North Korea’s government is a communist states and one man dictatorship, meaning that only the government and National rule the people and make and interpret laws among the people. Property rights are not guaranteed. Almost all property belongs to the state. Modern judicial system doesn’t exist, forcing Corruption in government, security, and military. The ruling Workers’ Party, the Korean People’s Army, and members of the cabinet run companies that compete to earn foreign exchange and trade.…
The heart breaking punishment and imprisonment that people in the North Korean prison camps are suffering is the most inhumane thing we have seen since Hitler tried to annihilate the entire Jewish race. Also, this is similar to when the white race tried whipping every last breathe out of the African American population during slavery in the antebellum South. Camp 14, as well as all prison camps, must be stopped for good as it is very similar to slavery in the antebellum South that happened long ago.…
In a communist economy, the whole market is controlled by the government in order to meet the people’s needs. Generally, the government decides what to produce, and try to produce only what and how much the people need. With the government in control, everyone is guaranteed the necessities for survival, such as employment, good education, and free healthcare (Doc B). This ensuring aspect gets rid of the worries of the people, such as being unemployed and not having social security (Doc F). Not one person has something more or better than another, so it creates true equality among the people. If one person receives up to a 5th grade education, so will everyone else. Communism “strips [the people] of their natural character” and eliminates the concepts of jealousy and competition (Doc E). This government-controlled market also means that the government can decide how much of each necessity the people are allowed to receive. Realistically, the government does not provide enough of anything for their people and use their hungry and uneducated population to their advantage. In North Korea, most families work on collective farms, but the profit that they produce all goes to the government. If they are lucky, they will get a very small return for their work (Doc C). Also, since everyone is required to live similar life styles, if not exact, there is no individuality, no bravery, and no creativity to help the…
North Korea is ruled by leader Kim Jong-Un, this government is so harsh that they do not allow people to experience the outside world. Experts illustrate, “The North Korean government systematically denies basic freedoms in the country and uses detention in labor prison camps to ensure fear of opposing the government” ("North Korea: Kim Jong-Un"). Civilians in this country do not have access to simple rights like browsing the Internet and going to college. The government does not want people to know what is going on in the outside world. They want the people to think whatever is going on in their country is the correct thing. North Korea has change the way away living through its government, equivalently Bradbury constructs a horrid government in the book’s futuristic world. The government prevents everyday activities, "'Do you ever read any of the books you burn?' He laughed. 'That's against the law!'"(Bradbury 5). The government banned books so people would not have any knowledge about outside things and stuff about the past. People in the society are brainwashed by the government. Another example of isolation, "'But cars started rushing so quickly they had to stretch the advertising out so it would last'"(Bradbury 7). Many privileges in this futuristic setting are stolen from humans so they use little brain power and cannot think about what…
Through public executions, prison camps, and famine, citizens of North Korea, under the Kim family regime, have suffered in horrific ways. However, in 1994, after the death of Kim II-sung, the state’s leader since its establishment in 1948, there was no uprising or rebellion (Kim 2017). The misguided citizens had lived their whole lives believing that their government was perfect, leaving no inclination to revolt after the death of their ruler- only grief. The totalitarian government of North Korea today, under the ruling of the supreme leader, Kim Jong-un, closely resembles the government in Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451. Published in 1953, the novel portrays a government that controls and manipulates its population through the banning of…
In North Korea there are many things that the people have to go through being under the dictatorship of Kim Jong Un. Un is a very powerful man that many people fear, he doesn't treat his people well. In north korea tvs are put in your house and can't be turned off, there is no social media or tv that isn't ran by the government. Even though Kim is a powerful leader he is not a nice man, he uses nukes to threaten, he oppresses his people, and uses his power to execute people for no reason. When he does get the people to agree with him or do what he wants he's makes them scared he's uses fear as a tactic.…
The war in Korea has affected North Korea’s economy today as well as the human rights of its citizens.…
Many people don’t realize how lucky we, as Americans are to live in such a great country. We have the right to vote, hold office and even to protect ourselves. Many would call these rights necessities, but in some countries they aren’t as fortunate enough to have these liberties and have a Republic system of government. Throughout history, there have been multiple countries that have ruled with the totalitarian style of government. Soviet Russia, Nazi Germany and Facist Spain could all prove this with their passed methods of censoring the public and intruding on their everyday lives. Even now, in North Korea, the country’s people barely have minds of their own. Since reforms placed by Kim Il-Sung and the late Kim Jong Il, citizens have the lowest ranking in rights of any country ever. The North Korean Government has censored news, blocked access to YouTube, Google or any type of social media websites and no one is permitted to leave or come into the country. A government like this is scary to think about, but far worse have been predicted in the past through literature. The power of a totalitarian government is truly displayed through 1984 by George Orwell where the theme of showing full governmental control by using whatever means necessary to convert an anarchists mind and exposing one’s fears as an advantage of power.…
