Moving to North Korea

I like north korea. If you want to move, do it. It will make ur life much more interesting and north korean women are really cute.
Is it better than Japan though? Legally i can also move to Japan if i want to
 
Is it better than Japan though? Legally i can also move to Japan if i want to
It depends on what you want. North korea has stronger morals and is collectivist and traditional, while japan is more individualist, modern, etc (both from my view doe). I can't really find videos on the daily life in either countries, so you have to do your own research (because western media heavily demonizes N. Korea and obsesses over japan). You share more with japan doe so that's a good idea, plus there is a ton of documentation on learning the language. Do you know japanese already? I would try to visit both countries before making the decision, it's easier because you're in brazil rn

I also plan on moving to a foreign country one day.
 
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It depends on what you want. North korea has stronger morals and is collectivist and traditional, while japan is more isolationist, modern, etc (both from my view doe). I can't really find videos on the daily life in either countries, so you have to do your own research (because western media heavily demonizes N. Korea and obsesses over japan). You share more with japan doe so that's a good idea, plus there is a ton of documentation on learning the language. Do you know japanese already? I would try to visit both countries before making the decision, it's easier because you're in brazil rn

I also plan on moving to a foreign country one day.
I hate Japan sm it’s just China but with American influence
 
I hate Japan sm it’s just China but with American influence
Also applies to south korea. Idk doe, maybe rural life there is le good or something. It's naturally very isolationist and ethnically pure (until weebs are able to find a better way to learn japanese, then it's gonna be the next american state because of le wholesome anime)
 
It depends on what you want. North korea has stronger morals and is collectivist and traditional, while japan is more individualist, modern, etc (both from my view doe). I can't really find videos on the daily life in either countries, so you have to do your own research (because western media heavily demonizes N. Korea and obsesses over japan). You share more with japan doe so that's a good idea, plus there is a ton of documentation on learning the language. Do you know japanese already? I would try to visit both countries before making the decision, it's easier because you're in brazil rn

I also plan on moving to a foreign country one day.
I don't know japanese, just basic hiragana and a bit of katakana. Is it over? I'm 15 already, and from what i know children learn languages way faster than teenager or adults.
 
I don't know japanese, just basic hiragana and a bit of katakana. Is it over? I'm 15 already, and from what i know children learn languages way faster than teenager or adults.
Nah, basically nobody has ambitions before 13, so you didn't have a choice. Just make due with the time you have right now. You'll wish you had if you don't right now, you will never remember procrastination or escapism, but you will remember your productivity. U can talk with parents too and maybe other japanese descendants if they're common in the area.

My tips 4 language learning:
Focus on le script (I think japanese has like a phonetic script and a logographic script).
Focus on the beginner grammar at first, use some free course if you want, but accept that it will never bring you to fluency.
Focus on consuming media, comic books, manga, vocab videos, glosbe, podcasts, chats, etc are really good. Find a friend or someone to talk to in the language.
Use glosbe, wikitionary, and chatgpt for making immediate sense of vocab, gender, conjugations, etc. I have no idea what that's like for japanese doe.
Use anki to create flashcards, but always learn vocab in the context of a sentence or similar/derived words, or you won't remember it.
Polyglot club's wiki has a lot of pages for learning vocab in a single context, like color, foods, animals. Other random sites are good for that too. Just look up visual dictionaries.
Try forming sentences in the language on ur own.
 
Nah, basically nobody has ambitions before 13, so you didn't have a choice. Just make due with the time you have right now. You'll wish you had if you don't right now, you will never remember procrastination or escapism, but you will remember your productivity. U can talk with parents too and maybe other japanese descendants if they're common in the area.

My tips 4 language learning:
Focus on le script (I think japanese has like a phonetic script and a logographic script).
Focus on the beginner grammar at first, use some free course if you want, but accept that it will never bring you to fluency.
Focus on consuming media, comic books, manga, vocab videos, glosbe, podcasts, chats, etc are really good. Find a friend or someone to talk to in the language.
Use glosbe, wikitionary, and chatgpt for making immediate sense of vocab, gender, conjugations, etc. I have no idea what that's like for japanese doe.
Use anki to create flashcards, but always learn vocab in the context of a sentence or similar/derived words, or you won't remember it.
Polyglot club's wiki has a lot of pages for learning vocab in a single context, like color, foods, animals. Other random sites are good for that too. Just look up visual dictionaries.
Try forming sentences in the language on ur own.
Thank for the advice 'teen. Would it be possible to learn the language while in a japense school? Like i still have 3 years of school or whatever.
 
Thank for the advice 'teen. Would it be possible to learn the language while in a japense school? Like i still have 3 years of school or whatever.
Of course. But if it's not good quality, it could kill your passion or interest really quickly.
 
Didn't one guy travel to north korea and get lobotomized for stealing a propaganda poster and then got shipped back?
 
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