For instance, North Korea employs the political theory of communism, but the United Kingdom has endorses capitalism. These mindsets are indicative of what both their countries are. It is the classic juxtaposition between an all controlling government that does what one man chooses versus a society where all people have say in what goes on in their country with the rulers being the people. This holds true for their legal systems as well, North Korea has strict laws forbidding many things that we hold dearly in our United States constitution that we could not think about living without. Rights such as freedoms of speech, freedoms of press, and even the freedoms to leave are prohibited in North Korea. The United Kingdom is the complete opposite where all these rights are granted and respected above all else. Here in America we treasure those privileges and tend to hold ideals similar to a capitalist, market, judicial Great Britain rather than a communist, controlled, inequitable North …show more content…
This can make people more open political unjust as the people can be blinded by the love of their country, an example would be Nazi Germany and their crimes committed as they were allowed by the citizens due to many factors, including nationalism. Great Britain and Korea also share a trend of nepotism when it comes to the people in power, and while the king and queen of Britain are fruitless title, it still shines a light on their past where the kings and queens were chosen by blood as they are in North Korea today. Overall, political systems can carve out reality as we know it as our lives are morphed by where we reside. Looking at these two nations proves that systematically countries across the world are diverse with their administrations, legislations, and government differing in all ways, effecting whoever inhabits that