https://fb.watch/4QdQpJ5EeL/
Прогноз исхода войны с Украиной.
https://fb.watch/4QfegGlyTL/
How they live in North Korea - one of the most closed countries in the world.
North Korea is the most closed country in the world and the most unpredictable. Here they live according to the Juche calendar, where Kim Il Sung's year of birth is taken as the starting point, so now this state is only a little over a hundred years old. There are legal permissible hairstyles in North Korea: 18 for women and 10 for men.
You can’t buy Coca-Cola, Choco Pie and blue jeans here, as these products are considered a symbol of imperialism. Let's see what is hidden behind the facade of the country with an ever-smiling leader.
Let's start with the story of five years ago.
American student Otto Wombier visited this country in 2015, where he received 15 years of hard labor for stealing a propaganda poster.
Subsequently, under pressure from the world community, the North Korean authorities released him, after pumping up drugs, and after such “wellness therapy” the student fell into a coma and died in the United States.
From the filing of “The Brilliant Comrade”, “Genius from Geniuses” and just the leader of the Labor Party of Korea, it is believed that local residents do not need money, since the state fully provides for their needs. The monthly salary in the public sector for ordinary workers is 1500-2500 won. At the state rate it is 12-25 dollars. Peasants work on a completely different principle: they earn in kind as a percentage of the harvest. Such a meager income does not even cover the need for food. According to the UN, about 70% of the population suffers from chronic food shortages. The average North Korean diet consists of rice, wheat and corn, and at best he gets a small piece of meat for the holiday, the main of which are the birthday of Kim Jong Il and Kim Il Sung. Under these conditions, most North Koreans seek additional income, but only in their free time. The country has 100% employment, for parasitism you can thunder in labor camps, so people have been working all their lives, including retirement.
Retirement age - 60 years for women, 65 years for men. It is known that the pension in North Korea is approximately $ 30 for almost 85% of the population. The state “cares” about retirees and does not let them get bored: in villages, old people are assigned allotments of land for sowing and handing over part of the harvest to the state, in cities they are assigned yard or public territories for voluntary-compulsory service.
In the country, with the official absence of private business, there are quite a few large private enterprises that are close to the country's top leadership, which are decorated as state-owned. Here workers have a completely different income level - about $ 300 per month. These are mainly residents of Pyongyang and several large cities.
At first glance, it might seem that there can be no inequality in North Korea, but in fact, the gap in living standards between the top and bottom is very high and continues to grow .. Premium goods are sold in stores for the elite, for the “top 1%” , in the so-called "Singapore stores" - in "Pukse" or in "Ryugyon". There are rich people, for whom it is not a problem to spend a few hundred dollars on a Chanel handbag.
One sign of North Korean welfare is the ability to go to a plastic surgeon. Among the most popular operations appears blepharoplasty. But changing the shape of the eyelids and giving the eyes a European look is not so simple. Plastic surgery in the DPRK is banned, so North Koreans are forced to go to clandestine surgery rooms.
Education also belongs to the category of luxury: about 15% of all high school graduates, mainly from privileged families, enter higher education institutions. It’s hard to enter a North Korean university. In this regard, the tutoring industry flourished. A tutoring course for a good tutor costs from $ 10 to $ 30 per month, so its income is quite high.
Николсон, ты конченый идиот
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