies? I'm curious

    • @YourFaulty
      @YourFaulty Год назад +35

      @@zatzu I'm also curious

    • @janterri3539
      @janterri3539 Год назад

      @@zatzuWhatever it is I’m sure it was forced onto him. They brainwash all their citizens in NK and I’m sure they do it while they are children.

    • @ediblelipstick109
      @ediblelipstick109 Год назад +19

      Aight im curious too

  • @MacTac141
    @MacTac141 Год назад +1634

    Damn that’s honestly a nightmare. One day part of your family or a close friend decides it’s time to try escaping, and once they’re gone odds are essentially certain you’ll never hear from them again or even learn what happened

    • @josephmatthews7698
      @josephmatthews7698 Год назад +314

      Not only that you're almost certainly getting executed or sentenced to life in a work camp for being affiliated with an escapee.

    • @thecinematicexperience420
      @thecinematicexperience420 Год назад +110

      And then you and your entire family get imprisoned and punished harshly for it 😔

    • @raptorcell6633
      @raptorcell6633 Год назад

      Or you will learn what happened when everyone, 3 generations above and below them, in your family is thrown in a concentration camp.

    • @itsthenewlifeofsomeone1
      @itsthenewlifeofsomeone1 Год назад +5

      Welcome to America

    • @MemeMachine3216
      @MemeMachine3216 Год назад +5

      You go to prison too.

  • @Mxsfit11Six
    @Mxsfit11Six 3 месяца назад +8

    It truly boggles my mind how a country can be like this

  • @Luminty99
    @Luminty99 Год назад +3784

    Imagine having absolutely no idea what the rest of the world is like and what rights they have and what technology they have and never having the chance to leave and see what you’re missing. It’s like their country is the whole world to them

    • @EEEEEEEE
      @EEEEEEEE Год назад +27

      E‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎

    • @Lennxd12
      @Lennxd12 Год назад +75

      The only advantage of that is that they don't have to be ennoyed and bothered by some things... Like idk pride shit this... Extreme stuff like in USA or Canada or other things

    • @placidqualm
      @placidqualm Год назад +814

      @@Lennxd12because seeing people love each other is so much worse than “living” in extreme poverty and being one breath away from slavery 🙄

    • @Lennxd12
      @Lennxd12 Год назад

      @@placidqualm you seem to have absolutely no plan about how incredible bad that movement got, and I just mentioned it I never said it was worser to see that than live like there I just said that's the only advantage that that has, it keeps them away from western stupidity problems I never said what you implemented it just shows that you are either too stupid to look behind that or your one of these "things"

    • @henriantoinette
      @henriantoinette Год назад +315

      ​@@Lennxd12my dude i am so sorry you have to see that... it must be so detrimental to your well-being, prayers for everyone in the states 🙏

  • @chrism3790
    @chrism3790 Год назад +4559

    The crazy thing is that Kim Jong Un went to school in Switzerland. He experienced life in one of the most free and peaceful environments anywhere in the entire world, first hand, only to go back to North Korea and perfect the hellish dystopia he inherited from his ancestors.

    • @Churros1616
      @Churros1616 Год назад

      You seem to forget that Switzerland was pro nazis.

    • @rustyboltz2820
      @rustyboltz2820 Год назад

      He has to, China needs a buffer zone between any ally of the US government. If he decided one day that things need to change he would be assassinated very quickly, and he can't step down either because of the family dynasty. That being said I doubt he would rather his people be free in the first place.

    • @OriQinzzi
      @OriQinzzi Год назад +1033

      I think it's from narcissism and possibly some kind of child abuse from his family. He's definitely not sane.

    • @vortexriver1071
      @vortexriver1071 Год назад +715

      @@OriQinzzidoubt any dictator is sane

    • @OriQinzzi
      @OriQinzzi Год назад +57

      @@vortexriver1071 true

  • @aaronworsnop
    @aaronworsnop Год назад +1519

    Honestly, the tragedy of all this makes me feel sick. I'm in no way related to the situation, but being human and thinking that real people are going through this...

    • @iidoyila_live_
      @iidoyila_live_ Год назад

      making the world better is a puzzle , so prepare to understand the complexity of conflict . .

    • @Brixster
      @Brixster Год назад +54

      @@iidoyila_live_Why does this sound suspiciously like a threat 🤨

    • @iidoyila_live_
      @iidoyila_live_ Год назад

      @@Brixster because i am speakinh with the voice of the rules of the universe -- here to warn you not to be too sure of yourself ! and maybe you'll see me fightinh . . i am a demon who play-fights !

    • @SwimSwim-wx4hh
      @SwimSwim-wx4hh Год назад +5

      When using a death note seems justified...

    • @littletoe8408
      @littletoe8408 Год назад

      ​@@LostSoulchild89dmt

  • @broooowdym
    @broooowdym 4 месяца назад +7

    “Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country.” - Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

  • @RandomStranger335
    @RandomStranger335 Год назад +2133

    This feels genuinely wrong, you only live once and I can’t imagine having to live in the same country your whole life serving under a leader without being able to do things you want. This is very wrong and I feel extremely bad for people who live in North Korea. I hope the people who escaped are doing well.

    • @NikoCubeRoot
      @NikoCubeRoot Год назад

      North Korea be like: Do anything that is related to North Korea rules or get device that is allowed by government or else you will get prisoned for x10+ jail time multiplier in total of average of 10y Jail Time or even a easy execution because they have over 600M+ CCTVs!! Even attempt to escaping you get OOF'd by government rules breaking

    • @jkeebla
      @jkeebla Год назад +17

      YOLO 🤑

    • @theguyof360
      @theguyof360 Год назад +4

      They should stay there forever

    • @cringeposting435
      @cringeposting435 Год назад +33

      very appropriate pfp

    • @DavidTheBrain_
      @DavidTheBrain_ Год назад

      ​@@theguyof360U should stay a virgin forever do not reproduce

  • @Soniman001
    @Soniman001 Год назад +6594

    I’ve never seen a country with THIS MUCH contempt for its own people. Every law I’ve seen enacted and enforced has been done in a effort to make people’s lives more miserable and never EVER to make it better. I’m ashamed as a human being that such a nightmarish place continues to exist on the modern day and nothing can be done about it

    • @BIllyZantensu
      @BIllyZantensu Год назад +111

      USSR

    • @knightsofsumeria
      @knightsofsumeria Год назад

      Thank China. The only reason why NK even still exists

    • @just_aaaaly84
      @just_aaaaly84 Год назад

      ​@user-oc7wm2hp9sKys.

