Backlash against Feminism in North Korea

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J0E
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Joined: 11 May 2010, 17:41

Backlash against Feminism in North Korea

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....Seoulbro must be concerned:

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/01/worl ... nists.html

Image

SEOUL — They have shown up whenever women rallied against sexual violence and gender biases in South Korea. Dozens of young men, mostly dressed in black, taunted the protesters, squealing and chanting, “Thud! Thud!” to imitate the noise they said the “ugly feminist pigs” made when they walked.

“Out with man haters!” they shouted. “Feminism is a mental illness!”

On the streets, such rallies would be easy to dismiss as the extreme rhetoric of a fringe group. But the anti-feminist sentiments are being amplified online, finding a vast audience that is increasingly imposing its agenda on South Korean society and politics.

These male activists have targeted anything that smacks of feminism, forcing a university to cancel a lecture by a woman they accused of spreading misandry. They have vilified prominent women, criticizing An San, a three-time gold medalist in the Tokyo Olympics, for her short haircut.

They have threatened businesses with boycotts, prompting companies to pull advertisements with the image of pinching fingers they said ridiculed the size of male genitalia. And they have taken aim at the government for promoting a feminist agenda, eliciting promises from rival presidential candidates to reform the country’s 20-year-old Ministry of Gender Equality and Family.
South Korea is reckoning with a new type of political correctness enforced by angry young men who bristle at any forces they see as undermining opportunity — and feminists, in their mind, are enemy No. 1. Inequality is one of the most delicate issues in South Korea, a nation with deepening economic uncertainty, fed by runaway housing prices, a lack of jobs and a widening income gap.


J0E
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Joined: 11 May 2010, 17:41

Re: Backlash against Feminism in North Korea

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Blurt
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Re: Backlash against Feminism in North Korea

Unread post by Blurt »

Mimi doesn't realize how thankful she should be she doesn't live in N. Korea, right, Joe?

Dude, your gossamer-veiled misogyny is getting to be old hat.

Be a real man for a change and stop hating teh vajeen.


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mimi
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Re: Backlash against Feminism in North Korea

Unread post by mimi »

:D

Mostly, I'm thankful that I have Joe to remind me to be thankful. =)))


J0E
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Joined: 11 May 2010, 17:41

Re: Backlash against Feminism in North Korea

Unread post by J0E »

Blurt wrote: 02 Jan 2022, 06:23
Dude, your gossamer-veiled misogyny is getting to be old hat.

Be a real man for a change and stop hating teh vajeen.
....Hey idiot, before you launch your not-so-thinly veiled attack on me, look at the source of the article.

The New York Times

A left leaning liberal publication sympathetic to the interests of people like YOU Blurt & your causes.

It did not appear in a right wing news publication like the Epoch Times

Sometimes it's interesting to know what's going on elsewhere in the world.

Anything wrong with that?


J0E
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Joined: 11 May 2010, 17:41

Re: Backlash against Feminism in North Korea

Unread post by J0E »

mimi wrote: 02 Jan 2022, 09:25 :D

Mostly, I'm thankful that I have Joe to remind me to be thankful. =)))
The article appeared in the New York Times, a liberal publication mimi.

Sympathetic to liberals like you mimi


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mimi
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Re: Backlash against Feminism in North Korea

Unread post by mimi »

Do you take your lunch to work, or do you walk. :confused:


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Blurt
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Re: Backlash against Feminism in North Korea

Unread post by Blurt »

I can't believe Joe called me an idiot. :blink:

They're training him well over at BF.

Still not a real man, though.


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mimi
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Re: Backlash against Feminism in North Korea

Unread post by mimi »

Ya but...he's got a full head of HAIR ! :huh:


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asal
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Joined: 20 Feb 2011, 04:44

Re: Backlash against Feminism in North Korea

Unread post by asal »

We're allowed to share foreign videos as we live outside of North Korea.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SiviOdWDl9o



Get in on it.
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asal
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Re: Backlash against Feminism in North Korea

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npr, February 26, 2024

...URBINA: Yeah. I mean, we spent six months reaching out to over 150 different companies, and most of them stonewalled us and just wouldn't engage. A small portion did engage and said they were shocked to find out. Some of them very candidly engaged and said, look, China is a tough place to really know what's going on. Some companies, to their credit, severed ties to the plants immediately when we contacted them.

KELLY: When you say some of the companies severed ties, which ones?

URBINA: Several - one was Trident, and that's a company that, for example, supplies McDonald's. Another was Sysco, the world's largest food company, and then a Canadian company called High Liner - all very big companies - immediately said they're going to pause any imports until they can investigate....


Good on McDonald's and High Liner for pausing trade with Chinese companies that use North Korean forced labour (in Dandong, China, processing fish).

The North Korean forced labor program supplying seafood around the world


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asal
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Re: Backlash against Feminism in North Korea

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North Korean Workers in China Riot over Unpaid Wages; 2,000 Occupy Factory, Kill Plant Manager

Yomiuri Shimbun, February 17, 2024

About 2,000 North Korean workers dispatched to China’s Jilin Province started a riot in mid-January triggered by anger over unpaid wages, a North Korean source told The Yomiuri Shimbun.

According to the source, the first large-scale demonstration by North Korean workers also highlights the rebellious spirit of the country’s young, who are not content to live in slave-like conditions. Many former female soldiers in their 20s also participated in the riot, the source added.

The riot occurred at a clothing manufacturing and seafood processing factory in Helong, Yanbian Korean Autonomous Prefecture, within the province. The factory is located in a development zone filled with factories and is near the Tumen River that flows along the China-North Korea border.

The North Korean workers were dispatched by a company under Pyongyang’s defense ministry to earn foreign currency.

Angered at long-term unpaid wages, the workers on Jan. 11 occupied the factory and took hostage North Korean personnel dispatched to manage and monitor the employees. The workers declared that they would go on strike until their wages were paid.

North Korean authorities attempted to bring the situation under control by mobilizing the consulate in China and personnel from the secret police and the State Security Department, but the workers refused to let them enter the factory. The employees assaulted one of the hostages, a management representative from North Korea. The riot continued until Jan. 14, and the representative was killed.

The riot occurred after word spread that other workers who returned home last year had not received their wages despite promises that they would be paid in Pyongyang. Generally, when a North Korean company dispatches workers to Yanbian, it receives about 2,500 yuan to 2,800 yuan (about ¥50,000 to ¥56,000) per month from the Chinese company. Of this amount, 700 yuan to 1,000 yuan is usually given to the workers, after deducting 800 yuan per month for accommodations and meal expenses and 1,000 yuan per month of the North Korean company’s share.

However, since the China-North Korea border was closed in 2020 due to COVID-19 countermeasures, the North Korean company had taken all the workers’ money in the name of war preparation funds. The total amount reached several million dollars, which was reportedly given to the North Korean leadership and embezzled by company executives.


North Korean authorities temporarily placated the workers by paying them their unpaid wages, while identifying about 200 people who played a leading role in the riot and repatriating half of them.

“They will be sent to a political prison camp and will not escape severe punishment,” the source said.


According to the source, the incident was reported to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and government heads are in shock. Because other North Korean workers dispatched abroad are reportedly in similarly poor conditions, the impact of the Yanbian incident is likely to spread to other regions in countries such as China and Russia where Pyongyang sends workers to earn foreign currency.


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Sargent Smellibitz
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Re: Backlash against Feminism in North Korea

Unread post by Sargent Smellibitz »

Did they eat the manager?


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