Quantcast
Channel: Sherdog Mixed Martial Arts Forums
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 11021

Kim Jong Un's inner circle?

$
0
0
Ok so lets say an agent of Kim Jong Un approaches you and tells you that the Dear Leader has offered you a position in his inner circle. You basically get to live like Kim lives..any thing you can imagine can become a reality. The best food, the best Korean women, fancy cars, gold etc. You could even set up death matches between wild animals if you feel like it. You could live in a North Korean palace with naked female servants attending your every need.

You would get to meet Dennis Rodman, and play in the N. Korean basketball league as a starter. Imported toys would be at your disposal. You could drive around the empty North Korean highways in the latest Ferrari, doing over 150. You also get to bring in 30 of your closest friends and family members.

The cons of the job are:
You can't ever leave.
The uncertainty of Kim Jong Un's paranoia.
The knowledge that you are living like a sultan, while millions others in the country are starving.
You have to kiss Kim's ass and give him praises from time to time.

Let the discussion flow freely.

An article describing Kim's lifestyle:

Spoiler!!! Click to Read!:
He likes people to be happy around him. He’s got 50 to 60 around him all the time – just normal people drinking cocktails, laughing the whole time.

“If you drink a bottle of tequila, it’s the best tequila. Everything you want, he has the best.”

It comes as statistics show North Korea’s imports of luxury goods including pets, watches and alcohol have soared under Un’s regime – exceeding even the extravagance of his father.

Data gathered by South Korea shows imports under Kim Jong Il’s rule reached $584.82 million in 2011
In 2012, after Un took over, imports of luxury goods totaled $645.86 million, Japanese newspaper the Asahi Shimbun revealed.

“Foreign currency that should be used to improve the lives of the people has instead been used for the luxurious lifestyle of the Kim family as well as to maintain its base of authority,” said ruling Saenuri Party lawmaker Yoon Sang-hyun, who released the statistics.

The paper adds imports of alcohol and watches in particular have soared and suggests the items are likely to have used as gifts for high-ranking party officials.

In June last year the United Nations said two-thirds of the country's 24 million people were facing chronic food shortages.

It added nearly a third of children under the age of 5 showed signs of stunting, particularly in rural areas.

There have even been fears some famine-stricken North Koreans are being forced into cannibalism following claims a man was executed for murdering his two children for food.


http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2013...#slide=1084597


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 11021

Trending Articles