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3:00 am is the "devils hour" because it is the opposite of 3:00 pm, the hour Jesus died on the cross. The Devil is at exact opposites with God. 3:00 pm the hour of mercy 3:00 am the hour of darkness, the devils hour. this "opposite" method is used through out satanic practices. (Supposedly)
Veronica Greene
CAN YOU SPOT PABLO PICASSO IN THIS HEAP OF PULP TRASH?
Let’s say you’re on vacation in China and you’re near the North Korean border and you think to yourself—“wouldn’t it be totally awesome if I just crossed into North Korea for a few seconds to take a quick photo so I can prove to my buddies I was there?” Before you know it, you’re surrounded by armed NK guards and taken into custody. Because you are a nobody who isn’t working for Al Gore–the outside world is not going to care that you were arrested, you’re not going to be on CNN, you’re going to be tried and convicted on charges you probably won’t understand and sentenced to one of the country’s infamous labor camps. You are essentially screwed, my friend. No one’s going to be holding any vigils for you, Anderson Cooper will not be interviewing your family and Bill Clinton will not be coming to your rescue. In case you may ever find yourself in this situation, I once again offer some practical advice—this time, on what to expect in these camps and the best way to survive. According to a recently published report by the nongovernmental US Committee for Human Rights in North Korea, entitled The Hidden Gulag, prisoners are forced to work–many to their deaths (some estimates say as many as 20-25 percent of detainees die every year)–in mining, logging, farming and industrial enterprises. Other facts: “The camps give out such meager food rations that prisoners are kept in a condition of ‘deliberately contrived semi-starvation.’” “Former inmates who have escaped North Korea have given accounts of brutal treatment inside the camps, including regular beatings, forced abortions and rape.” “Others have told of Nazi-style experiments involving chemical and biological weapons resulting in the painful deaths of dozens of prisoners at a time.” “At other times, re-education classes involve long sessions where inmates are forced to memorize speeches by Kim Jong-Il, word-for-word.” “Most work 12- to 15-hour days until they die of malnutrition-related illnesses, usually around the age of 50. Allowed just one set of clothes, they live and die in rags, without soap, socks, underclothes or sanitary napkins.” As bad as all this sounds, some former prisoners have said that what is even worse is the pre-camp interrogation at the hands of the Bowibu, the National Security Agency. Here’s how one inmate described the almost year long ordeal: “They wanted me to admit to being a spy. They knocked out my front teeth with a baseball bat. They fractured my skull a couple of times. I was not a spy, but I admitted to being a spy after nine months of torture.” It gets worse. We know from news reports that Ling and Lee were allowed phone calls to their families as well as letters during their imprisonment period. But this seems to have been an exception made due to the heavy media focus on the two journalists. According to the Korean Bar Association’s 2008 paper on human rights in North Korea, prisoners are denied any contact with the outside world. So your friends and family may not even know you’re in one of these camps. They may think you just mysteriously disappeared on your Chinese vacation. And it gets even worse. Most of the camps are designated “complete control districts.” That means inmates work there until they die. Doesn’t matter what your sentence is, don’t expect to get out—ever. And if you have children while in the camp, he or she must also serve a life term. And if your children have children, your grandchildren must serve out a life sentence for your crimes too (three generations must be punished according to doctrine).
Veronica Greene
Veronica Greene
Veronica Greene
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