    • @towtruckaj
      @towtruckaj Год назад

      Hate to break it to you but a lot of countries want the same control, they just try and hide it better.
      I mean shit, Outside of any other opinions of china or russia. The fact that they would deport people back to north korea knowing their fates and their reasons for escaping proves within itself that they have the same ambitions for their people...

    • @sonofaspine
      @sonofaspine Год назад +448

      Its a very hard life here living in luxury and freedom. I am very intelligent and would therefore prefer living in North Korea@@Valdraya

  • @MrGiygas1
    @MrGiygas1 Год назад +4280

    Actually, North Korea is not the only country that made it illegal for its citizens to leave without approval. Eritrea also forbids its citizens from leaving the country.

    • @MrGiygas1
      @MrGiygas1 Год назад +1037

      Eritrea is also called Africa’s North Korea btw

    • @daniellee2343
      @daniellee2343 Год назад

      Ruled by a communist party.

    • @Plznojudge
      @Plznojudge Год назад +167

      Gotta blow it up

    • @wentoneisendon6502
      @wentoneisendon6502 Год назад +485

      It's also the only country that has overseas citizens file for taxes within the countries, alongside the USA lmao

    • @theanonymousservant5909
      @theanonymousservant5909 Год назад +572

      As per my cousin who was raised in Ethiopia and lived with Eritreans, the rule in there is that once you turn 15, you can’t leave the country. That’s why many parents usually send their kids out of the country so that they don’t have to stay there

  • @ilma-dr2vg
    @ilma-dr2vg 2 месяца назад +9

    my parents where from north korea. when they were escaping they were caught but the soldiers let them go. i really thank those soldiers for letting them go because then i would of grew up in north korea (i was like 1 when they escaped so i dont remember anything) i try to ask my parents about north korea but they dont like talking about it. they have been helping other peope get across but they now stopped bc its basically impossible now. they first went to Mongolia then back to south korea then they moved to the UK

    • @SilennaCuddles
      @SilennaCuddles 2 месяца назад +1

      Thats great that they made it. I doubt that the soldiers even want to kill anyone because who would truly enjoy killing people who are just trying to escape that horrible prison of a country

    • @Wellch
      @Wellch 2 месяца назад

      Were, not “where”

  • @SwiFTDBL
    @SwiFTDBL Год назад +6266

    honestly crazy to think a country like this still exists

    • @joeyvillarreal761
      @joeyvillarreal761 Год назад +120

      America is right behind

    • @xavierharris7123
      @xavierharris7123 Год назад +1113

      @@joeyvillarreal761 America and North Korea are nowhere near the same I have no idea why you think this

    • @stavrostelka2252
      @stavrostelka2252 Год назад +66

      ​@xavierharris7123 Oh yes,democracy is flourishing in usa🤦‍♂️🤭.

    • @milo5315
      @milo5315 Год назад +676

      ​@@stavrostelka2252compared to freaking North Korea it sure as hell is

    • @stavrostelka2252
      @stavrostelka2252 Год назад

      @@milo5315 I suppose your "truth telling" TV channels told you that 🤷‍♂️🤭😁. You modern slave,be well 🤝.

  • @ThisIsACreativeName
    @ThisIsACreativeName Год назад +4137

    I genuinely wish we could do something to help the citizens. The world is a messed up place

    • @ExoGhost
      @ExoGhost Год назад

      We can. Our nations are just afraid that Kim will launch nukes if we try to abolish him

    • @zombreon6021
      @zombreon6021 Год назад +166

      Apparently there’s a price that can be paid to smuggle them out. 20k a person? A million dollars could free 50 people :/ I dunno…

    • @ExoGhost
      @ExoGhost Год назад +330

      @@zombreon6021 A million dollars is pocket change for governments. They could easily do it

    • @squish162
      @squish162 Год назад +37

      @@zombreon6021thats gotta be cap

    • @zombreon6021
      @zombreon6021 Год назад +3

      @@squish162 they said 21k in the video

  • @kartikjaggi007
    @kartikjaggi007 Год назад +2691

    Can't help but think that if this continues, there might come a generation that might not even know that there is anything outside North Korea, and the rest of the world would start to treat them like an uncontacted tribe.

    • @gorkyd7912
      @gorkyd7912 Год назад

      It's already worse. They know there's a world out there but they are disinformed about it. They're taught the US is an evil imperial force, for example, and they use real facts when it suits this agenda. So its not like they're going to wake up and realize its all lies when a big chunk of it is based on actual fact, they will have to learn through experience like everyone must.

    • @astralmindny9055
      @astralmindny9055 Год назад

      Lol! Imagine? Nah. As long as WAR exist, I'm pretty sure at any given generation, they'd know the outside world exist just for the simple fact that the men are forced to join the military, and I'm pretty sure they would know that they're defending their country from other countries. Lol!

    • @crimsonpirate1710
      @crimsonpirate1710 Год назад +346

      This is already a reality i fear.

    • @jonathansorek6705
      @jonathansorek6705 Год назад +257

      Most uncontacted tribes dont have access to Nuclear ICBMS and regularly threaten peaceful countries with them

    • @Patroba23
      @Patroba23 Год назад +28

      Lmao nah they watching south korean movies from the black market w a VPN

  • @aieurich
    @aieurich 15 дней назад +3

    And people say our government is corrupt, atleast you have the freedom to complain how corrupt we are.

  • @Cluisanna
    @Cluisanna 11 месяцев назад +1632

    I'm a German from Berlin and it's so strange to think that only a little over 30 years ago, there also was a border where defectors would get shot on sight and people trying to escape with crazy plans like hiding in car seats - and yet today there's parks and open streets where the Wall used to be and the only way you can tell whether you're in former East or West Berlin is whether there are trams or not. The situation was far from the same as in North Korea but it still gives me hope.

