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[Music] Here's the latest news from North Korea.
What's the news? If you call me and listen to the news, just hello, viewers.
I'm Lee Cheol -eun TV, appearing on the Cider Channel.
Nice to meet you.
Kim Jong-un has been testing artillery fire more than once or twice, and it's not the first or second time that we've seen it.
Recently, in our Republic of Korea, we had a military parade and marched through the streets, didn't we? After seeing that, Kim Jong-un must have thought, "Hey, you're not the only ones.
We have ours too.
" I think Kim Jong-un will definitely admit that they have the upper hand in symmetrical power.
But he's showing off his nuclear weapons, right? And since he does n't want to fire nuclear weapons, he says that we have a pretty cool gun, and he calls it the "Shinryong gun.
" He's going to fire it now, but he's just showing off.
Yes, and it seems like Kim Jong-un has been practicing more military exercises since the beginning of his time.
What kind of artillery fire training is this? What kind of training is this? I do n't know why they're doing so many trainings, but right now, there's a war between Russia and Ukraine, right? Looking at that, Russia used the Fords that were already produced, but they didn't work well.
There are many, many unexploded ordnances, and looking at them, I think they are also reorganizing the weapons stored in the munitions factories and the toilets.
So Kim Jong-un is like that.
He just shows off and says, “We’re doing it too.
” Yes, and recently, I see that North Korea is copying South Korea too much.
Yes, they’ve been copying and even copying the military.
In the past, North Korea had nothing more important than having Kim Il-sung’s badge.
They would wear rank insignia and medals here and there, but now I see that they even have their ranks and names attached to them.
Just like South Korea, and they’re also hanging their national flags here and there.
They’re also copying South Korea a lot.
Looking at that, Kim Jong-un said, “South Korea is really the enemy,” and he said, “We’re copying the enemy quite a bit.
” Kim Jong-un said, “ These soldiers are really into gear, right? Yes, they have an aura.
When I look at them, when I see a North Korean soldier compared to a South Korean soldier, I think something is a little awkward and something is not right.
So I think they insisted on copying South Korea.
I can't say, but North Korea has also changed its military uniforms a lot.
What surprised me the most while watching the street fighting was the Hyunmoo wave.
It was a huge thing.
I was surprised to see it come out.
As far as I know, in our country, we can respond to North Korea's nuclear weapons with that.
The Hyunmoo is a weapon that can enter a bunker and destroy the top leadership of North Korea.
When I watched the Hyunmoo wave, I thought the Hyunmoo missile was really cool.
But I thought how great it would be if it could enter and destroy the top leadership of North Korea, Kim Jong-un.
It was cool, but I thought it would be even better if it had something attached to it.
I think it would be nice if it had something attached to it in North Korea.
When I saw the Hyunmoo vibe, I was a little relieved that it had the ability to deal with nuclear weapons.
Also, a dog came out.
I looked at the dog and it was a robot that was looking for minefields.
So, with the advent of the AI era, military equipment is also changing a lot.
And I think the most important thing is that in order to reduce casualties, our military is conducting advanced research to reduce the damage to appointments, and we are continuously conducting research to reduce the damage to appointments.
I think in North Korea, a person would go and see if there is a military base, and that person would go and step on it, but is it an AI military or something? What should I call it? I don't even know the name.
I'm not a military expert, so a detection dog would have to do it.
I thought a lot while watching the detection dog.
I think it would be nice if a lot of this kind of military equipment came out.
When I saw Kim Jong-un in North Korea, he said that he was developing it too, and he put wheels on the robe.
It was heartbreaking to see that.
Why are you spending money on something like that? No matter how much you try, our Republic of Korea can't do it.
To be honest, North Korea just has one nuclear weapon.
So you have to research it 100, 1,000 times.
It's not necessary.
For that kind of money, I think North Korean citizens need to ride it or make some improvements.
Trains and such, in North Korea, where it takes several days to go 100km, you can barely ride a bicycle.
Instead of that bicycle, would n't it be better to develop some motorcycles so that North Koreans can ride them and have freedom of movement? That's what I think.
No, what about attaching feet to a robe and wheels? Kim Jong-un says it can't be done in our country and the world over.
Instead of developing something that can't be done, I think it would be good to produce some motorcycles that can be used by North Koreans and give them freedom of movement.
If conditions are created for North Koreans to be able to freely travel back and forth between North Korea, North Koreans will be surprised.
They were living in the same North Korea, but they didn't know that this place was like this and that place was like that.
But things have gotten a little better recently.
