Idolization campaign of Kim jung un in N.Korea

bluesky79

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Apr 21, 2008
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Ever since power has been passed down to Kim Jong-Un, a leader lacking both experience and knowledge, many are concerned about the future of North Korea and its regime. North Korea has been putting the young Kim in the front-lines to bring stability to its regime, but power struggles between military big shot, Li Young Ho, Kim Jong-Un's uncle, Jang Sung Taek, and Aunt Kim Kyung Hee, may happen at anytime.

It is also notable that in order to conceal Kim Jong-Un's incompetent leadership, North Korea are working to shift the focus to the idolization of Kim Jong-Il, and Kim Jong-Un. The Kim Jong-Un's idolization efforts emphasize the leadership bloodlilne from Kim Il-Sung and Kim Jong-Il. Propaganda of Kim Jong-Un's legendary acts and mythical birth is repeatedly used for idolization.

Recently public institutions like the State Security Department and the People's Security Department are ordering the placement of Kim Jong-Un's portrait on all buildings, and some institutions are already producing 'Kim Jong-Un Badges' to idolize their leader. However, due to the fact that some are expressing complaints on the idolization of their inexperienced leader, Kim Jong-Un, considerable amount of resistance is expected against the idolization. The people and military authories of North Korea, and the international society will no longer tolerate the hereditary power successions and the idolization of 3 generation and 60 year worth of dictatorship.
 
Are dey nuts???...
:cuckoo:
China expresses confidence in NKorea's leader Kim
23 Apr.`12 — China's top foreign policy official has met a North Korean delegation and expressed confidence in the country's young leader just over a week after Pyongyang conducted a rocket launch that Beijing had discouraged.
The Foreign Ministry said State Councilor Dai Bingguo met late Sunday with a North Korean group led by Kim Yong Il, secretary of the central committee of the ruling Workers' Party. Dai said he was confident that under Kim Jong Un, North Korea would continue to move toward building a prosperous country, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

China is the North's biggest ally but had expressed concern about its rocket launch, which the U.S. said was a cover for testing long-range missile technology. The U.S. suspended food aid to North Korea after the failed launch. North Korea had said the Unha-3 rocket carried an Earth observation satellite and touted it as its most ambitious effort yet to join the exclusive club of space-faring nations. But the rocket broke apart soon after the April 13 launch, apparently during its first stage.

Analysts said the failed mission suggested that North Korea had not learned much from previous Unha rocket shots in 1998, 2006 and 2009, which are all believed to have ended in failure. Dai's comments were released before the latest threat from North Korea, in which the military said Monday it will launch "special actions" soon meant to wipe out conservative South Korean President Lee Myung-bak's administration.

The army statement carried by state media said the actions would last 3 to 4 minutes and be carried out "by unprecedented peculiar means and methods of our own style." It gave no more details. North Korea has issued a steady stream of harsh criticism of Lee and his government. Pyongyang says Lee insulted the North's recent celebrations of the birth centennial of national founder Kim Il Sung.

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