Sunday, December 17, 2017

NoKo's citizen prisoners still hungry after all these years

North Korea is marking the sixth anniversary of Kim Jong-il's death and his citizen prisoners are coming from all hobbles of life to attend the ceremony or they will be summarily killed, used as target practice for Kim's emaciated army.

They bow deferentially and put flowers at statues of Kim Jong-il and his father, Kim-Il-sung.

Kim Jong-il, the father of Kim Jong-un, died on December 17, 2011 and mandatory mourners came from all over the hermit nation as fears that crazy Kim Jong-un will launch another missile rise.

Thousands of hungry people marched up Pyongyang's Mansu Hill to bow and place flowers at the feet of the two huge bronze statues of Kim Jong-il and North Korea's founder, Kim Il-sung, who is their "eternal president" and the current corpulent Kim Jong-un's grandfather.

Sad music played in the sub-zero temperature as North Koreans slowly made their way up the hill.

While the level of national mourning is less intense than in previous years, where people were expected to cry uncontrollably, some having to pull out nose hairs to achieve this level of make believe sadness, they are still commanded to avoid drinking, entertainment (such as watching ant fights) and inappropriate displays of enjoyment (often acquired by finding something to eat) the day prior to and after the ceremony.

At midnight, senior ruling [with an iron fist] party officials visited a mausoleum just outside the city where the elder Kims lie dead. 

And now, the still alive corpulent Kim vowed to develop more nuclear weapons on Tuesday, as he decorated scientists and other officials who are part of the development of North Korea's intercontinental ballistic missile, the Hwasong-15.
Somebody dropped a penny


The Center for Strategic and International Studies said in November that data analysis indicated elevated chances for provocations by NoKo within four weeks--so it's time and anything may happen.

Corpulent Kim said on Tuesday that scientists and forced labor would continue manufacturing 'more latest weapons and equipment' to 'bolster up the nuclear force in quality and quantity.'

On the temporary bright side, however, some experts believe North Korea still has technical areas it needs to improve before fully completing its goal of developing a nuclear-tipped missile capable of hitting anywhere in the United States.


So let's wait and watch to see when it happens.


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