It's true that since 2009, North Korea has been using cell phones, and we've come to know things about each region that we didn't know before.
You can find out things over the phone, but it's different when you actually go there.
To be honest, I've been in North Korea too.
I said I knew a lot about South Korea because I watched a lot of South Korean TV, but when I actually watched it, it was different.
I learned a little bit about different places over the phone, like how that area was and how that area was, but when you actually go around and experience it, it can be completely different when you bump into it yourself.
Since you have freedom of movement, you get to know things you didn't know about.
That's because there are rumors and things you can't talk about there.
There are regions you didn't know about.
Imagine if North Korean residents went in like Ahn Byung-ji.
Then, they'd say, "Wow, there was this place.
There was this place where he got hurt.
If you go into the management office where the political prisoners were held, you'd be shocked.
You'd probably come out with things you didn't know about.
That's why North Korea now blocks free movement.
Well, if you start going like that, all those rumors will spread all over the place.
You'll learn things you didn't know about, and then it'll be harder to control.
Right now, it's easy to control because it's strictly blocked by region, but if all the kids were open and just came and went as they pleased, it would be hard to control.
It gets harder because the people in charge of management and control are limited, and if all the North Korean people move, how can they follow them and control them? That's why North Korea does not give this freedom.
They cannot give freedom of movement.
As long as the North Korean regime is maintained, there will never be freedom of movement.
I think that the only way for North Korea to reform and open up is for the North Korean people to wake up on their own.
They have to wake up.
We can't do this from outside forces.
So, North Korean people have to let in a lot of things, like the Korean Wave or culture from other countries.
North Korean people have to see, hear, and feel things.
So, North Korean people have to wake up on their own.
Other than that, there's nothing special we can do.
What are we going to do in particular? We just have to study how many videos, songs, or anything can flow in so that North Korean people can wake up.
We have to let them in.
We have to send them to China or have them appear on TV.
I can't explain the method.
There are these methods and those methods, but what is this? Since it is related to the safety of our people, I ca n't say anything specific, but that's the exact thing.
The mindset of the North Korean people needs to change.
In North Korea, mechanization is no longer an ordeal.
It can't be an ordeal.
People will have a hard time making a living.
Can I feed my own machines? That's why they are mobilizing a lot of manpower.
Because they are mobilized as manpower, there are many cases of accidents at construction sites.
In particular, North Korea is digging a lot of toner.
They are digging caves and preparing for war and doing things like that.
While doing that, tunnels are collapsing and many people are dying.
So what do they do when they die? Those people are now out of commission.
If they were out of commission, they would n't be on the news or anything.
I guess they died again.
Yes, that's the reality of North Korea.
But those people and their families can't ask why they did that again.
So in North Korea, mechanization has not been realized, so that can't happen.
People are mobilized to work, but there are quite a few people who die.
That doesn't mean they keep dying, but because of that.
There is no way for the North Korean government to solve it.
But will the workers solve it? There is no way to solve it.
Even when an apartment is under construction, the apartment collapses.
They have to hit it again.
Why would an apartment collapse? They sell construction materials like cement and steel bars to make a living.
Because they sell them and then they collapse again.
Because these people also have to work to eat, but they don't get anything in return, so they sell the construction materials.
You know, those apartments that North Korea is building right now.
If we were to ever be unified, they would have to be rebuilt.
Yes, they would have to be rebuilt.
No one would go there and live.
Of course, I don't know if there are any South Korean citizens who would go to North Korea to live there, but there will be.
If unification happens, yes, I think so too.
That mask is an apartment.
They have to eat and rebuild it.
Are they willing to risk their lives to live in an apartment? So North Korea doesn't spend much money on symmetry anymore.
They are only investing money in nuclear weapons and such, so it doesn't seem like a possible problem if one or two soldiers die in North Korea.
So, they have detectors that go like this and beep, and the equipment is probably old.
Now, there are many cases of people being trampled to death, and the North Korean military is pitiful.
It's so heartbreaking that they don't know anything and are just loyal to Kim Jong-un.
It wo n't be on the news.
North Korean news about such facts, such as the fact that landmines were laid and countless soldiers died, is not something that should be on the news.
It won't be on the news at all.
And they just send one special force home and that's it.
They don't go out and talk about human rights.
When I was in North Korea, honestly, the education itself was like that.
Our Republic of Korea is a modern-day American colony, and the military is the same.
They said that there is no military authority and no command authority, and so on.
Because they educated us like that, I did n't think very positively of the South Korean military.
And I thought that discipline was disorganized.
