That vast swath of darkness at the center of the above image, looking like a speckled, oddly shaped body of water — that’s the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, photographed from the International Space Station on January 30th. NASA has some relevant landmarks labeled for context.
It’s a striking reminder of how literally and figuratively dark the country is: Pyongyang, North Korea, a city of 3.26 million, looks about the same size as Gunsan, South Korea, population 280,000. The rest of the DPRK might as well be an extension of the Yellow Sea.
Anonymous knows no bounds with who or what they will attack, but the group has since chosen to attack their boldest target yet -- the government of North Korea. The attack has so far included the collection of over 15,000 passwords used to access the website Uriminzokkiri.com, a website that provides Korean language news and propaganda from North Korea's central…
Apparently, ANIMAL "inspired" a part in the new Taiwanese animation video, the time that we enlisted North Korea expert Michael Malice to explain the photos of Kim Jong-un in Grease, the musical. The CGI reenactments of bunnies jumping into the anal cavities of a dictator in bondage and stuff? That wasn't us. Dear Animal New York,…
Before Kim Jong Un inherited his dictatorship over North Korea, "Dear Leader might have been just another goofy pre-teen in a school play." That's what the Atlantic says about those photos. The question mark at the end of the headline says they're not sure but what they hey, clickity-click-click. The…