    • @robertwhite7071
      @robertwhite7071 11 месяцев назад +51

      I was stationed in Germany when the wall fell and reunification occurred the next year. My second Heimat.

    • @EssieKaye-f3q
      @EssieKaye-f3q 11 месяцев назад +25

      Probably the most crucial border here that needs to be broken is the one between North and South. But the leaders will have to figure out how to reconcile such a vast difference in society, economy and ideology. None of that can begin unless South Korea first sends the USA packing. If Koreans can work out a reunification independent of interference from other nations, I believe we can eventually see true peace and freedom there. No nuclear disarmament is necessary either. A unified Korea would be best served by maintaining status as a responsible and self-restrained nuclear power.

    • @achmed2pac
      @achmed2pac 10 месяцев назад +10

      Why say Finally in This video title? its a Hell Hole living there in the State of North Korea for citizens just watch the Interview of Defectors....May Jesus Bless and Keep Blessing those people who are trying to Escape the Tyranie of the Government there in North Korea💯🙏💟In Jesus Powerful Name!

    • @gummy5862
      @gummy5862 10 месяцев назад +18

      @@EssieKaye-f3qit won’t work for at least another 50 years. Modern South Koreans already tend to dislike and discriminate against North Korean defectors, and SK doesn’t seem to have any plans or reasons to reunify the North and South.

    • @Bundesrepublik_Deutschland1950
      @Bundesrepublik_Deutschland1950 10 месяцев назад +2

      Hallo mein lieber Mitbürger

  • @sickcallranger2590
    @sickcallranger2590 Год назад +2634

    We don't give the North Korean people enough credit. Defecting is no easy feat, but despite physical and ideological obstacles and decades of programming, they still find a way.

    • @hobomike6935
      @hobomike6935 Год назад +14

      I think we’ve given the North Koreans enough credit.

    • @ducks9678
      @ducks9678 Год назад +1

      @@hobomike6935 You sound racist?

    • @sickcallranger2590
      @sickcallranger2590 Год назад +145

      @@hobomike6935 I don't think so honestly. I've studied them, their language and their culture for my work. North Korea is a black box, but its people are far more imaginative than most people think. It's almost impressive how well they fend for themselves in such a shitty regime.

    • @ENZOxDV9
      @ENZOxDV9 Год назад +46

      ​@@sickcallranger2590
      they're not dumb, they're human like everyone else. Even with no outside information they know their situation is horrible and many will attempt to escape by any means necessary

    • @sickcallranger2590
      @sickcallranger2590 Год назад +30

      @@ENZOxDV9 That is my point. I've had the pleasure of speaking face to face with and receiving lectures from a former high-ranking Bureau 39 official who defected some years ago. Fascinating stories, truly extraordinary man.

  • @andreakp311
    @andreakp311 Год назад +1299

    I’ve always had a bit of a morbid fascination with North Korea, and have read a number of North Korean defector memoirs, so I was familiar with the general landscape described here, but I wasn’t aware of how much worse things have gotten since 2020. Most of the escape accounts I’ve read took place in the 90s and early 2000s and followed the “easiest” China route, however they are all incredibly harrowing. To think that now it is many times harder than it was then is just unimaginable. My heart breaks even more for the poor innocent people trapped inside that horrifically evil regime.

    • @osheridan
      @osheridan Год назад +20

      Same, just I hope you don't mean Yeonmin Park.

    • @franzferdinand1393
      @franzferdinand1393 Год назад +84

      @@iloveevil86go live there then

    • @slicingonions4398
      @slicingonions4398 Год назад +23

      If you're a woman or girl and being smuggled out you would get R worded for "protection" and to keep your family safe, that's a common thing I always heard in those memoirs. It being so much harder now my heart truly aches for all of them

    • @albevanhanoy
      @albevanhanoy Год назад +2

      ​@@osheridanWhat's wrong with Yeonmi Park?

    • @KonjikiNoYami666
      @KonjikiNoYami666 Год назад

      @@osheridanwhy??😮

  • @kyaryi1
    @kyaryi1 4 месяца назад +2

    My parents are from turkey and after the war we emigrated to germany, to find work.
    Everytime I return to our home village, my grandma tells me about the soldier of our home village that was sent to south korea to help defend the country. He didn't return.
    While I don't truly know how south koreans feel about unification, I pray to witness the unification between north and south korea. My prayers are with the koreans.

  • @kit-rg7ib
    @kit-rg7ib 6 месяцев назад +1379

    and yet people still escape . the indomitable human spirit

    • @monaezytwo6513
      @monaezytwo6513 5 месяцев назад +186

      We have no way of knowing how many are killed trying to escape. Has to be a lot.

    • @kit-rg7ib
      @kit-rg7ib 5 месяцев назад +41

      @@monaezytwo6513 oh yeah that's true

    • @QuiVierge
      @QuiVierge 4 месяца назад +116

      @@monaezytwo6513 At least they died escaping the regime instead of being captured alive. Defectors that were brought back to NK probably had a worse fate coming to them

    • @scratc930
      @scratc930 3 месяца назад +25

      ​@@QuiVierge Hearing the horrors of North Korea alone, I would rather be dead than live through it.

    • @brandonfoley7519
      @brandonfoley7519 3 месяца назад +3

      Escape is never impossible

  • @badbadleroybrown
    @badbadleroybrown Год назад +1193

    I highly recommend everyone reads 'The Girl With 7 Names'. An amazing and tense account of a girl's early life in NK and her attempted and eventually succesful escape. One of the best books I've ever read.

    • @spice_kitten
      @spice_kitten Год назад +75

      Looks super interesting, thanks for the recommendation! Btw it's "7 names" :))

    • @CoCo-yv3hl
      @CoCo-yv3hl Год назад +17

      I’m going to check it out i think I saw her interview

    • @Inkironnrum
      @Inkironnrum Год назад +7

      Sounds interesting. Will look this book up and add it to my tbr list. Thank you.

    • @plantmama7442
      @plantmama7442 Год назад +38

      Another great book is Nothing to Envy, the title describing the propaganda North Koreans tell their people about other parts of the world compared to their lives. Great read for anyone who’s looking for another book.

