What is to come?

Day 1,758, 08:43 Published in North Korea Ireland by OogieBoogie3

In the past few weeks we came a long way. We established the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and as result a few good citizens put forth the extra effort to give North Korea real diplomacy. Thanks to their great work, we now have Military protection Pacts signed with both neighboring China, and Turkey. This is a huge step forward for our security, sovereignty, and diplomacy.

Despite that, we still have a lot of work to do. I started talking to big name alliances like EDEN and CoT, which created a bit of confusion regarding our intentions. I apologize for the confusion, because deeply I understand that at this day and time, North Korea is not capable of contributing to such alliances. I wanted to know from them what it would take for us to potentially become a member in the future. Lets be honest, we are far away from being capable of contributing to such, but the real question is whether we will ever become sovereign enough to become an economic powerhouse again. Our economy is destabilized and we are in a deep recession. our currency is greatly inflated and we have nearly no exports. We almost entirely rely on China for trade and protection. The question is whether we, meaning all of us citizens, are going to actually work on fixing what needs to be fixed. It isn't a matter of if we can do what we need to do, but will we do it.

The problem isn't the government as much as it is the majority of the population. Undoubtedly, we have the smallest active population in the eWorld, and half of those who are active refuse to acknowledge our government's accomplishments, and refuse to recognize us as legitimate. that applies outside too, because our government is barely recognized around the world too. Ultimately the question is whether all of us are willing to come together and become a legitimate an unified nation. Whether we will stop trying to bash the government and support them as an oppositional political party. We have a new generation of nationalists that see themselves as revolutionaries fighting against an occupational political power. But in reality they are lazy whiners that refuse to do any real work, and would rather just point fingers and cry about what they refuse to change. I think the final question is whether we are ever going to put our differences aside and all look at ourselves as eNorth Koreans, and all put forth the effort to fix our problems unitedly.