Speaking of Communism and how it works out so well…
In van Houtryve’s hotel room, propaganda played in an endless loop on the three TV channels. North Korean biographers, striving to make Kim his more revered father’s equal, insist a swallow foretold his birth and attribute a spate of superhuman characteristics to him – the ability to manipulate time among them. Defectors have described him as arthritic and illiterate.
Posing as a businessman looking to open a chocolate factory, documentary photographer Tomas van Houtryve visited North Korea. Despite 24-hour surveillance and the pointed reticence of North Koreans, he managed to take some photographs.
Lest we forget, North Korea still has concentration camps and gas chambers. Hence perhaps the reticence. Via Mick Hartley.
“This is shopping in North Korea. The clerk sits in the dark, unheated special store, waiting to turn on the lights for foreigners, the only permitted customers. “She’s wearing a ski jacket or parka; the rest of this time they’re sitting there with the lights off, freezing,” van Houtryve says. The goods —toys, televisions, and the like— are imported from China. The store only accepts euros.”
It’s literally gloomy.
“It’s literally gloomy.”
The permagloom (literal and figurative) is a theme of Guy Delisle’s book Pyongyang, which is worth a read. It’s a comic book account of his visit to the city and his constant surveillance. The airport and much of the city is unlit and his pocket guide forbids the use of lights at night, even when driving. The only floor of his hotel to have electricity is the one he and other foreigners are permitted to stay in. In order to save power, illumination is largely restricted to enormous monuments of the country’s father-son dynasty.
http://www.amazon.com/Pyongyang-Journey-North-Guy-Delisle/dp/1896597890
Thanks, David. I’ll order that.
North Koreans have the right to reject western capitalism!
🙂
And yet, Marxist student protestors in the South repeatedly demand reunification – under Pyongyang’s rule.
Truly mind-boggling.
“Posing as a businessman looking to open a chocolate factory”
Are chocolate factories allowed in North Korea? Sounds a bit decadent.
“Are chocolate factories allowed in North Korea?”
And gumball factories too. I’m guessing the balls being squeezed by the Dear Leader are superior Communist gumballs, fully compliant with Juche philosophy:
http://cache.boston.com/universal/site_graphics/blogs/bigpicture/manuf_02_20/m08_17614393.jpg
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-01/16/content_10668187.htm
Brazilian Pinup
This weekend’s pinup comes with a slightly South American flavor. For years, the crime-ridden jungles of the lower continent have been held up as bastions of political perfection on the cusp of Utopia at the hands of countless “revolutionaries” and…