    • @Kxmzz
      @Kxmzz Год назад +5

      Commenting so I remember

  • @livef0rever_147
    @livef0rever_147 Год назад +794

    “Freedom has many difficulties and democracy is not perfect, but we have never had to put a wall up to keep our people in” - J.F.K.

    • @dinojack5567
      @dinojack5567 Год назад +95

      That quote originally was about the Soviet Union and Berlin Wall. Interesting to see it in a new meaning/context!

    • @dianehenry733
      @dianehenry733 Год назад +11

      Yet...

    • @KittyNoo
      @KittyNoo Год назад

      Yet there is a wall now on the south boarder

    • @MrGrae333
      @MrGrae333 Год назад +19

      ​@@dinojack5567It's not cool lol, it's sad that that quote still fits as a description for a place in earth..

    • @AdorableAdonis-ni9dq
      @AdorableAdonis-ni9dq Год назад

      They put a wall in Mexico

  • @magnumEiz
    @magnumEiz 3 месяца назад +6

    You can check out at anytime but you can never leave

  • @WhiteWolfos
    @WhiteWolfos Год назад +1153

    As someone who meet someone from that country who made it out in the 1990s, it is appalling with the abuse of basic human rights and many kids and people starving from constant food shortages. He told me how his mom and grandma died trying to feed him and his brother. 😢 They send you to prison for even asking the wrong questions, and anything that can mildly turn to doubt the leader/government.

    • @andreasottohansen7338
      @andreasottohansen7338 Год назад +58

      It is crazy how a state with all that shit going on has managed to not collapse in the decades of existing

    • @teaboy9614
      @teaboy9614 Год назад

      ​@@andreasottohansen7338i guess it's basically slavery. Leaders get everything , others get nothing. Money keep flowing. And others are too hungry and unequipped to make any coup..

    • @deadmansgulf911
      @deadmansgulf911 Год назад

      Don’t worry the US will get there soon enough with the Biden regime and fellow communists

    • @amalgamfrostpink5030
      @amalgamfrostpink5030 Год назад

      ​@@andreasottohansen7338China is their paypig and Russia is their friend. That's the only reason why they are alive.

    • @Tyfen64
      @Tyfen64 Год назад +32

      ​​@@andreasottohansen7338it doesn't collapse because North Koreans are way too scared (and with reason) to do anything that isn't following the dictator. The only way North Korea's "government" can collapse is by help from other countries such as the US. It's literally almost impossible to make a move from the inside without getting you, your whole family and the next like 4 generations to come (if you somehow survive) locked in a camp.

  • @NuggieIsMissing
    @NuggieIsMissing Год назад +970

    As someone who was born in SK and was adopted into an American household, I find myself incredibly incredibly blessed

    • @iamdalibor
      @iamdalibor Год назад +75

      That's the right way of thinking. I myself being serbian moved to america. However... both of my parents died when I was 7 & it pains me to see people not realizing how lucky they are to have parents.
      Sometimes people just don't take things for granted from what I seen.
      Keep up the positivity no matter what because in this crazy ass world.... some positivity is a good thing
      Basically my grandparents adopted me and were my parents but man... they were old school but in the end helped raise me and for that I will always be indebted to them forever

    • @censored4christ162
      @censored4christ162 Год назад +13

      Imagine if a north korean kidnapped you and smuggled you into the country

    • @ILoveCatsYippee.
      @ILoveCatsYippee. Год назад +69

      @@censored4christ162 bro what

    • @katherinesmallbean3594
      @katherinesmallbean3594 Год назад +1

      @@censored4christ162 ‼️⁉️❗️

    • @EEEEEEEE
      @EEEEEEEE Год назад +3

      ‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎E‎‎‎‎‎

  • @halldorberg
    @halldorberg Год назад +803

    Staying in China for over a decade, I would speculate that a significant factor was also the Chinese COVID tracking system. For a couple of years you couldn't enter any establishment (restaurant, apartment building etc) in China without a green code, and even with the coffee, domestic travel was heavily restricted - your code in one city or a province would not automatically allow you freedom of movement in another. This made things extremely difficult for migrants in China - and I imagine that out made it absolutely impossible for North Korean illegal immigrants to do the necessary trek described in this video.

    • @zhiwang6529
      @zhiwang6529 Год назад +36

      this is accurate, we have the Covid tracking system for a few years and you will be found if you're an illegal immigrant because you need to show you ID to sign up for the system, if you're not in the system it's hard to get by daily life

    • @wzk921109
      @wzk921109 Год назад +9

      True that. The digital lifestyle has made day to day easier however it’ll always come at a cost. Most times, people don’t mind it. Let’s be honest, it’s not anyone truly have privacy or freedom anyway, NSA works hard to make sure that’s the case.

    • @kuirivito
      @kuirivito Год назад

      literally none if this is true lolll

    • @Fleur2005
      @Fleur2005 Год назад +13

      @@kuirivitobut it is true

    • @ZhonyRon
      @ZhonyRon Год назад

      Talking about China. They really sending refugees from NK back to NK. Lmfao.

  • @joblo2671
    @joblo2671 9 дней назад +1

    'Escape from Camp 14' was one of the most thrilling, engrossing (not in a positive way, but nonetheless) books I have ever read. Absolutely amazing to think it is even partially true. APPALING.

  • @AgileGamingGnM
    @AgileGamingGnM Год назад +1325

    It amazes me how focused we are on past human atrocities when there's one happening right now, yet I rarely hear anything about NK anymore.

    • @ballgown4life
      @ballgown4life Год назад +22

      This comment deserves 1k likes

    • @walukirby
      @walukirby Год назад +151

      I think it's mostly due to how little we can even do, all laws say NK can do what they want, only way to help here would really be with an invasion, and those have a lot of other problems.

    • @SeanRTR
      @SeanRTR Год назад +2

      Amen

    • @serkotsins
      @serkotsins Год назад +9

      we rarely hear much bc NK doesn’t talk much, especially since covid happened

    • @originai1840
      @originai1840 Год назад +2

      Maybe it’s because NK barely talks

  • @ChrisWhite.fishing
    @ChrisWhite.fishing 6 месяцев назад +1570

    The fact there are 200 escapees in USA and I’ve met one, makes it incredible.