As Americans, we live with a dominant economic structure and a continuous chain of democratic power; therefore, our country has a privileged and a developed economic system in comparison to numerous other countries. Each citizen of the United States has freedoms and rights—many people take for granted—which our nation’s regime has created. North Korea and Oceania—a fictional country in the book, 1984 by George Orwell—are both irreconcilable countries compared to America, and are each a totalitarian society. Both nations have extremely strict rules which many Americans would find highly concerning and may be absurd. A dystopian country, Oceania --in George Orwell’s book 1984-- portrays a similar society to North Korea’s which entails an overpowering regime like structure that…
The entire government system is corrupted due to the overwhelming power of the reigning dictator, Kim Jong-Un. In a sense, he is the Big Brother of North Korea--he sees all and all must obey. Resembling the methods of the Party, dissent is limited through the restriction of information and constant threat of death if they act against the views of the DPRK. Dissent in North Korea is mainly based on political criticisms such as anti-DPRK propaganda or failure to adhere to DPRK’s beliefs. This brutality is especially shown within North Korea’s hidden labor camps. One account from a escaped North Korean defector, Shin Dong-hyuk, explains the atrocities faced in the camps: “Shin and his mother lived in the best prisoner quarters Camp 14 had to offer: a ‘model village’...There were no beds, chairs, or tables. There was no running water. No bath or shower...About thirty families shared a well for drinking water” (Harden 15). This excerpt from his biography, Escape From Camp 14: One Man's Remarkable Odyssey from North Korea to Freedom in the West, shows the inhumane conditions within the camps. The camps itself are human rights violations, but with the addition of torture and cruel punishments it makes it an even bigger offense. Being sent to the internment camps or, as it was first publicly noted as “reform through labor”, is possible for even the smallest of crimes…
When I finished reading the book “Escape from Camp 14” by Blaine Harden, I realized that there were so many serious problems we should have known about the circumstance of the North Korea. It was actually much more horrible than I expected. What I have seen through this book was not only Shin’s awful situation but also the tragic relationship between Shin and his parents because of hunger, education and dehumanization.…
From Hitler's election to power in January 1933, Nazi Germany although exhibiting totalitarian elements lacked some required factors to characterize it fully as a totalitarian state. George Orwell suggested that totalitarianism is (1984, introduction) "the ability for a political system or society where the individual does not exist, a single party controls every aspect of life." Paramount to the classification of a state as totalitarian is the oppression of its people and the lack of their patriotism caused by the resentment and anger they harbor towards their dictator. Rather it was through populism gained through continued success that Hitler governed Germany. A question is raised as to the extent that the Nazi government conformed to a totalitarian state and an example of this dispute arises with the structuralists criticism of the interpretation of the intentionalists. Structuralists, notably Ian Kershaw, criticize the internationalists emphasis on the form the society took rather than its content. Intentionalists, such as Alan Bullock, focus on the image presented by the Nazis. With respect to both these arguments it would be further incorrect to describe Nazi Germany as fully totalitarian as it does not fulfill sufficient criteria according to the academic interpretation of Carl Friederich. Thus Nazi Germany cannot be labeled a totalitarian state in the period 1933-1942.…
There are multiple accounts of North Korea treating their citizens poorly. In the film, “Inside North Korea”, it…
Currently the world faces the greatest threat mankind has ever seen, a zombie apocalypse. In the streets of cities, states, and countries, people are being savagely butchered as infected people spread the epidemic across the land. Crippling the world with a disaster beyond anything that mankind has dealt with before. Deciding on the best course of action boils down to either forming a republic or totalitarian state. The many voices of a republic leads to inaction due to so many decision makers is too slow and weak in a crisis to effectively deal with this world crisis with its lack of control and direction. Delays and indecision made this catastrophe grow worse when quick action was needed to prevent such needless loss. Immediate action to…
“The Janjaweed are the armed militia supported by the Sudanese Government to carry out the genocide, alongside and independent of, the Sudanese Army,” according to Darfur: The Basics. The North Koreans are different, however. “Previous UN reports and resolutions have concentrated on nine patterns of human rights violation: violation of the right of food; torture and other cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment; arbitrary detention as a form of persecution; violations of human rights associated with the prison camps; discrimination particularly targeting women, children, people living with disabilities, repatriated refugees, and those disfavored by the government; extensive violation of freedom and other related freedoms, violation of the right to life, public executions, and the abusive application of the death penalty; restrictions on freedom of movement and abuse of repatriated defectors; and enforced disappearances, including the abductions of foreign nationals.” This is in relation to the article The Forgotten Genocide: North Korea’s Prison State. The killing in North Korea is being done by the government and national military, not a group that has been organized for the purpose of murdering people, even though it is just as…