I thought that the military was like that, like going to the military and going and coming home and coming back when they were released.
But that's how they educate in North Korea.
I received education in North Korea and then came to South Korea and went to a lecture on the South Korean military, but I thought that the North Korean education was wrong.
Because if you really think of South Korea as an enemy, you should let the South Korean military know exactly.
I don't know why you're telling the South Korean military in such a pitiful way, but because of that, the North Korean military looks down on South Korea even more.
They think, "Oh, you can win any fight," but no, the North Korean military doesn't have the ability to do that.
But because they educate them like that, the North Korean soldiers have to have this kind of awareness.
But when they come to South Korea, it's not like that.
When I came to South Korea by swimming, the first thing I met was a soldier.
Other people came through the three countries, so they came that way, but when I first saw a soldier, I was shocked.
The hash hash soldiers that I was trained in North Korea are not soldiers.
When the boat came out, the soldiers were wearing sunglasses, masks, and guns.
Wow, they had that aura.
Oh, they were scary.
So wouldn't ordinary North Korean soldiers be scared if they saw those soldiers? I was scared myself.
Wow, that aura that comes from the soldiers' bodies.
We usually watch martial arts dramas, but when we watch them, it's scary.
There's something fluttering, right? Soldiers have an aura like that.
Hey, the soldiers I learned weren't like this.
The soldiers I learned in North Korea had this kind of aura.
I never thought of them.
They were so cool.
That's what surprised me.
They were wearing the Taegeukgi right here.
Oh, I was surprised when I saw that.
This is something that defectors from North Korea almost all say, because North Korean soldiers wear Kim badges, but when I see them wearing the Taegeukgi, I think they're really cool.
Because these soldiers who protect this country have ideals and such, they're really cool, but North Korea isn't like that.
And that does n't mean that all North Korean soldiers are like that.
Like we often say, there are some pathetic North Korean soldiers, but North Korean soldiers are also soldiers who fight regularly.
Special forces are n't like that.
So, not all North Korean soldiers are like that, but many soldiers are not like that because they ca n't eat the kind of food we think they can.
Hey, what do our soldiers eat? Do n't worry, our soldiers, that's why the aura itself is like that.
The soldiers that I learned in North Korea were trained like that.
When I defected, my thoughts about anti-military people changed 360 degrees.
I was so surprised.
When I defected, my friend and I came here.
My body had an ID card.
But now that I was wearing a military uniform, I guess it was the soldiers' rule.
They tied me up, blindfolded me, and the boat was rocking back and forth, so I had to lie down and shoot at me.
My friend said, "Take the gun away.
I'm going to shoot you.
This boat is like that.
When we ride a Rolls-Royce or a Maybau, it's really bumpy.
Oh, this is in the ocean with waves crashing and guns pointed at me.
So we were a little worried that we might make a mistake and get shot.
At first, we thought, "Oh, what's the big deal? Why are you doing this?" But now I think it's something that the Marines do.
To be honest, my pride was a little hurt at first.
Yes, they were bright and doing this, so my pride was a little hurt.
But later on, I came and saw that they had to do it that way.
He said, "There was no major misunderstanding, but my pride was a little hurt at first.
Well, since he was so bright and bold, I honestly thought about that.
Did I come to the wrong place? I thought, 'This is so different from what I know,' and I thought about that a lot.
So now I have to go to Boro.
Yes, I came here to find freedom, but at first, I was a little hesitant.
I said that I was in the Republic of Korea to find freedom, and that I was my own doctor and that I was a ghost, but I was a little embarrassed at first because I did this.
Yes, and after that, a friend who was in the same unit that stomped on me in the Marines contacted me.
He 's on my YouTube channel.
He said that he was the person I found on September 19, 2016.
He contacted me and I met him.
We met, and he said that he was monitoring me at the surveillance station.
He said that two unidentified people were swimming toward their location.
They said that there was something that only they were doing.
Yes, he said that I had to do that.
While listening to the story, he said, 'How can they swim here?' and he said that he was surprised.
He's still in contact with me and he's attending my wedding.
The time has come.
He is a very kind person, very handsome and very manly.
Recently, I saw the military of the Republic of Korea fighting in a street battle.
I also had many thoughts while watching.
The armed equipment is really cool.
Yes, it is cool.
On one hand, I thought that.
Hey, if only it had lasted until the sun.
Because when I saw the street battle in our Republic of Korea, Kim Jong-un took action like, “Why are you acting like this in front of the country that the sun has set?” I also had the same thought while watching.
