North Korea Executing More People for Watching Foreign Films and Tv, Un Finds
Posted4 months agoActive4 months ago
bbc.comOtherstory
heatednegative
Debate
80/100
North KoreaHuman RightsCensorship
Key topics
North Korea
Human Rights
Censorship
The UN has found that North Korea is executing people for watching foreign films and TV, sparking a discussion on the regime's brutality and the role of foreign influences.
Snapshot generated from the HN discussion
Discussion Activity
Moderate engagementFirst comment
2h
Peak period
8
26-28h
Avg / period
3.7
Comment distribution33 data points
Loading chart...
Based on 33 loaded comments
Key moments
- 01Story posted
Sep 12, 2025 at 6:12 AM EDT
4 months ago
Step 01 - 02First comment
Sep 12, 2025 at 7:59 AM EDT
2h after posting
Step 02 - 03Peak activity
8 comments in 26-28h
Hottest window of the conversation
Step 03 - 04Latest activity
Sep 13, 2025 at 9:47 AM EDT
4 months ago
Step 04
Generating AI Summary...
Analyzing up to 500 comments to identify key contributors and discussion patterns
ID: 45220589Type: storyLast synced: 11/20/2025, 6:56:52 PM
Want the full context?
Jump to the original sources
Read the primary article or dive into the live Hacker News thread when you're ready.
I'm not even saying this country is not paranoid, but its nearly not as bad as everyone is imaging, and frankly, considering what Americans have inflicted unto the korean people, its fairly understandable.
The kind of obvious propaganda like "it's a crime to have the same haircut as Kim Jong-Un" (or to not have it, depending on the source). No one is saying life there is great, but there is a track record of fantastically untrue stories.
A lot of it was driven by quotas that the police had to meet.
0: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otto_Warmbier
Some foreigner came into their country and tried to 'illuminate' the 'unwashed' masses via tearing down propaganda and was promptly thrown into some hellhole of a jail.
Seems to me like a normal thing to have happened. By the standards of the Global North, that is.
Doesn't seem meaningfully different from today's USA.
I'm mostly trying to make light on the fact that trying to validate outlandish propaganda by using an event which actually happened as some kind of 'gotcha' falls flat when the event you're talking about is something that happens routinely in the USA and, more generally, in the Global North.
If I went to the USA and took down a MAGA poster, my ass would be in Alligator Alcatraz 2.0 within the day and nobody would ever find me again. At least until I land in South Sudan or some shit.
Sounds like the most innocuous thing in the world
Then there's the idea that it's just too unbelievable to conceive that the regime would execute people simply for watching foreign movies. The Stalin regime executed or GULAG-starved many hundreds of thousands for the 1930s versions of the same thing, or for having any contact and even just suspected contact with foreigners. The Nazi regime killed millions simply for existing under a certain invented category of threat, the Cambodian Khmer Rouge would mass execute hundreds of thousands for being "bourgeoisie" because they.... had university educations, or maybe wore glasses, or spoke a second language (yes, the condemnations were really that murderously banal and never mind that many Khmer leaders themselves could tick off these same classifications for their own lives). I see nothing at all unbelievable about a youthful dictator in a closed country protected by its nuclear arsenal further absolutizing his own power by showing ever more of his already well-demonstrated indifference to human life whenever it suits him.
ultimately it shows - your system is built on 'sinking' sand.
First, doubts of people not right away believing any news about NK are justified, given how many lies about NK, like executing by feeding to dogs, were spread. So don't take them as NK defenders, it may be just a healthy skepticism.
Second, note that NK kills their citizens for what is illegal in their country, which is gross, but in 2019 Americans killed North Koreans for what was pretty legal, and got away with it [1].
Third, it looks hypocritic to read how horrible is that people got prosecuted for just watching videos. We all know that in so called civilized democracies, people's life can be ruined (luckily not taken) for possessing illegal video materials, it's just legality differs by jurisdictions.
West's true advantage is that we're much more shy in capital punishments, however we're still far from humanistic ideals, and I believe concentrating only on NK regime crimes lets the mindset "they being so bad, then we're not so bad after all".
[1] https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/05/us/navy-seal-north-korea-...
I'm sure the current leader saw that also.
20 more comments available on Hacker News