    • @feraltaco4783
      @feraltaco4783 4 месяца назад +88

      I would love to talk with someone who escaped. It would be fascinating.

    • @TheBeatMakersGuild
      @TheBeatMakersGuild 4 месяца назад

      @@feraltaco4783 no it wouldn't already exists online someone who didn't escape with a uncensored opinion is much more valuable maybe google stuff

    • @nightshadehelis9821
      @nightshadehelis9821 4 месяца назад +14

      Who did you meet?

    • @SophiaFrench-e5i
      @SophiaFrench-e5i 3 месяца назад +1

      @@feraltaco4783same 😮

    • @blabla-eb8wm
      @blabla-eb8wm 3 месяца назад +227

      @@nightshadehelis9821nice try Kim jun un

  • @terryheo3464
    @terryheo3464 Год назад +838

    Im a South Korean and I heard a story of North Korea soldier's escape through DMZ. The cage got destroyed because of the tornado and he ran fast as he can. However the soldiers knew he was gone and started to shoot at him. Luckily the bullet missed his head by slight inches and he made it to South Korea..

    • @bankerlinlyngdoh819
      @bankerlinlyngdoh819 Год назад +1

      Y 6

    • @mistiq2947
      @mistiq2947 11 месяцев назад +55

      yeah i heard of another story where a NK guy ran his car into the DMZ and ran across the border... genuinely terrifying to think about

    • @case8987
      @case8987 10 месяцев назад +2

      Does your country teach you about all the citizens South Korea murdered during the Korean War?

    • @terryheo3464
      @terryheo3464 10 месяцев назад +40

      @@case8987 We know that both sides committed war crimes but North Korea did more

    • @terryheo3464
      @terryheo3464 10 месяцев назад +21

      @@case8987 This is not taught a lot but North Korea killed thousands of injured soldiers and citizens in Seoul hospital

  • @IvanFitz
    @IvanFitz 29 дней назад +3

    It’s crazy because if north korea ever went to war they’d lose, their soldiers would all take the chance to flee

  • @fanjin
    @fanjin Год назад +456

    Starting 2010s, China started to require identification on all public transportation, including trains and inter-city buses (实名制车票). This could be potentially another reason for the increased difficulty for NK defectors to cross China. Previously, train tickets were sold anonymously, allowing a foreign person to travel a long distance without being identified.

    • @longiusaescius2537
      @longiusaescius2537 Год назад +1

      Probably

    • @halfbakedproductions7887
      @halfbakedproductions7887 Год назад

      The best thing China could do is just show a bit of humanity for once - stop sending NK defectors back when caught and start busting the people traffickers and pimps. That sort of crime is not acceptable in China when perpetrated against anyone else. It's a very simple policy decision and it's not like they owe North Korea anything, and all North Korea could really do is block inbound Chinese travel out of spite.
      Other countries either offer asylum to NK defectors or hand them over to the South.

    • @longiusaescius2537
      @longiusaescius2537 Год назад

      @@halfbakedproductions7887 why would they though

    • @sergeyzh7186
      @sergeyzh7186 Год назад +4

      ​@@longiusaescius2537Surveillance and preventing reselling. Russia did the same in the 1990s - all long-distance train tickets are named and train stewards check passports on boarding.

    • @iratepirate3896
      @iratepirate3896 Год назад

      @@longiusaescius2537 Because China is a totalitarian hellhole almost, but not quite, as bad as NK.

  • @72dew
    @72dew Год назад +3391

    Here's a bit of existential dread for y'all. You could've come into consciousness as a baby in North Korean to spend life in prison starting at age 2 just easily as you came into consciousness in whichever part of the world country you were born. Every one of us should feel immense gratitude despite our individual situations because our first breath wasn't drawn inside North Korea

    • @soffa93
      @soffa93 Год назад +23

      no i couldn't

    • @SwingJake
      @SwingJake Год назад +25

      It really makes you consider the laws of Karma

    • @budwhite9591
      @budwhite9591 Год назад

      No. We just get to watch the USA turn into North Korea

    • @72dew
      @72dew Год назад +165

      @@soffa93 so long as north Koreans are having babies, those babies has to come into consciousness. And unfortunately they don't get to choose their parents any more than you did. So unless you had a some say in who your parents would be before coming into this world, then it's really up to chance where you'll first open your eyes

    • @mapetidye
      @mapetidye Год назад +24

      We decide everything before birth. We forget once we come out the womb.

  • @Mo-pt2ml
    @Mo-pt2ml Год назад +477

    I still can’t believe that a place like North Korea even exists. The level of dictatorship and mistreatment that millions have to go through everyday even in 2023 is crazy.

    • @phoenixofmetal
      @phoenixofmetal Год назад +31

      If it can happen there with no one doing a damn thing to stop them, it can happen here and there will be no one willing to step in and put a stop to it. There are absolutely people who want to bring this kind of authoritarian, mass surveillance state hell to other places.

    • @ratspew932
      @ratspew932 Год назад +27

      ​@@phoenixofmetalyes, it's happening in Russia rn. Not nearly as bad as NK right now but the government is definitely aiming for it

    • @iamdalibor
      @iamdalibor Год назад

      You better believe it heck there's still a population of humans that are still tribes people on the North Sentinel Island which is even more isolated then North Korea. NK at least has some technology unlike those tribes people on top of that they will kill and eat you

    • @eeg-rh7jv
      @eeg-rh7jv Год назад +3

      ​@@ratspew932it's everywhere around the world lmao, even in your country. Some nations are just more subtle about it

    • @TheGoodReverendSatan
      @TheGoodReverendSatan Год назад

      Boarder lined with garden hose with razor blades taped to it 😂😂😂 north korea is a joke

  • @Koum_Bets
    @Koum_Bets 3 месяца назад +4

    As a Laotian American I’m ashamed that Laos returned escapees back to N. Korea.

  • @socialanimalmedia
    @socialanimalmedia 4 месяца назад +578

    Can you imagine the terror that 2-year old has had to grow up with? At that age it’s frightening to lose your parents for a short period of time. Can’t imagine what it would be like to get sent to prison. On the plus side he probably didn’t even understand what was happening. Evil.