Our military equipment is really state-of-the-art equipment.
Hey, but since that state-of-the-art equipment becomes useless in the sun, of course, before North Korea launches a nuclear weapon, we have a scenario where we will strike the launch site.
But do you know, we had that kind of thought while watching it.
The armed equipment is really modern.
It goes to North Korea on its own.
No matter how much North Korea does in a military parade, it cannot be compared to the armed equipment that comes out.
All we have is an ICBM, and the ICBM family comes out and shows it.
Right now, we are focusing on missiles.
But each and every one of them is different.
These are incomparable military equipment to North Korea's.
We don't want to admit North Korea's nuclear weapons, but we have to admit them.
When I looked at it, I thought it was a bit ironic.
The airplanes and the North's MIGs are incomparable, right? When I saw that, I thought, "Oh, it's a bit disappointing.
" Yes, recent sources say that North Korean sources are like that.
It's just recent, but it's always like that.
They say it's hard to make a living.
When I talk to them on the phone and hear the news, they just say it's hard.
It's hard to make a living.
It's getting harder.
I don't know how long it'll be hard.
But the people I talk to on the phone say the same thing.
They say it's been the same for 10 or 20 years.
But the North Korean regime is still in place, and they're still eating and living.
Those who are starving will starve to death, but those who are living are still living.
So the new news from North Korea is just that it's hard.
Yes, I appeared on the Cider Channel today and talked about it.
I'm Lee Cheol-eun TV's 2,000 won.
I don't know if my story today was good or bad, but our viewers, please listen to what you have to say.
And I hope you'll love Cider Channel a lot and stay by my side.
We ask for your love for our Lee Cheol-won TV.
Thank you to everyone who watched it.
And also, I think Kim Jong-un has run out of money these days.
Since he ran out of money, the Northwest will open in December.
So you can travel to North Korea.
So the first demonstration team from Russia came in, and hundreds of people have already been touring North Korea.
But with ordinary North Korean citizens, they just talk and converse and can have a negative effect.
But I heard news from North Korea recently.
They are hiding it from people who come to Gangwon.
Hello, viewers.
I am Lee Cheol-eun, who will be appearing on the Cider Channel.
Nice to meet you.
I heard a lot about broadcasting to North Korea when I was young.
I used to live in Hwanghaenam-do.
We can hear it well in areas close to South Korea.
But now they have installed it and started broadcasting to North Korea.
I can hear it well.
Yes, and I can hear the content of the broadcast to North Korea well.
But the important thing is that in order to prevent North Korean citizens from hearing it, North Korea also installed its own broadcasting station.
But that broadcasting station is not broadcasting to the broadcast being transmitted from South Korea, but is running it together.
It is the same.
This is North Korea's, this is South Korea's.
Why is this? Should we call this broadcasting output? It can't be compared to our Republic of Korea.
So, to prevent the North Korean people from hearing what's going on, they put a mixer on.
They do this so that North Korean broadcasts come out and they don't know what South Korean broadcasts are.
But the important thing is that the power lines in North Korea are weak, so there are power outages.
When there's a power outage, you can hear it well.
It's especially better at dawn or at night.
So, you shouldn't think that the effect of the North Korean broadcasting is happening in all of North Korea.
Last year, up, and the units in North Korea last year.
The units in North Korea last year were the 1st Corps, 5th Corps, 4th Corps, and the 1st Corps in Gangwon-do.
Those soldiers listened to it a lot.
Basically, it doesn't seem like the effect of the North Korean broadcasting was happening in all of North Korea.
From what I can see, soldiers and North Korean residents can also come into the Hwanghae-do region.
So both soldiers and residents just listen to it.
In the Hwanghae-do region, you can only hear it in places like Yeonbaecheon and Cheongdan, and you ca n't hear it in other regions.
Our loudspeakers for North Korea do n't reach all the way to Hanbuk-do.
The leaflets we usually send go to Pyongyang.
What, what, going north? Oh, that's not true.
That leaflet also only goes to the Hwanghae-do region and Gangwon-do region.
I heard that the loudspeakers for North Korea have been deployed again and started.
The thing that can have a negative effect is Kim Jong-un.
After all, North Korean citizens have been receiving new trade since they were young, so if you suddenly hear that North Korean broadcast and say that Kim Jong-un is acting in such absurd ways and that the fundamental cause of the North Korean citizens' misery is the Kim family, some people may believe it.
That's because people who secretly listen to the North Korean broadcasts, watch a lot of Korean TV, or are immersed in the Korean Wave may believe it.
