@@nonebeachstop this “all Asians look alike” nonsense just because you’re too lazy to differentiate. This is just purposeful ignorance. If someone put up a photo of Queen Elizabeth and called her Russian everyone would be up in arms.
How do we know there hasn't been any coup? Not every coup replaces the guy at the top. Some coups replace the inner circle or faction in power. A leader may even coup his own government to purge and replace members.
I suppose all we know for certain is that there's never been a revolt of the population sufficiently extensive in scope to make it impossible for the government there to suppress any news of it leaking to the outside world.
I guess, technically, we don't know that they never have minor coups like you described or attempted coups, but obviously, when most people think of "coups" they think of national governments being overthrown.
Simple. If caught preparing for a coup, the entire generations of a family would face punishments worse than hell. Also, there are more than three layers of surveillance system which is impossible to avoid being caught while orchestrating the plan.
Fear can be easily overcome by anger, and even if every North Korean citizen become angry enough to forget about everything else, that does not necessarily mean that the anger will all be directed at the central government. Regime change requires a sustained organized effort, and if anger can overcome the fear within the citizens, it still has to be sustained and organized towards the central government to fuel the effort to overthrow the regime. There will definitely be people directing their anger towards other citizens for different reasons (personal conflict, social differences, emotional prejudice etc). North Korea keeps the population physically divided by controlling the internal movements of the people. That makes coup that much more difficult, and the group of people who has the greatest chance of success are the people physically close to the central government. The problem is that those people are screened to the extremes for their loyalty to the regime. If forced unity is a thing, the North Korean government has proven itself to be the best at it.
They have Coups. A few were documented, Like that Prison revolt in the 90s where all the inmates were klled. For whatever reason youtubers just never cover them.
@@kettelbe It was. Despite what is widely spread among western Media, the DPRK has had internet for quite a long time. They even have an official youtube. You could make the argument that they don't have absolute freedom to browse, but they have internet and have had it for several decades.
I recently started watching videos and doing research about North Korea and how a collapse can happen. I enjoyed this video, pretty much summed up the research I did and the other videos I watched.
Out of curiosity what would happen if every citizen outside of law enforcement decided to rise up against the North Korean government would they be able to defeat the North Korean military? And even if they don't could the North Korean government even survive if something like that happened?
The citizens won't be able to defeat the military, because they don't have the kind of resources that the military has to scale up the violence. If every citizen decided to rise up against the regime, the bordering nations will likely take advantage of the ensuing chaos to exert political influence on the regime, and that may cause the regime to fracture to multiple pieces, and an eventual downfall. This is because each bordering nation has its own political interests to get involved. If there is nationwide civil disobedience, it essentially means that the central government has become dysfunctional. The North Korean military IS the regime, and a dysfunctional leadership can be easily influenced by external state actors. Imagine several state actors, each with their own interests, influencing the regime in different directions. Divided they fall.
@@BannedUser-m8r they can't afford to remove that much peoples. If all rise up, who will they remove first? (Possible in theory, but never seen it happened in practice besides one that happened in east Germany where they overwhelm a border checkpoint between east and west Germany)
@@lightbulbmoment8162 Those citizens have no comprehension of how the world or reality works. The top commanders in this video considered a coup because they are well read in to how the world, and more importantly how North Korea works. We're talking about brainwashed cultists who think things like the internet, radios and airplanes just magically exist at the whim of the North Korea, and the famine is some normal occurrence. the military leaders were well aware the famine was because of incompetence. The common citizen has no idea of this.
Obviously, North Korea has remained stable by carefully applying the principles of Juche and the revolutionary thought of Kimilsungism-Kimjongilism to create a harmonious workers' republic.
Well they have food alright. But just for the elites of Pyongyang. The rest of the country? Nobody knows about them, nobody cares about them. Last time NK published a song (The Friendly Father/친근한 어버이), we can clearly see that even the official MV never showed a single farmer at all.
They all watch each other and tell on each other. If 1 general uttered dissent to any other general, he'd be dead and his family would be dead before he could tell a 2nd guy about a plan. Nothing gets off the ground there internally.
Fear! The reason I didn't try to bring down the Tory government for 15 years of poor governance is because I was afraid to. Isn't that why everybody doesn't lead revolutions?
@@pebblepod30 I think what he's saying is that the Soviet Union may have set a benchmark for sophisticated mass repression in the 20th century but it was North Korea that had pushed past that benchmark WAY more than possibly imaginable. They literally systemically indoctrinated generations of their population to the point where there's literally almost zero chance of them recognising that the way they are living is a form of subjugation, which is why North Korea is still a thing and East Germany isn't
@@tonyryan43 its no secret the USA bullies and treats other nations in the world theatre like trash ... Difference is the USSR was more likely to do to their own people what the USA was willing to do to people from other countries
In Greece, an unusual type of coup took place in 1967, which installed an awful and murderous far - right regime (1967 - 1974), which ended in national tragedy. The strange part was that it was organised and led mostly by colonels, as was the regime that followed. Brigadiers and generals participating in the coup commanded the colonels in everyday military life, but obeyed orders from the colonels for the needs of the conspiracy and the coup preparation and execution. It was CIA-backed.
