Language has power. If you control the language, as I said on a recent podcast with fellow PJ Media writers Greg Byrnes and Ben Bartee, you can control not just what people say but even how and what they think. And that’s what authoritarians — both in North Korea and America — want to do.
Liberty University quoted Park: “In North Korea, seeing dying people is like looking at a tree. That’s how common it is.” She went on, “In North Korea, we don’t even have a concept of love. The only love that North Korean people are allowed to know is the love for the dictator… Until my father passed away, he never told me he loved me.”
North Korea has horrific torture, abuse, and forced labor in its prisons and an ongoing food crisis. It is also one of the most dangerous places in the world to be Christian. How did the country become that way?
Liberty University quoted Park: “In North Korea, seeing dying people is like looking at a tree. That’s how common it is.” She went on, “In North Korea, we don’t even have a concept of love. The only love that North Korean people are allowed to know is the love for the dictator… Until my father passed away, he never told me he loved me.”
North Korea has horrific torture, abuse, and forced labor in its prisons and an ongoing food crisis. It is also one of the most dangerous places in the world to be Christian. How did the country become that way?
“A lot of people don’t understand how North Korea became this way. It resembles exactly what’s happening in America right now,” [Park] said, referring to her concerns with Critical Race Theory, gender ideology, and intersectionality seeping into the American Education system, which she said fosters a victim mentality. “Now thinking about (these ideologies), what an insult that is to all the students. They were on purpose making me a disabled person.”