But are n't there more than half of those who don't? That's why the North Korean system is still maintained in North Korea.
That's why North Korean citizens are told about the Kim family, that Kim Jong-un is a Japanese employee, and that stores in Japan are good, but the fact that North Korea can't live because of Kim Jong-un and that North Korea can't live because of nuclear weapons is not true.
As I said before, North Korean citizens are people who have been trained as slingshots and are newborns who should be fed powdered milk.
If you make corn chips, will you eat them? Will you be able to digest them? So, we need to do it step by step, but suddenly, with more intensity, and also, when we make leaflets, if Kim Jong-un just randomly posts who's here and who's there and blocks them, that won't be effective.
This is where the effect can be.
We need to do it step by step.
If we say step by step, it won't be for one or two days, but for 10 or 20 years.
They say we don't know when the North Korean regime will collapse, but I think it will take quite a long time.
So, we need to do it step by step, calmly, for 1 year, 2 years, 3 years, and this year, we need to do it step by step so that the North Korean people will be aware of it.
If we just criticize the Kim regime or criticize the injustice of the regime all at once, it might be difficult for the North Korean people to accept.
To be honest, there's a difference between when the government sends leaflets to North Korea and when an organization does it.
I do n't know if it's because I received the ones sent by the government when I was in North Korea, but the quality of the content is great.
And what the government does is definitely effective for the North Korean people.
They also use psychological factors to do that, but the groups are just provocative.
Yes, they just criticize the North Korean regime, and Kim Jong-un just beats them up.
Yes, they do things like that, and since the groups have to get money from sponsors now, they have no choice but to be provocative.
So there is a little difference.
So did n't they tell us to look at the security of the Republic of Korea? At that time, North Korea was still sending garbage.
There must not have been much garbage in North Korea, but they had to produce all the garbage as compost, so there must not have been much, but they were doing that.
That's what North Korea did.
They said, "The North Korean government does n't care about the garbage.
It's just the North Korean people sending it now.
" That's ridiculous.
That's a scam.
Can an individual citizen send something like that to the Republic of Korea? It's ridiculous to do something big.
That's done by the state, by the North Korean Kim Jong-un regime.
If we send it to North Korea, it would be groundbreaking.
Honestly, anything we send would be groundbreaking.
But if we send TV, well, there are so many TVs.
Honestly, it 's hard to go there and watch TV.
Regular inspections are also like that.
What is that, I thought a lot.
What should I send? Something groundbreaking.
Even if it's just money, please.
Just send money.
If you send money, North Korea will be able to use it and have its own sense of satisfaction.
I think that's what I'm thinking.
I really thought a lot too.
Hey, it would be really good to send this.
Then, the next thing comes to mind.
I sent this, but how will they use it? So, I kept thinking about the next thing.
I said, "Oh, it would be so good to send this," but hey, how will people use this? People walking around here are better than cars.
But can they drive? No.
So this isn't it.
But I ca n't send a nuclear power plant.
It seems really bleak.
It's frustrating.
So, I think I'm going to find the right answer that money is piling up.
If we send money, what is this? Kim Jong-un didn't give it all.
The money is all gone.
Well, let's say they received a lot of leaflets.
The money was just scattered.
They saved up all the money.
This is money sent from South Korea.
So should we give it to the country? Should we give it to the country? Should I pay or not? It's money.
Money, money, money, I don't pay.
In the past, there were times when dollars, one-dollar bills, came to North Korea.
I did n't give them.
North Koreans all took them.
Then, one more good thing is USB.
USB.
North Koreans secretly look at them.
USB, they say it's good for South Korea, and they don't give it to that country.
When leaflets were flying, USB came.
They say there was a USB.
They just give leaflets, groceries, and things like that, but they don't give money and USB.
They just consume it all.
Another important thing is dollars, USB, and things like that.
It's easy to hide.
It's not bulky.
When leaflets were flying, there was a USB.
There was a dollar.
How would they know? They do n't know.
Ah, just say this came and give it to them.
And if they ask for it and USB, it doesn't matter.
You can just use dollars and carry a USB secretly and see if it works.
Ah, if you say you bought this and USB, it's over.
So there's no place to reveal it.
So now, USB is effective for North Koreans.
Do you have to go? You have to go unconditionally.
I don't want to go, but if I absolutely have to go, the first thing I'll have to take is this, right? My ID card, right? Because I live as a citizen of the Republic of Korea, if I'm taken to North Korea and try to escape, of course, North Korea will take this back, but for example, do n't think too much about it.
