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On October 12 2011 21:39 Velr wrote:Show nested quote +On October 12 2011 16:41 marttorn wrote: Ahh I've been wanting to go to North Korea for a long time. It's easier said than done I can imagine. 5/5 A guided tour to North Korea is nothing really "hard/difficult" for most europeans? At least my "lonely planet" said so and tehse are normally right?
You are right. It is nothing hard to do as long as you have the money! It costs a ton though.
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Zurich15306 Posts
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Watch a show on some people traveling there with hidden cameras, seems very ominous from what I know of it, hopefully one day that regime will fall and the North can open up and enter the "world stage". Nice pictures/blog. 5/5
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The propaganda is scary.. and alarming if you ask me. Reminds me:
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Wowww. I'm going to the border this Friday, and I'm more excited than ever now.
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On October 12 2011 18:36 DNB wrote:Hello, as a beginner Korean learner myself, I managed to translate some of the propaganda posters and just thought to share a few of them — The others I could not fully read due to the text extending out of the photo or just small font. 위대한 어머니당에 최대의 영광을! Literally: The biggest honor for the great Labor Party! 일심단결을 더욱 강화하자! Let's keep strengthening our unity!1st poster (second line): 세계적인 도시로 훌륭히 꾸리자! Lit: Let's gloriously pack up for the global city (Not sure about the first line since I could not translate 평잉) 2nd poster: 혁명의 수뇌부(를/들) 중심으로 천만군인이 일심단결하자! This one was more difficult, literally something along the lines of: Let's unify our tens of millions of people by the very heart of our revolutionary leading members of the government!I tried translating posters 3 and 4 but they came off as too vague and 5th was too small to read clearly. Maybe someone fluent in Korean can clarify. Edit: Also a question, what kind of a job are you engaging in in China, and how did you get it?
Thanks for those man, I'd no idea what they were saying!
To answer your question. I'm teaching English to primary students as well as a few High School classes. I got the job by googling, it is actually really easy. They need a lot of foreign teachers here; I basically get job offers ever month...
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On October 12 2011 23:04 mTw|NarutO wrote: The propaganda is scary.. and alarming if you ask me. Reminds me:
I think we had more style
/joke
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I have always wanted to visit North-Korea atleast once.
On the other hand i personally feel kinda uneasy paying one of the worst governments in the world for the privilige. Also would be kinda disturbing to put your fate in the hands of North-Koreans. Ofcourse they would never do anything serious against tourists because of the outrage it could spark and how pointless if would be for them to do something like that, but still.
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Was it a guided tour (i.e. you were shown what you were supposed to see) or was it more of a free-for-all tour?
Anyway, people in PY are extremely well off comparative to other parts of North Korea.
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On October 13 2011 00:47 Cambium wrote: Was it a guided tour (i.e. you were shown what you were supposed to see) or was it more of a free-for-all tour?
Anyway, people in PY are extremely well off comparative to other parts of North Korea. It was guided. There is no other way to travel in North Korea.
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cool pics. Did you ask any questions when you were on the tour or did you just observe? I'd probably ask open ended questions a few times but also be scared shitless asking them.
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Granny holding an AK-47
Standard
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On October 13 2011 10:11 SpoR wrote: cool pics. Did you ask any questions when you were on the tour or did you just observe? I'd probably ask open ended questions a few times but also be scared shitless asking them. Yeh I asked a ton of questions. I made sure never to argue though.
I asked things like "Why can't the people use Internet?", "Why can't we travel freely?", "Why do you have nuclear capability?"
All answers were always vague and had something to do with protecting the North Korean population.
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On October 12 2011 18:12 Synwave wrote: Really curious what that last photo is of with all the boomboxes. A class of some sort but if so why the gear?
Neat pictures and a tiny little window into N. Korea, thank you for this. It's like a study hall for music majors.
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On October 13 2011 10:41 borny wrote:Show nested quote +On October 13 2011 10:11 SpoR wrote: cool pics. Did you ask any questions when you were on the tour or did you just observe? I'd probably ask open ended questions a few times but also be scared shitless asking them. Yeh I asked a ton of questions. I made sure never to argue though. I asked things like "Why can't the people use Internet?", "Why can't we travel freely?", "Why do you have nuclear capability?" All answers were always vague and had something to do with protecting the North Korean population.
Tbh, 'why do you have nuclear capability' is a really dumb question... Uh, cuz it's the world's strongest deterrent?
Just thought that was random... oo!
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Beautiful and stunning. Thank you for risking safety to bring your trip pictures to us.
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On October 13 2011 11:37 Xeris wrote:Show nested quote +On October 13 2011 10:41 borny wrote:On October 13 2011 10:11 SpoR wrote: cool pics. Did you ask any questions when you were on the tour or did you just observe? I'd probably ask open ended questions a few times but also be scared shitless asking them. Yeh I asked a ton of questions. I made sure never to argue though. I asked things like "Why can't the people use Internet?", "Why can't we travel freely?", "Why do you have nuclear capability?" All answers were always vague and had something to do with protecting the North Korean population. Tbh, 'why do you have nuclear capability' is a really dumb question... Uh, cuz it's the world's strongest deterrent? Just thought that was random... oo! yeh obviously I didn't phrase my question like that. I asked why they put so much effort and resources into nuclear development rather than trying to improve the living standards of the North Korean people or something like that. It was more a discussion (not argument) rather than a Q&A thing
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On October 12 2011 23:51 borny wrote:Show nested quote +On October 12 2011 18:36 DNB wrote:Hello, as a beginner Korean learner myself, I managed to translate some of the propaganda posters and just thought to share a few of them — The others I could not fully read due to the text extending out of the photo or just small font. 위대한 어머니당에 최대의 영광을! Literally: The biggest honor for the great Labor Party! 일심단결을 더욱 강화하자! Let's keep strengthening our unity!1st poster (second line): 세계적인 도시로 훌륭히 꾸리자! Lit: Let's gloriously pack up for the global city (Not sure about the first line since I could not translate 평잉) 2nd poster: 혁명의 수뇌부(를/들) 중심으로 천만군인이 일심단결하자! This one was more difficult, literally something along the lines of: Let's unify our tens of millions of people by the very heart of our revolutionary leading members of the government!I tried translating posters 3 and 4 but they came off as too vague and 5th was too small to read clearly. Maybe someone fluent in Korean can clarify. Edit: Also a question, what kind of a job are you engaging in in China, and how did you get it? Thanks for those man, I'd no idea what they were saying! To answer your question. I'm teaching English to primary students as well as a few High School classes. I got the job by googling, it is actually really easy. They need a lot of foreign teachers here; I basically get job offers ever month...
Interesting. I'm also curious to hear what agency you got through with, and where you teach...
Thanks
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This is pretty sweet. I wish I could visit my homeland someday. Too bad my family left it for a better life during the Korean War. I miss my country! The buildings look nice in the pics, the people too. I love the idea that they could welcome anybody, even an American like me.
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