Once communism gets in it rules with fear greed and does terrible things to anyone who is not a puppet once in almost impossible to get out let this be a lesson
It is because workers and peasants in DPRK live a relatively good stable life under the leadership of the Workers party of Korea and enjoy the social benefits and profound care of marshal Kim Jong Un. This is in direct contrast to the dystopian capitalist society of American backed South Korea where the people live a miserable life in poor conditions and receive no social welfare whatsoever from the state.
@Kamil_Jumpen People in South Korea do not live in miserable conditions and their not a puppet state of America their the 11th biggest economy on the planet and your just quoting lines from North Korean propaganda
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Next Video: Why South Korea Has Coups
If the Kim dynasty ever does fall, its story will make for one hell of a mini-series.
Probably just a series
@@Amsterdampardoc1 Netflix will use African actors for the Kims
@@miliba I have ideal candidate. You remember that ginger black chinese jew guy?
😂@@miliba
@@miliba we wuz kimz and sheet
Well, Now South Korea had one.
south korea had already 2 coup before
Lasted for a whole 3 hours
more like a pathetic attempt at one
Had more than one
Bruh in the picture of Soviet Koreans you show picture of young Mao
same shit, close enough
@@nonebeach No.
MAOBama 🇨🇳
@@nonebeach that's like making a video about Joseph Stalin while using pictures of Queen Elizabeth and saying, "same shit, close enough."
@@nonebeachstop this “all Asians look alike” nonsense just because you’re too lazy to differentiate. This is just purposeful ignorance. If someone put up a photo of Queen Elizabeth and called her Russian everyone would be up in arms.
Boy this is a BAD timing
0:49 “And embrace democracy like their neighbours to the south” - Well that aged rapidly and terribly.
And now this comment has aged terribly. South korea is way too democratic to allow a coup like the one attempted after going through one already.
Who else is watching this after the South Korean president declared martial law?
this is how i found out
Bro, the timing of this video. Its like he saw into the future
Wrong korea tho lol
Just imagine how inept these high ranking people would need to be so that the inept ruler doesn't feel threatened.
I rather chose to be an inept officer than having my entire generations of family punished to be slave labor for the rest of their live lol
How do we know there hasn't been any coup?
Not every coup replaces the guy at the top. Some coups replace the inner circle or faction in power. A leader may even coup his own government to purge and replace members.
You mean coup or cow?
I suppose all we know for certain is that there's never been a revolt of the population sufficiently extensive in scope to make it impossible for the government there to suppress any news of it leaking to the outside world.
Supreme leaders brother was killed at an airport, looks suspicious to me.
What if they do have coups which they knock down? We would never know, they don't communicate with us 🤔
I guess, technically, we don't know that they never have minor coups like you described or attempted coups, but obviously, when most people think of "coups" they think of national governments being overthrown.
The Ruling Dynasty in Singapore was in power since 1959, still going strong today.
Bro must have told the President of South Korea to attempt to coup 💀
Simple. If caught preparing for a coup, the entire generations of a family would face punishments worse than hell. Also, there are more than three layers of surveillance system which is impossible to avoid being caught while orchestrating the plan.
yeah, plus there is no people who born before communists to see a difference. Without foreign help, they would never revolt against Kims
Fear can be easily overcome by anger, and even if every North Korean citizen become angry enough to forget about everything else, that does not necessarily mean that the anger will all be directed at the central government. Regime change requires a sustained organized effort, and if anger can overcome the fear within the citizens, it still has to be sustained and organized towards the central government to fuel the effort to overthrow the regime.
There will definitely be people directing their anger towards other citizens for different reasons (personal conflict, social differences, emotional prejudice etc).
North Korea keeps the population physically divided by controlling the internal movements of the people. That makes coup that much more difficult, and the group of people who has the greatest chance of success are the people physically close to the central government. The problem is that those people are screened to the extremes for their loyalty to the regime. If forced unity is a thing, the North Korean government has proven itself to be the best at it.
this video's time of upload was so perfect
1:10 *GET OUT*
I got an ad at that moment on top of it 😭
Interesting timing and recommendation.
The Algorithm has a sick sense of humor
For any coup to succeed, international backing is required. NK does not anyone in, neither friend nor foe.
They have Coups. A few were documented, Like that Prison revolt in the 90s where all the inmates were klled. For whatever reason youtubers just never cover them.
Internet wasnt there in the 90s lol
@@kettelbe It was. Despite what is widely spread among western Media, the DPRK has had internet for quite a long time. They even have an official youtube. You could make the argument that they don't have absolute freedom to browse, but they have internet and have had it for several decades.
I recently started watching videos and doing research about North Korea and how a collapse can happen. I enjoyed this video, pretty much summed up the research I did and the other videos I watched.
Doing research so you can lead the people there to a new America? Good luck!
*What a coincidence to after this video; South Korea Coup happened and then Failed.*
North Korea where the people eat grass and have icy bms.
They also live in the days of the Flintstones
because of USA sanction, other countries can't trade with North Korea
The timing is crazy
Never say never, if somebody was in your line of sight and you MG has ammo with no safety you wont say NO to the chance,
Not yet. Not yet.
Ofc I get this recommended to me now...
being executed as CoS for "disagreeing over economic policy" does kind of tell you what you need to know lol
That might be a slight preview to the next administration, which already had a small preview previously
Out of curiosity what would happen if every citizen outside of law enforcement decided to rise up against the North Korean government would they be able to defeat the North Korean military? And even if they don't could the North Korean government even survive if something like that happened?
The citizens won't be able to defeat the military, because they don't have the kind of resources that the military has to scale up the violence.
If every citizen decided to rise up against the regime, the bordering nations will likely take advantage of the ensuing chaos to exert political influence on the regime, and that may cause the regime to fracture to multiple pieces, and an eventual downfall. This is because each bordering nation has its own political interests to get involved. If there is nationwide civil disobedience, it essentially means that the central government has become dysfunctional. The North Korean military IS the regime, and a dysfunctional leadership can be easily influenced by external state actors. Imagine several state actors, each with their own interests, influencing the regime in different directions. Divided they fall.
@@BannedUser-m8r they can't afford to remove that much peoples. If all rise up, who will they remove first? (Possible in theory, but never seen it happened in practice besides one that happened in east Germany where they overwhelm a border checkpoint between east and west Germany)
@@G.A.C_Preserve No one can stop the North Korean military turning its nuclear weapon against its own citizens.
Almost all citizens in North Korea have a couple years of military training so would depend if they get guns
@@lightbulbmoment8162 Those citizens have no comprehension of how the world or reality works. The top commanders in this video considered a coup because they are well read in to how the world, and more importantly how North Korea works. We're talking about brainwashed cultists who think things like the internet, radios and airplanes just magically exist at the whim of the North Korea, and the famine is some normal occurrence. the military leaders were well aware the famine was because of incompetence. The common citizen has no idea of this.
Obviously, North Korea has remained stable by carefully applying the principles of Juche and the revolutionary thought of Kimilsungism-Kimjongilism to create a harmonious workers' republic.
Todays coup was the worst coup ever. Only lasted 2 hours
Can't have coup if you don't have enough food to feed more than 2 people
Also can't have a coup if you can't organize or talk freely.
Well they have food alright. But just for the elites of Pyongyang. The rest of the country? Nobody knows about them, nobody cares about them. Last time NK published a song (The Friendly Father/친근한 어버이), we can clearly see that even the official MV never showed a single farmer at all.
They all watch each other and tell on each other. If 1 general uttered dissent to any other general, he'd be dead and his family would be dead before he could tell a 2nd guy about a plan. Nothing gets off the ground there internally.
Same question I ask: why don’t junior countries rebel against America’s influence and dictation?
Great timing
its kinda hard to deal with the army
No oil , no interest !!
South Korea be like:
Count me in 😁
Thank you
Enjoyed it. Scary business
Your accent sounds so South African also clean editing and thanks for the video
9:05 you stayed loyal and didn't stand up and look where that got you.
South Korea President saw your video, felt inspired i guess.
14:35 don’t compare to modern era compare to previous Korean dynasties
From 1:08- 2:02 there is an ad everyone should skip. Clearly the uploader does not respect your time, so don’t support the uploader
Just get the add on sponserblock
Democracy Assistance Program...🤣
Fear! The reason I didn't try to bring down the Tory government for 15 years of poor governance is because I was afraid to. Isn't that why everybody doesn't lead revolutions?
North Korea, karma never forgets
I wonder how often the average North Korean just closes their door and lets out a good cry over their situation
Im confused. They don’t have chicken and pigeon coups? So they only eat beef and pork?
The film Steel Rain depicts a coup against the current supreme leader
DPRK is so based
North Korea should’ve just printed more money and lower the prices of their goods.
I don’t understand how difficult this is.😕
Because NGOs don't exist to agitate the public constantly 😂
South Korea has had like 3 or 4.
5:38 who in the hell is the guy to the left?
USSR may have invented mass repression. But it was North Korea who perfected the arts and sciences of mass subjugation.