Yes, if I escape North Korea and try to go anywhere, I can go anywhere in the world with this ID card, right? So I think I have to take this ID card and the conditions.
I think most of the people who intentionally defected from North Korea are those who have been working overseas.
Because when people who lived in North Korea come overseas, they think, "Oh, this is a different world.
" And they probably think a lot about whether the Kim Jong-un regime and the Kim family regime are legitimate.
And there must be people who defect for their own selfish reasons.
There were a lot of videos like that.
Seriously, because high-ranking North Korean officials are defecting, the North Korean regime is starting to shake.
No, I do n't think so.
How many high-ranking North Korean officials have defected and who will fill those high-ranking positions? Isn't there anyone to fill the gap? No, that's not true.
That's why I do n't think the North Korean regime will collapse just because high-ranking officials defected.
In the Kim Jong-un regime in North Korea, I still don't think the Kim Jong-un regime will collapse just because a few people intentionally defected.
There are probably more people executed in North Korea than high-ranking officials who defected.
To be honest, since Kim Jong-un came to power in North Korea, let's say there are people who intentionally defected and went to the US or somewhere else.
How many people would that be? How many hundreds? I do n't think that's true.
But how many high-ranking officials have died in North Korea? As soon as Kim Jong-un took power, he killed many people.
If you look at that, there are a lot of people who were killed, but it's not like we can say that just because a few people were killed.
That's right.
And it didn't collapse because it was in line with his position.
Oh, it didn't collapse because it was in line with his position.
Even if someone who was a member of the elite class in North Korea comes, the North Korean regime will not collapse.
Even if Choe Ryong-hae comes, the North Korean regime will not collapse.
And Kim Jong-un must have run out of money these days.
He ran out of money and is opening up North Korea in December.
So North Korea decided to open up travel in December, but Kim Jong-un said that the first demonstration team from Russia came in and hundreds of people have already been to North Korea.
In order to satisfy those people, there is another image North Korea shows.
How should we promote the legitimacy of the regime? Kim Jong-un will also be very concerned about what to do.
Do you think that those who have traveled abroad have only come because of friendly relations with North Korea? Do you think that they have only seen North Korea in a good light? Most of them must have seen it in a bad light.
Let's open up North Korea, which was a Bailey relationship.
Oh, what is this? Let's go see it.
Oh, that scary North Korea.
Let's go see it.
But those people are definitely saying that those who are traveling from North Korea now are not free travelers like us.
They have to follow a tour course.
Do you think that they will only show good things on that course? People might also take pictures of bad things and go and reveal them.
Anyway, Kim Jong-un is worried about that.
North Korea is having a hard time right now.
Whether it's the relationship, the North Korea issue, or the inter-Korean relationship, wouldn't you be concerned about it ? If you worry about these issues a lot, you'll end up drinking all day and night, so your face looks puffy.
Isn't there a rumor about Kim Jong-un's health? Anyway, it's true that Kim Jong-un's health is not good.
It's true that it's not good, but the important thing is how many years Kim Jong-un will be able to go.
There's a lot to hide from tourists.
That's why there's a tourist course.
So, for those who come from abroad, they should be allowed to travel freely.
If they can't make a living, they should be allowed to go and do things like that.
But if you only show the places that are good and the places that Kim Jong-un has visited, they'll only think, "Oh, that's not so pathetic.
" When I roughly looked at the tourist course, it was like that.
The Masikryong Ski Resort is in Wonsan, and Myohyangsan and Pyongyang are the only places worth visiting.
So, those foreigners who come and have positive thoughts about North Korea think, "Oh, this is pathetic and bad about North Korea.
" You might think that the people talking are wrong.
That's why Kim Jong-un in North Korea also uses it as a means of propaganda.
It's to show the legitimacy of the system and that the North Korean system is not as pathetic as you're talking about.
People from overseas and North Koreans can't compete.
It's not just the guides, but only the people in the Ministry of State Security who monitor people traveling abroad.
You can't just talk to ordinary North Koreans and ask them about the North Korean system.
Basically, people are unconditionally controlled.
And as you go by, what can you do about houses? You can't blow up people's houses.
You just leave them there.
But now, North Koreans fundamentally block contact with foreigners.
I heard one piece of news from North Korea recently.
North Korea is cracking down on the Korean Wave.
I think Kim Jong-un is having a hard time because of the Korean Wave.
That's because in North Korea, Kim Jong-un says, "There are two countries.
North Korea is North Korea and South Korea is South Korea.
So now, you don't call our Republic of Korea by its correct name, right? Republic of Korea.