    • @TheAnswer70
      @TheAnswer70 3 месяца назад +65

      He probably won't even remember. He just will know he is being punished by the "sins" of his family. Extremely sad. For reading a book!!!

    • @breauxdose
      @breauxdose 3 месяца назад +3

      @@TheAnswer70Gods word.

    • @Xessa82
      @Xessa82 2 месяца назад +8

      ​@@TheAnswer70He definitely may remember this. At that age many people tend too remember traumatic events. My first memory I can remember was from when I was a year and a half. My father, who was a horrible man, punched my mother in the face while holding me and then smashed my music box my grandmother had made for me. I remember the whole thing and as an older child I brought it up to my mother one day and she was shocked that I remembered it so accurately. I have multiple memories between the ages of 1 and a half to 6 that all involve my father and are all horrible traumatic memories. My mother and grandparents never discussed these events or my father in front of me so these weren't things I just overheard and took on as memories. They were true memories. My first good memories begin when I was around age 4. At age 2, having something that traumatic happen that changed your whole life, he could definitely remember it. Such an awful thing for that child.

    • @TheAnswer70
      @TheAnswer70 2 месяца назад

      @@Xessa82 sorry that happened to you. I meant kids may not remember in general, some kids can't remember even but still live with the trauma...
      All kids deserve loving parents, but not all parents deserve kids...
      Look at it this way, you will be a better parent than your father. 💕

    • @thetruth5864
      @thetruth5864 2 месяца назад +3

      just imagine how African slaves were treated around the planet if you actually consider this to be horrible to you

  • @AxeIx
    @AxeIx 8 месяцев назад +1194

    my step dad in uni taught a man in Australia around 60 years old who escaped North Korea, he was so interested and had passion in everything he was always doing work. This shows how glad and happy they are to be out of the country and how much of a hell hole North Korea could have been. I wish I could have questioned the dude but it was 3 years ago.

    • @CeBme
      @CeBme 7 месяцев назад +6

      Wonder how's he doing 🤔 .... a job maybe a child with a gf ...

    • @CJOlin
      @CJOlin 7 месяцев назад

      So... Apparently you didn't go to "uni", hence the appearance that your comment was written by a 12 year old.

    • @xyp293
      @xyp293 6 месяцев назад +78

      ​@@CJOlin uni is common slang for university in Australia. And no one expects or cares about proper grammar in a youtube comment, no one's appreciating your pedantic insult.

    • @TheinternetArchaeologist
      @TheinternetArchaeologist 5 месяцев назад

      Work ethic isn't necessarily related to The state of north korea No need to go to propaganda tactics My dude

    • @portaldolphin13
      @portaldolphin13 5 месяцев назад +12

      @@CJOlin Did this comment achieve anything?

  • @tijankusacic8079
    @tijankusacic8079 Год назад +3056

    Dude, after watching this video, I don't think I will ever complain about my life ever again. I'm so lucky to be living in Netherlands and to have freedom. I'm so sorry for all those people who were born in North Korea without their choice. Newspaper, websites, no movies or tv shows, only information that's related to North Korea and not to the outside world is so sad. They all look like they've been brainwashed.

    • @striderzarnick
      @striderzarnick Год назад +123

      You're so lucky you're in the Netherlands. I'm still hoping to get out of my 3rd world country 😭😭

    • @iuvcalls8565
      @iuvcalls8565 Год назад +191

      @@striderzarnickLook at it this way, at the very least you have internet access, otherwise you wouldn’t have been able to write this comment. Thats STILL a step up from the average north korean.

    • @darkslothplants
      @darkslothplants Год назад +3

      Either brainwashed or full of fear

    • @tijankusacic8079
      @tijankusacic8079 Год назад +22

      I came from 3rd world country, I'm actually from Croatia. I used to live there for 21 years, I just moved here recently, 2 and a half years ago. It was my own choice, I wanted a better life conditions, but Croatia wasn't so bad either, just not enough opportunities for development of yourself. Especially after seeing this video.@@striderzarnick

    • @patrickbaumhahn3555
      @patrickbaumhahn3555 Год назад +73

      @@tijankusacic8079Croatia is a first world country wtf are you talking about?

  • @Leeummm83
    @Leeummm83 3 месяца назад +3

    It’s so difficult to imagine that a place like this is allowed to exist

  • @intreoo
    @intreoo Год назад +1378

    The Korean peninsula has such a crazy history that in a parallel universe, it'd be impossible to believe. A nation unified for centuries, suddenly split between the globe's foremost superpowers. One side developed into a derelict impoverished bastion of communism, headed by a single man, while the other developed into a cyberpunk dystopia of capitalism and technology, headed by several conglomerates. Unbelievable.

    • @ethanwmonster9075
      @ethanwmonster9075 Год назад +233

      the south may have it's flaws but the choice has been made effortless by just how crappy things are in the north.

    • @hechss
      @hechss Год назад +369

      Indeed, the South has A LOT of flaws that become evident as soon as you dig past the colorful KPOP and modern skyscrapers. Their society is messed up in very different ways. Still, there is no doubt where I would rather live.

    • @PeterLamin-bw5rs
      @PeterLamin-bw5rs Год назад +38

      ​@@ethanwmonster9075South Korea occupied by the US and pretending a democracy 😂😂😂😂

    • @Kromiball
      @Kromiball Год назад +40

      There's nothing as permanent as a temporary solution

    • @teemomilkov2929
      @teemomilkov2929 Год назад +2

      😢

  • @MercuryAi1
    @MercuryAi1 Год назад +196

    7:38 I hate to be the one to correct people, but Vietnam is actually not a country that deports North Korean Defectors to South Korea. Just in November 2019, Vietnam deported 14 North Korean defectors back to China, where they were sent back to North Korea.

    • @hedge-h0gs
      @hedge-h0gs Год назад +1

      Oh

    • @xymoriintus
      @xymoriintus Год назад +1

      The video says deport to South Korea not North

    • @MercuryAi1
      @MercuryAi1 Год назад +1

      @@xymoriintus Well, I hate to break it to you, but the video is wrong. They can’t always be 100% accurate. They’re humans, after all. You can search it up on Google if you can’t believe me.

