Tyrant Kim-Jong-un bans North Koreans from eating hotdogs for bizarre reason

DESPOT Because hot dogs are too Western, Kim Jong-un has outlawed them.

According to the despot, it is treasonous to serve a popular meal made with the sausages to North Koreans.

Anyone seen preparing them at home or selling them on the street faces deportation to labor camps.

However, the rogue state still permits the consumption of dogs.

Pyongyang’s recent crackdown on what it perceives as an infiltration of Western culture is exemplified by the edict.

Hotdogs are used to make the spicy noodle soup known as “budae-jjigae.” In 2017, pro-Western South Korea imported spam.

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However, a merchant in the Ryanggang province in the north stated: Budae-jjigae sales in the market have ceased.

Anyone found selling it will have their business shut down, according to the police and market management.

In order to make amends for their misdeeds, the dictator has also ordered divorcing spouses to be transferred to a labor camp.

Since a split is viewed as anti-socialist, he wants both to serve for a maximum of six months.

Additionally, he threatened to execute everyone in North Korea who celebrated Christmas in December.

Kim Jong-un’s succession crisis

Since 2011, Kim Jong-un has maintained strict control over North Korea, but questions have been raised concerning his successor due to health issues.

The 40-year-old Supreme Leader, who is only 5 feet 5 inches tall, is thought to have diabetes and high blood pressure.

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His grandfather, Kim Il-sung, died of sudden cardiac arrest in 1994, and his father, Kim Jong-il, passed away from a heart attack in 2011.

However, it appears that Kim has not yet decided who will succeed him in death, even if his health appears to be declining.

It is believed that either his eldest son, Kim Yo-jong, or his notorious sister, Kim Ju-ae, are in the race.

Ju-ae, who is believed to be 11 or 12, has been photographed with her father during military parades and missile launches, suggesting that she is receiving successor training.

However, Kim’s strong sister, who has long collaborated with her brother, has been predicted to succeed him for years.

But according to experts, if Ju-ae is too young to assume leadership, Yo-jong might not be a direct succession and might instead be named leader in a temporary position.

Yo-jong, who has been known to order executions, is regarded as one of the world’s most dangerous women.

Although she and Ju-ae have both been spotted in public with Kim, a third candidate—Kim’s purported son—is shrouded in secrecy.

For years, there have been persistent rumors that Kim gave birth to a boy in 2010, but no information is available about him.

The Sun previously quoted Dr. Adam Zulawnik, senior Korean Studies instructor at the University of Melbourne: “There has been discussion about whether Kim has an eldest son or not, with some ideas suggesting that he may be raising him in secret as a successor.

This is predicated on the idea that North Korea would adopt a male-successive Confucian patriarchal system. However, it’s also possible that Kim’s oldest son isn’t qualified to succeed her.

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“There are several possible causes for this, including the person’s lack of interest or even health problems.

“Mental health and developmental issues, in particular, are still highly stigmatised in many parts of the world, and so any learning disability would likely be enough to rule out succession.”

According to Dr. Zulawnik, the only tenable argument for Kim Ju-ae taking over would be that the son is unfit or nonexistent.

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