North Korea says supreme leader Kim Jong Il has died

Status
Not open for further replies.
I hope you're joking... :P

Apparently there are some Koreans panicking, but I don't think it means the cease fire is over.

My brother has lived in Seoul for years as an English teacher, and he's told me that as a whole Americans are more scared of/worried about North Korea than South Koreans are.
 
SaQGL.jpg
 
My brother has lived in Seoul for years as an English teacher, and he's told me that as a whole Americans are more scared of/worried about North Korea than South Koreans are.

Yeah, NK doesn't really have the means to do anything with their large (but hungry, and poorly equipped) military. They don't even have the technology to actually deliver a nuke.
 
I'm updating the OP. Help me, GAF

OP:

No More Dear Leader: Kim Jong-il is dead.

kim-jong-il-smiling.jpg


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-16239693

North Korean leader Kim Jong-il has died, state-run TV has announced.

His death was announced in an emotional statement read out on national television.

The announcer, wearing black, said he had died on Saturday of physical and mental over-work. Kim Jong-il was 69 and believed to have suffered ill health for many years.

The BBC's Lucy Williamson in Seoul says his death will cause huge shock waves across North Korea.

His son Kim Jong-un has been suggested as a likely successor although nothing has yet been announced in the highly secretive state.

Kim Jong-il is finally dead, after having ruled North Korea with an irongrip since 1985.
Time will only tell if the next leader will handle the situation in North Korea better.
 
Somehow, I don't think he'll have as much control as the previous Kims. That power over people can't stay constant forever.
Not forever, but the overwhelming majority of North Koreans don't have any (truthful) concept of the outside world. There can't be an uprising with no context.
 
This is now the time if any for the people of NK to revolt if they feel it in themselves to do so. I really hope it happens so they can be free, but perhaps many don't even know what it's like to live a life beyond totalitarianism.
 
My brother has lived in Seoul for years as an English teacher, and he's told me that as a whole Americans are more scared of/worried about North Korea than South Koreans are.

Yeah, I remember hearing as much from friends in Korea back when the last OMG GUYS THEY'RE TESTING MISSILES thing was going down.
 
Yeah, so like I was saying to my roomate: the current power structure is still entrenched, but the cult of personality around him was so incredibly strong that we'll see what it does to their national psyche.
 
Good. Now hopefully his son has better senses.

If he's interested in self preservation, he'll just keep oppressing his people collecting aid checks from the other industrialized nations too worried about backlash to actually put any kind of pressure on North Korea.
 
Now that I think about it I wish Hitchens lived long enough to see this day, this might've even made him happier than the death of Bin Laden.
 
Kim Jong-un at 18: "We are here, playing basketball, riding horses, riding Jet Skis, having fun together. But what of the lives of the average people?"
 
Yeah, so like I was saying to my roomate: the current power structure is still entrenched, but the cult of personality around him was so incredibly strong that we'll see what it does to their national psyche.

Shouldn't be any different that when his father died, unless it takes three generations of successive leadership and oppressive regimes to finally upset the balance in the DPRK.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom