• Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Point to where I said “we know they don’t let people in because they’re isolationist”.

    Also, my sources explain how the two Koreas manifested themselves in the past. Your counter sounds a lot like the old “the Roman republic was not the Roman empire” which isn’t true. They weren’t called North and South Korea at the time. Names change. Governmental systems change. It happens.

    • booty [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      1 year ago

      Point to where I said “we know they don’t let people in because they’re isolationist”.

      Sure! It was right here.

      The restrictions for leaving and entering have not been imposed on them externally, this attitude of Korea predates even the Roman empire

      Anyway, we’re at an impasse here. You’ve decided that the DPRK is not a distinct country and that all you need to know about their laws can be extrapolated from the ancient history of the Korean peninsula, and that anything modern which contradicts your juvenile interpretation of ancient history must simply be made up. I have no idea what species of brainworm is responsible for this ridiculous conspiracy theory, and I am not qualified to exterminate it.

      • Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Sure! It was right here.

        I don’t see it, whether in your passage or out of it. Maybe because I never said it. Neither did I say the DPRK wasn’t its own country, or that modern history is made up, at most I was saying its customs of isolating go back to earlier manifestations of North and even South Korea. I did give sources. Many sources, ones that weren’t Wikipedia. They said what I said before I did. What do you bring to the table?

        • Egon [they/them]@hexbear.net
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          1 year ago

          They literally quoted you…

          The restrictions for leaving and entering have not been imposed on them externally, this attitude of Korea predates even the Roman empire

          This is you saying the thing you said you didn’t say.

          I did give sources. Many sources, ones that weren’t Wikipedia.

          “Giving sources” isn’t just mentioning them. If that’s the case then I can back up the other user by saying they have their data from Reuters, the UN, the CIA, CNN, AP, internal military documents made available by FOIA, BBC, MSNBC, NPR, etc.
          “Providing a source” means you give a reference to a specific text which supports the claim you’re making - in other words it’s it’s linking to them, providing them as references. You’ve only done this for the aforementioned ancient history and three christian dudes.

          Listen to Blowback season 3, it would do you some good.