jimnyc
06-12-2018, 03:30 PM
I'm confident that Trump speaks of him being funny, and he can "trust" him, and I'm sure this is all part of negotiations, to not piss off the fat guy.
NK's records on the human rights issue is downright filthy. But I'm also confident, that while pushing for the denuking and inspections, that right now may not be the time to push him on this one as well.
It sure would be nice to see them come around fully & stop with this stuff, and maybe down the road, but I don't see it happening anytime soon. Again, if word fully gets out about other places, SK and how they live & other particulars, then there may be an uprising of sorts. I don't think that Kim wants to relent power or do anything that may give the citizens over there pause. I still think he and his folks will want full stomping control over everyone.
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North Korea’s Chamber of Horrors: Oppression, Slavery, and Starvation
President Donald Trump praised North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un as a “funny guy” who “loves his people” on Tuesday after concluding his summit with Kim. Kim definitely has a funny way of demonstrating that love, because North Koreans are the most abused people on Earth, and that is definitely not an easy title to win.
Trump said that human rights were discussed during the summit, but the discussion was focused on denuclearization “90 percent of the time.” It would be interesting to know exactly what Trump said about humanitarian issues and how Kim responded.
For example, did Trump bring up North Korea’s hideous prison camps? They have been compared to Nazi concentration camps by people who survived Nazi concentration camps.
The U.S. State Department published a report last September describing North Korean prisoners as “walking skeletons” who are starved, beaten, and sexually abused.
Entire families disappear into the camps and die from the brutal conditions if they are not executed first. There are people who spend their entire lives in North Korean prisons, having been incarcerated as children – or even unborn children – because multiple generations of an entire family are punished for the “crimes” of individual family members. Needless to say, due process is a joke. Few features of North Korea’s judicial system meet international standards for individual rights and basic humanity.
Rest - http://www.breitbart.com/national-security/2018/06/12/north-koreas-chamber-horrors-oppression-slavery-starvation/
NK's records on the human rights issue is downright filthy. But I'm also confident, that while pushing for the denuking and inspections, that right now may not be the time to push him on this one as well.
It sure would be nice to see them come around fully & stop with this stuff, and maybe down the road, but I don't see it happening anytime soon. Again, if word fully gets out about other places, SK and how they live & other particulars, then there may be an uprising of sorts. I don't think that Kim wants to relent power or do anything that may give the citizens over there pause. I still think he and his folks will want full stomping control over everyone.
---
North Korea’s Chamber of Horrors: Oppression, Slavery, and Starvation
President Donald Trump praised North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un as a “funny guy” who “loves his people” on Tuesday after concluding his summit with Kim. Kim definitely has a funny way of demonstrating that love, because North Koreans are the most abused people on Earth, and that is definitely not an easy title to win.
Trump said that human rights were discussed during the summit, but the discussion was focused on denuclearization “90 percent of the time.” It would be interesting to know exactly what Trump said about humanitarian issues and how Kim responded.
For example, did Trump bring up North Korea’s hideous prison camps? They have been compared to Nazi concentration camps by people who survived Nazi concentration camps.
The U.S. State Department published a report last September describing North Korean prisoners as “walking skeletons” who are starved, beaten, and sexually abused.
Entire families disappear into the camps and die from the brutal conditions if they are not executed first. There are people who spend their entire lives in North Korean prisons, having been incarcerated as children – or even unborn children – because multiple generations of an entire family are punished for the “crimes” of individual family members. Needless to say, due process is a joke. Few features of North Korea’s judicial system meet international standards for individual rights and basic humanity.
Rest - http://www.breitbart.com/national-security/2018/06/12/north-koreas-chamber-horrors-oppression-slavery-starvation/