USSR invented repression??🤣🤣🤣
That's the wackiest thing ive ever heard, like human history started in 1917?
@@pebblepod30 I think what he's saying is that
the Soviet Union may have set a benchmark for sophisticated mass repression in the 20th century
but it was North Korea that had pushed past that benchmark WAY more than possibly imaginable.
They literally systemically indoctrinated generations of their population to the point where there's literally almost zero chance of them recognising that the way they are living is a form of subjugation, which is why North Korea is still a thing and East Germany isn't
No. The US has done this to 61 sovereign nations since 1946.
@@tonyryan43 its no secret the USA bullies and treats other nations in the world theatre like trash ... Difference is the USSR was more likely to do to their own people what the USA was willing to do to people from other countries
Hmm, excellent documentary, but your source is Wikipedia?
why USA fking sanctions north Korea
because north korea violates human rights, has nuclear warheads, and also treats people like shit
@@deez8202The US does too it illegally invaded Iraq and Afghanistan
@2:13 that aint Kim got ill
No it's because it's illegal to do so
6:49 that photo doesn't look right
Did you know something we didn't?
In Greece, an unusual type of coup took place in 1967, which installed an awful and murderous far - right regime (1967 - 1974), which ended in national tragedy.
The strange part was that it was organised and led mostly by colonels, as was the regime that followed. Brigadiers and generals participating in the coup commanded the colonels in everyday military life, but obeyed orders from the colonels for the needs of the conspiracy and the coup preparation and execution. It was CIA-backed.
18:44 Ew…his soldiers look at him 👀 REAL flamboyant like
My own question is why didn't the Soviets transfer birth Korea to the CCP with Manchuria. That way the Korean war will never happen
Rebellious is only something westerns like to think. Asians are obedient and hard working people who do what they’re told.
Because some Asian countries like North Korea are ran by dictators
If there so bad for keeping their leaders in place, is african nations that are under wars by paramilitary factions good?
WE, ARE, SO, BACK, BABYYYYYY
We are doing Impeachment 2 Electric Coup-galoo with this one🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣
who has a worse survival rate in NK, the starving peasants or affluent persons
Why no coup in usa
You forgot about January 6th? 🤔
@@ericdpeerik3928that will do nothing to America
@@ericdpeerik3928 what a protest? no guns or weapons were used...stop parroting democrat propaganda. 😂
@@gutzzgutzz6795 I'm not a democratic. Nice attempt of justifying terrorism though
@@ericdpeerik3928based Trump and DPRK
maybe the people are just happy to Live in the country :)
most of the people there has a limited opinion and thinking..
How tf did you know?
North Korea is great.
Annoying commercial break pls put em at the beginning or the end
The other one coups
This is what Trump wants from the USA.
Same thing coming to America in 2025.
The moment you played up us vs them sentiments, i knew your video was biased 0:50
You put a picture with Mao Zedong as a "Soviet Korean." Thumbs down.
Xiao ling sigma
Weak frightend
Please define "isolated"
Do you know how many countries trade with North Korea on agricultural products?
Mostly Russia and China but North Korea is in fact isolated
Same problem as in China and Russsia, and theocracies - fear, fear and more fear
Because they are demure.
Sometimes a monarchy does work better
Both are same shit
@@Nope-w2hno
The monarchy doesn't work in North Korea
Great argument serf @@gustavojoaquin_arch
Simple because it starves its citizens, while the short, tubby tyrant sits in fancy chair
..
Wazzaaap
2:13 picture of kim il sung twice
lmao
East Asians are very obedient
There also smart and racist they own the future
@@Nope-w2hyup
They're really not, Chinas whole history is rife with rebellion. As is Japans lol.
@@Nope-w2h And quite arrogant too, from the sound of your comment.
Democracy is freedom for all.
what is democracy ?
You may confused democracy with pro-USA/the West.
so Nazis is democracy too, don't you think ?
Once communism gets in it rules with fear greed and does terrible things to anyone who is not a puppet once in almost impossible to get out let this be a lesson
Same shit
It is because workers and peasants in DPRK live a relatively good stable life under the leadership of the Workers party of Korea and enjoy the social benefits and profound care of marshal Kim Jong Un. This is in direct contrast to the dystopian capitalist society of American backed South Korea where the people live a miserable life in poor conditions and receive no social welfare whatsoever from the state.
Oh fuck off! How much is kim-jong-un paying you to support his shitty excuse of rule
@Kamil_Jumpen
People in South Korea do not live in miserable conditions and their not a puppet state of America their the 11th biggest economy on the planet and your just quoting lines from North Korean propaganda
Is this satire?
@@major_kukri2430 no it’s legit. Great general dear leader is a benevolent king
@@Srp_-_f funny
early
Hard to Coup when you hungry.
Great timing