" Don't you think that way while doing things? South Korea used to do it, but our Korean peninsula is one, and the nuance was that we are living apart and divided.
Now it's not like that, it's just North Korea, of course, it's not like North Korea recognizes it and becomes South Korea or not, but North Korea seems to be thinking that way anyway.
And yet, North Korea's younger generation seems to be into the Korean Wave craze.
So Kim Jong-un recently said to crack down on the Korean Wave more vigorously.
Did n't they come up with a lot of laws in the past? The law guaranteeing the culture of cleaning, and now the law protecting Pyongyang culture.
There are laws that can punish young people and boys.
Now, there are justifications, right? Oh, there are laws like this, and there are things like "You did something wrong.
" That's why Kim Jong-un says he's cracking down on the Korean Wave more severely.
In particular, the younger generation cracks down on the Korean Wave more severely than the older generation.
That's because the younger generation, the female soldiers who will carry North Korea in the future, are the owners.
But those people are into the Korean Wave culture and adore the Republic of Korea, the enemy country.
Kim Jong-un is doing that.
He clearly stated that the enemy of his North Korea is South Korea.
Kim Jong-un likes the culture of the first country so much.
So, how recently has this ideology toward young people been? I know, the Sariwon enemy.
What did they do to those 15-year-old minors? I heard they sent them to 15 years of reeducation.
I guess they didn't even tell us the story.
Those people have now spread the Korean Wave.
These people say that young people have nothing to fear anymore.
They don't just try it out on their own, they copy it and pass it around.
They say, "Hey, this is new, it's fun.
" But isn't that how it is when you're young? If it's fun, you don't want to watch it alone.
Because there are things like, "I'm watching this, this is cool, do you want to watch it?" So, because they keep passing it around, the Korean Wave craze has gotten worse.
We're the same.
Hey, if you tell us not to do this, we do it even more.
If you tell us not to go, we wonder why they tell us not to go.
So It's getting worse.
I think people who didn't know are starting to find out because Kim Jong-un is cracking down on the Korean Wave more severely.
They say, "What is the Korean Wave? What on earth do they find so interesting about Korean dramas?" and now I think young people are starting to watch them more intensively.
That's why I heard that Kim Jong-un is having a hard time cracking down on the Korean Wave.
What is Kim Jong-un doing? He can't kill everyone just because he's good at executions.
He must be having a hard time figuring out how to reform their ideology because they watched Korean TV.
I recently saw that he's bringing in some idiots.
What do you mean, idiots? Why don't you watch idiots? At some point, I went into Joo-ye's room and she was watching Korean TV.
My daughter is watching it too.
This is a real headache.
So I think he'll be drinking all day and night.
And Kim Jong-un's headache is also due to international relations.
Even though North Korea made a confession with Russia, he's also worried about his relationship with China.
I also heard that China sent defectors from the northern region to the area close to North Korea.
I heard that China is protecting North Korean defectors.
So how much of a headache must Kim Jong-un have? Kim Jong-un has been making a lot of friends since he made the Russia confession.
So when I came here, they said, “ Hey, those guys in China, what are you going to do with those defectors?” So this third world country relationship problem, China, Russia, and North Korea will have a headache because of the problem.
It’s a headache.
Oh, from now on, I will become a person who pays a lot of taxes in South Korea.
So I will work hard and do some kind of business, and I will live diligently with the desire to repay South Korea.
I am currently a freelancer and am also attending graduate school.
Since I said I was attending graduate school, did the company accept me today? Well, I am attending graduate school at Kookmin University.
The Global Peace and Unification Graduate School opened this year, and yes, I am attending there.
While attending, I am also working on broadcasts and giving lectures.
Hello, Cider viewers.
I have talked so hard again today.
How can I know everything? I can just say this and that.
So today was something like that, but I think our Cider Channel viewers, we need to fundamentally learn about North Korea, right? I think we need to be unified in the end, so I think it was a time to learn about North Korea.
And by the way, I would appreciate it if you loved TV a lot.
Thank you for watching Da Cider viewers.
After all, isn't our Republic of Korea a democracy? People who lived in this socialist system have something ingrained in them.
They tell you to do this and that.
So should we call this a choice disorder? There are quite a few people who don't know themselves well and don't know what to do.
They say that those who eat meat eat more, so people from North Korea don't eat much meat.
Hello, I am Lee Cheol-eun, who defected from North Korea in September 2016 and is currently living in the free Republic of Korea while doing a good job.
Also, I am Lee Cheol-eun, who runs Lee Cheol-eun TV.
