What Daily Life In North Korea Looks Like

It's known that the North Korean government runs a tight ship. They try to be extremely careful with the information that gets out of their country. In recent years, the country allowed tourists from other countries to experience their way of life, but these tourists were met with carefully curated and staged home visits, museum tours, and even grocery store trips.

Thanks to daring photographers, memory cards filled with never-before-seen images captured in North Korea were smuggled out of the country…

Fake Computers

Naturally, it only made sense for the guides to want to push the perspective that North Korean's lived good lives. When tourists visited homes and schools, they were encouraged to take photos like this. However, when someone would comment on the computer's lack of power, the guides were visibly upset.

Re-Education Camp

North Korea takes its prisoners to a re-education camp to try and make them "better" instead of punishing them. Either way, the camps still starve the inmates and force them to perform hard labor. During re-education training, prisoners are usually interrogated or tortured.

Next Post

Advertisement

The More You Know

  • J is the only letter that doesn’t appear on the periodic table.
  • In one month, the average person consumes about a Lego brick’s worth of microplastic.
  • Pittsburgh is the only city where all three major sports teams share the same colors.
  • The population of the United States increases by one person every 12 seconds.
Next Post

Post originally appeared on Upbeat News.