North Korean top general purged — more

Famine killed 10% of the country in the 90s, if that didn’t break the system I doubt grinding poverty will.

I have no idea what’ll break the system, but I doubt ‘the people’ (meaning the bottom 90%) will be the cause seeing how terrorized, disorganized and brainwashed they seem to be. That is my opinion though. When the system does fall it will probably fall because the elites (not the super elite, but the endless thousands of military, business and political elite) realize their lives will be better under reform and start allowing more behavior opposed by central leadership.

Starving your people has always caused problems historically. And killing off the people around you just tells their replacements that they’re life expectancy is at the pleasure of the King.

Or there will be a military coup.

I honestly don’t understand what point you’re trying to make. You started out claiming that the lack of streetlights would cause a revolt. Now you’re claiming that it is starvation that will. Neither has.

In re killing off the people around you: please look at the history of young/minority heirs in a country with a tradition of hereditary leadership. Seriously. In general, either the heir or the regent gets killed.

I guess that answers iLemming’s question – his “different dreams” were the family-friendly kind, not the “wet” kind.

Truly, North Korea has a dynasty that just cries out for a new Suetonius.

The street lighting is just a visual example of the severity of the money shortage. That should be obvious.

History is full of rebellions that are fed by the starving masses and delivered by a military coup.

Reading that statement, I noticed a couple of things. First, the statement referred to “the peerlessly great men of Mt. Paektu.” Is the propaganda machine spreading the BS that the current dictator has also been born on “the sacred mountain” like the machine says KJI was (when, in fact, he was born in Russia)?

Next, the propagandists seem to be quite fond of adjectives, the more the better. Maybe they could jack up the cash flow into the country by turning their hands to romance novels.

Imagine if your meetings at work were like that.

The scariest part about the announcement is that one of his crimes was half-heartedly clapping and “unwillingly” standing up for the ovation when Kim Jong-Un was “elected” to lead the country. This is why you always see such unbelievable displays of affection, tears, cheers, etc, toward these leaders from their people. Because if you don’t clap, cheer, or cry hard enough when it’s expected of you, you’ve committed a crime against the state and will be under suspicion for treason.

:rolleyes:
At least they tried to identify actual crimes and had a trial, no matter how much of a show. The US on the other hand, justperfers to kill some without such niceties.

The executions will continue until morale improves!

Who he obviously wasn’t willing to listen to in the first place, so no real change there.

“I didn’t get a harrumph outta that guy!”

“You watch your ass!”

An old adage comes to mind
‘Wonderful things happen when you plant the seeds of discontent in a garden of arseholes’.
Couldn’t happen to a nicer regime, literally,
Peter

They are.

Regards,
Shodan

Right now, he looks rather like the baddest snake in the pit.

Yup. As Frank so ably pointed out, this is pretty much inevitable. The New Boss always marginalizes anyone tied to the Old Boss. Sometimes that comes with the system–in the US, the Cabinet changes with a new administration (and the very few exceptions are newsworthy), and that shakeup affects civil servants as well. In a more, um, force-oriented regime like NK, it comes with imprisonment and execution. But it’s always about getting rid of the old guys to consolidate power.

I am not currently finding the long full text of the official North Korean English language news story anywhere on the web. That’s because the http://www.kcna.kp (Korean Central News Agency) .kp domain web site is down. And their other web site, http://www.kcna.co.jp/, which uses Japan’s domain, is not yet reporting the execution.

As for the Western web sites linked on this thread, they feature long pieces of the news story, but leave out most of Jang’s confession.

And even when www.kcna.kp was up, there was no permalink to the story. And the button that gets you the second half of the story was easy to miss.

Last night, thinking this was the kind of web page that might conceivably be lost to history, I saved the full story. And so, for anyone interested, my following link may be the only long-term way to read the full story:

The above link, which I hosted on Google Sites, may thus be the only way to obtain the full “Traitor Jang Song Thaek Executed” news story.

Depending on your browser, clicking on my link may cause a download of the web page as a file, which must then be launched.

If anyone can find a full story permalink I missed, or explain how I can fix my Google Sites uploaded file so it automatically opens, ideas are welcome.