Nice to meet you.
It's not just the North Korean Ministry of State Security, but also for a short period of time and in many other things.
Now, during some regimes in North Korea, they basically look at the foundation a lot because North Korea is a class system, so they unconditionally divide classes and strata, so in order to be loyal to Kim, they look at money as a foundation.
The units that we are familiar with, such as the Guchilsayo, are all the same.
They look at that foundation and the Voivodeship is the same.
The Voivodeship now looks at the foundation up to 6,000 or 8,000, and the foundation is I don't know when it first existed in North Korea, but Boybag is all over the documents.
My grandfather, my grandfather, everything is described in detail, so they looked at it and decided what kind of class foundation this person had.
But that doesn't mean that you can enter the Ministry of State Security just because you have a good foundation.
North Korea is now a place where those with power can enter the Ministry of State Security, and if you have capitalism or money, you can enter the Ministry of State Security.
When I was there, you had to have between $1,500 and $3,000 to enter the Ministry of State Security, but even that was in the provinces.
The area I lived in was Hwanghae Province, so it was around that level in Hwanghae Province.
In Pyongyang, the lowest amount is $ 3,000.
They say that you can enter with as much as $10,000 or $10,000.
You can enter with money, too.
It wasn't like I wanted to become a member of the Ministry of State Security.
It was n't like we took an exam or something.
My father was in the Ministry of State Security.
So Kim Il-sung told me to continue my father's deal and raise the children of the Ministry of State Security to become members of the Ministry of State Security.
So I did it with my father.
Thanks to that, I became a member of the National Assembly.
Since North Korea has no freedom of movement due to its characteristics, the duties will change depending on the characteristics of the people.
For example, people in the border area will have to strengthen control over people who are conducting secret education or trading with China.
People like me in Gangwon-do or Hwanghae-do will be severely punished for not being able to watch Korean broadcasts because they live in close proximity to South Korea.
However, I am not saying that the border area will be allowed to watch Korean TV.
In general, we crack down on the Korean Wave in all areas of North Korea.
However, border control and the control of areas adjacent to South Korea are a little different.
And defecting to North Korea is something we commonly think of as crossing the border, but in North Korea, if you go to China, you will cross the border.
In North Korea, if you go to South Korea from Hwanghae-do or Gangwon-do, you will defect to North Korea.
The political characteristics of the region are also different.
If you go to China, you are trying to make a living, but if you go to South Korea, you will completely defect.
In North Korea, the duties of those working on this are also a little different.
I served in the military in 2004 as a member of the Public Security Department of Gangwon-do.
Since there was that voyage, unlike our country, it's not like we have CCTV surveillance, but North Korea is now a people, so now the Ministry of State Security is monitoring that place, and since it's a port, it's not just North Koreans, but people from China, Russia, Japan, and other foreign countries come and go, and they periodically bring rice from our Republic of Korea under the name of "Korean Plate.
" That was the first time I met a South Korean citizen.
What was the feeling I had when I met them? What did I ask them? To be honest, I asked them a lot about economic issues.
When I was young and learned, I thought South Korea was poor, so I asked them a lot about that.
I was curious about how well South Korea lived to be this well.
To be honest, I said we weren't poor, but when thousands of tons of rice were brought in, I was really curious.
So that person seemed a little clueless.
He didn't know that South Korea's economy had developed to that extent, and he must have felt really pitiful that I was monitoring them like this.
So now we have a lot of conversations, and I also asked him about the problem of cars in South Korea.
I think he knew that there were a lot of cars in South Korea, because now that I see it through the media, there are a lot of cars, and where are the cars? I think he asked me a lot of questions like, "Are you okay?" I was really shocked when I talked to him about economic issues.
Oh, I guess I learned it wrong in the textbook, and I think North Korea is giving me wrong information.
I couldn't decide whether they were giving me wrong information or not.
I was surprised.
The person I saw through the media said, " Hello, how are you?" to the person who just got off the ship.
I was really surprised when he said, "Hello, how are you?" When I was sailing, why didn't I meet people from other countries? I met them but I couldn't talk.
It's like the Chinese saying, "Ni Hao.
" My heart was touched.
Wow, I was taught that this was the enemy in North Korea, but when I met him so quickly, saying "Hello" really touched my heart.
I think I raised my voice thinking, "Noona.
" I think I was really surprised that this is a Korean people who can communicate, even though we lived in a divided country.
Normally, if you get caught talking, there's nothing you can do.
After all, we 're the ones who are being monitored, so we don't punish them.