    • @theflashgirl2057
      @theflashgirl2057 Год назад +22

      @@xymoriintus and the commenter is correcting it

    • @ProjectBadass360
      @ProjectBadass360 Год назад +1

      Bummer

  • @justin_lee3005
    @justin_lee3005 6 месяцев назад +1547

    Sending a baby to life in prison literally sounds like something out of the movie The Dictator.

    • @ProtoAlpha
      @ProtoAlpha 6 месяцев назад +12

      But we both know he wasn't that cruel

    • @NigerianCrusader
      @NigerianCrusader 5 месяцев назад +1

      NORTH KOREA WOULD NEVER DO THAT

    • @squid1313
      @squid1313 5 месяцев назад +85

      ​@@NigerianCrusaderno one's believing your bs propaganda. That baby most likely died in that prison. Tragic

    • @NigerianCrusader
      @NigerianCrusader 5 месяцев назад

      @@squid1313 IM SPEAKING THE TRUTH

    • @squid1313
      @squid1313 5 месяцев назад +20

      @@NigerianCrusader 😂

  • @MrNightmarekill
    @MrNightmarekill 3 месяца назад +2

    I hope the numbers recently are higher and they're being more secretive about it, to not raise suspicious of new tactics Prayge

  • @peacebuddha96
    @peacebuddha96 Год назад +594

    Preventing people from leaving a country is the most evil shit a country can do in my opinion. Every other crime against humanity a country does can be countered by people leaving in masses and try there luck some other place that accepts them in. Forcing people to stay gives them no option. I honestly don't get why north korea is still considered a state and not wild territory anyone can occupy.

    • @maksymisaiev1828
      @maksymisaiev1828 Год назад +59

      because of geopolitics. Also because of civilized world. Most of the current countries do geopolitics without conqueroring the land (last time of that in civilized world openly was done in WW2, not-openly by russia a couple of years after USSR collapse). By less developed worlds it was much more frequently (India\Pakistan, Somali, constant wat in Israel, etc.).
      But ok, let's assume that developed world decided to stop NK as a dictatorship "holy grail" place. Who would do that? America or NATO? Nah, won't happen. China is a bit of a bad enemy to play against, counting that such war will create hundreds of thousands dead bodies very easily. Asian countries? South Korea won't attack own people, they are not russia. Japan won't do that as a sideeffect of WW2. China won't do that, because why? It won't give benefits to China (trading is more profitable than investment in dead area), also it will involve war wtih South Korea, which is not good too. Russia is not interested in this small piece of land, neither it can have war at all there (see how they suck in Ukraine, while being :second army in the world". Only options are for less developed countries (for them it may be free land and possibiltiy to spread influence), but most of such countries are too far from NK.
      In short, even if you say that NK is a wild zone and can be taken by many countries, nobody will do that. Unless we develop army of iron men type droids (a lot of armoury, completely automatic, good AI to distinguish civilian from military, precise shots to destroy military and not bomb areas, etc.), it just won't happen.

    • @honeybutterchipslol
      @honeybutterchipslol Год назад +4

      ​@@maksymisaiev1828I take it back he's not smart

    • @jp9519
      @jp9519 Год назад +4

      Ukraine did the same thing

    • @maksymisaiev1828
      @maksymisaiev1828 Год назад +4

      @@jp9519 Ukraine did what thing? Clarify

    • @arihantvyas6271
      @arihantvyas6271 Год назад +10

      ​@@maksymisaiev1828India did not conquer any land recently. The last time India captured a different country's land was in 1971 , when it had taken control over East Pakistan and declared it as an independent country called Bangladesh. If you are talking about the most recent war between India and Pakistan, then I must tell you , the "developed" countries have fought wars more recently than India/ Pakistan.
      Especially the US , which has a habit of invading other countries every now and then. Therefore I don't know on what basis you are claiming that your "civilized" and "developed" countries haven't captured any land since WW II.

  • @xenomorphbiologist-xx1214
    @xenomorphbiologist-xx1214 Год назад +822

    As far as I can tell, the only remaining viable way to leave North Korea is to go by sea, but more specifically from the East Coast as you will end in Japan instead of China if you drift too far. You’re still very likely to be caught by their navy or drown or something but it is still possible and probably the safest move at this point

    • @therealspeedwagon1451
      @therealspeedwagon1451 Год назад +235

      And even that is very hard. For one you have to simply be lucky that you and your family live on the shoreline and on the right side. Another thing is that you have to have a boat, which very few North Koreans have. You have to be very fortunate that you live in the right place and that your family has been in the fishing industry for a very long time.

    • @Lohanujuan
      @Lohanujuan Год назад +103

      Don’t the straights between Japan and China have crazy currents between them?

    • @Novastar.SaberCombat
      @Novastar.SaberCombat Год назад +60

      Imagine when taking one's own life GREATLY, significantly outweighs the idea of existing. The concept of "pursuing one's dreams" doesn't exist. Certain emotions are meaningless as well--things like happiness, fulfillment, hope, and true love.
      Sad. 😓

    • @ObliviousMonk
      @ObliviousMonk Год назад +113

      nothing says safe like riding a dinghy boat through the rough tides of sea and a whole-ass navy looking for you

    • @jasonlee0290
      @jasonlee0290 Год назад +119

      As a Korean, I've never ever heard of any successful escape attempts on the Sea of Japan. North Korean navy patrol those waters regularly and even used several routes to abduct Japanese citizens off the west coast of Japan.

  • @yurironoue5888
    @yurironoue5888 Год назад +6012

    The fact that this country is allowed to exist is a tragedy.

    • @GameKidsNotSoDaily
      @GameKidsNotSoDaily Год назад +70

      ikr

    • @van3158
      @van3158 Год назад +173

      Get on then Rambo!

    • @blenderbanana
      @blenderbanana Год назад

      North Korea is holding South Korea and Japan hostage.

    • @esobed1
      @esobed1 Год назад +412

      ​​@simon6556 not just the nukes. The amount of conventional rocket artillery pointed at Seoul is ridiculous.
      Very confident that if South Korea was attacked by the North that they would be very successful in defeating any invasion attempt. Also confident that with a coalition of Pacific nations along with the non-intervention of China( highly unlikely) that North Korea could be successfully liberated.
      Both of these options would cause major destruction and disruption of global economy... so North Korea is tolerated, unfortunately.

    • @Racko.
      @Racko. Год назад

      No Surprise, it just sounds like the Kim Regime is paranoid of losing his grip on the nation knowing full well its a shithole nobody truly wants to be in

  • @RitwikAnand-z4l
    @RitwikAnand-z4l 23 дня назад +2

    How to escape: 1 be in a state with shoreline 2 make a makeshift swomming mask 3 go to the shore at night and jump in it and be under the water 4 swim 200 KILOMETERS outside the demilitariarised zone to south korea and enjoy ur new life!

    • @Youtubecrystal
      @Youtubecrystal День назад

      patrol, need food, water and you need to swim really good

  • @illuzions1615
    @illuzions1615 8 месяцев назад +2969

    The sad part is we only saw the numbers for the successful detectors. We have no idea how many have perished trying to escape. If I had to guess it may be in the hundreds of thousands.

    • @RebrnKing
      @RebrnKing 7 месяцев назад +148

      That’s a thought I had as well, just wonder how many attempts were made. There was a successful North Korean girl who did escaped in 2007 that was on the Shawn Ryan show channel her name is Yeonmi park. All I can say is how absolutely absurd, insane & horrific that place. Makes me thankful to be an American

    • @CollectorsCorner777
      @CollectorsCorner777 7 месяцев назад +29

      It's most definitely not that many. Maybe just thousands.

    • @officialnoonon
      @officialnoonon 7 месяцев назад +72

      ​@@CollectorsCorner777 Whether it's hundreds of thousands or thousands, the latter are still enough to fill an entire football stadium. Imagine that. I believe the numbers could be in the middle, therefore tens of thousands, because North Korea isn't a particularly big country and many have starved to death already or have been executed. On second thought you might be closer to the truth, but please don't use the word "just" while describing genocide.

    • @NGHeartSilver
      @NGHeartSilver 6 месяцев назад +3

      even millions

    • @NoProblem-IAmMeYouAreYou
      @NoProblem-IAmMeYouAreYou 6 месяцев назад +16

      ​@@RebrnKingI read her first book, absolutely heartbreaking and disgusting how badly north Koreans are treated by Kim regime and how china treats the escaped north Koreans

  • @Owen_loves_Butters
    @Owen_loves_Butters Год назад +1571

    The saddest part for me about North Korea is the complete hopelessness of it. At least with other matters, you can blame people for being complacent. It doesn't make it any less upsetting, but it at least gives the *illusion* of control, like as if my endless complaining online will change anything. But there's quite literally nothing we can do about North Korea without having millions of people vaporized.

    • @mirandalynch9065
      @mirandalynch9065 Год назад +48

      That's what they thought about the Soviet Union, and it collapses with no actual war. Stay hopeful

    • @nikkolyn1122
      @nikkolyn1122 Год назад

      Instead of soldiers like the kids at my sons school being targeted, how about nearly hopeless but yet ready to give something of worth to this out of control situation. I will offer my life as a decoy. We need a country of decoys that NK can go ahead and nuke. Ofc it doesnt work that way. But think outside the box. They’re generations of lost and hopeless
      Souls that would infinitely gladly prefer to give their own lives than watch their children be recruited for the racket of endless war. Let’s end this shit

    • @maksymisaiev1828
      @maksymisaiev1828 Год назад +150

      @@mirandalynch9065 that is not correct. With the Soviet Union, people still travelled outside, they had influence from the world, etc. USSR would cease to exist anyway, as it wasn't such a dictatorship land already in 80th. This is not the case for NK. China is now more like USSR of 50-60th. NK is more like Stalin Area. It will need complete random accident to change the situation (death of whole leader lineage). And even then it may not work, as regime, while focused on one person, is based on a group of people. You need to remove whole group of people in some way (create internal conflict, assassination, jealous, corruption, etc.) and than the chance will appear. But chance is one thing, people's movement is other. Even if regime collapses, most people will be in vacuum and don't know what to do next (that is why communism is dangerous - you stop to think), which will lead to easy new dictatorship.

    • @whizkeysh0t
      @whizkeysh0t Год назад

      ​@@maksymisaiev1828 the communism comment was unnecessary considering how many people in the US are brainwashed by extreme hateful propaganda, BUT! I'll give it to you, you make a good damn point.

    • @massgunner4152
      @massgunner4152 Год назад +19

      ​@@mirandalynch9065 the problem is that the soviets themselves didn't vanish during the collapse, they consolidated their power on Russian and their renmants are trying to restart the union.

  • @arminkrivicic7656
    @arminkrivicic7656 Год назад +802

    Every time I watch a video about North Korea, I learn something new about that horror of a country and feel disgusted over the fact that somebody is doing such things to those poor people. I feel sorry for also the people in Africa or wherever where the famine is present, but I think those people can be much more happier as they have freedom, they don't need to fear they will go to prison or get executed for just moving around the country, or watch something on a mobile phone, or read a freaking book... Very very sad 😢

    • @johnhoney5089
      @johnhoney5089 Год назад +66

      Depends. In the worst African countries similar losses of freedom have also occurred, in addition to child slavery.

    • @sutishati9503
      @sutishati9503 Год назад +60

      ​@@leaveleague3491Are you going to repeat this over again by spamming the same thing on other comment sections and replying the exact line?

    • @Red_Lion2000
      @Red_Lion2000 Год назад

      Ah yes, these African countries exploited by the western nations who you think are so much better than North Korea.
      How many countries have NK invaded or exploited in the last 70 years? America have invaded over 40, lol.

    • @sixten8493
      @sixten8493 Год назад +10

      @@leaveleague3491 Lol trol

    • @leaveleague3491
      @leaveleague3491 Год назад +1

      @@sixten8493 speaking facts is troll?

  • @brianvalentas1121
    @brianvalentas1121 Месяц назад +2

    I was stationed in south korea for three years as air defense. There's a little red book inside our "engagement control station", soldiers are allowed to read it if you have a security clearance. It is the USA expectations if we go to war with NK. NK also does a lot more provoking than anyone knows.