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South Korea Sent 10,000 Choco Pies Over to North Korea in Balloons

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  • South Korea Sent 10,000 Choco Pies Over to North Korea in Balloons

    North Korea got a sweet surprise from its neighbor to the south on Wednesday.

    In South Korea, about 200 people — South Koreans along with North Korean defectors — packed 770 pounds of Choco Pies into plastic bags, which they attached to 50 giant balloons and released into North Korea from a park in the border city of Paju, according to organizers of the event. It was an act of rebellion against the alleged North Korean ban on the chocolate confections.

    See also: Riot Gear: How Protesters Around the World Suit Up

    The pies, which are produced in South Korea, are wildly popular in North Korea. Fearful that the treats would encourage an uprising, Kim Jong-un reportedly banned Choco Pies from the country earlier this month. The pies, which have become something of a political statement, are viewed as a symbol of capitalism and represent a taste of the world outside North Korea.

    Two women release balloon filled with Choco Pies

    People carrying chocolate pies and cookies during a rally near the border village of Panmunjom that separates the two Koreas on July 30, 2014.

    Image: Ahn Young-joon/Associated Press

    Choco Pies have occasionally been doled out in North Korea as bonuses to workers in the Kaesong Industrial Complex. Employees make around $100 a month there, according to the news site Daily NK, but only take home about 30% of their wages as a result of deductions by the North Korean government. The pies were used to supplement low wages and give the workers a literal taste of the outside world.

    "Choco Pies are an important mind-changing instrument ... [North Koreans] are suffering and starving, but thanks to Choco Pies, DVDs and large-scale labour migration to China, people don't buy the old story [that the South is even poorer] and the government does not sell it any more," Andrei Lankov, an expert on Korean studies, told The Guardian. Other items like DVDs have also been transported to North Korea via balloons.

    People filling balloons with treats

    Preparing to release the balloons carrying chocolate pies and cookies.

    Image: Ahn Young-joon/Associated Press

    It is not unusual for such balloons to travel across the border to North Korea. Often, they carry things like anti-North Korean leaflets and USB sticks containing photos from places outside the country.

    In response to the bombardment of chocolate pie-filled balloons, North Korea's leadership has threatened to shell the people responsible on the other side of the border.

    I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

  • #2
    I wish they would send those over this way. I love me some chocolate pies!

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    • #3
      I figured the north would take this as a threat and respond with force.

      IF that happens.... What the fuck is next?

      320rwhp. 7.67 @ 90mph 1.7 60'

      DD: 2004 GMC Sierra VHO 6.0 LQ9 324whp 350wtrq

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      • #4
        "It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom - for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself."

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        • #5
          Hilarious!
          ZOMBIE REAGAN FOR PRESIDENT 2016!!! heh

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          • #6
            When I was at Camp Greaves (Frost knows where, but just outside the DMZ, for those that don't) we used to get balloons from the north filled with their propaganda.. Makes sense.

            They also used to somehow obtain US personnel rosters and broadcast names from "Freedom Village", in addition to North Korean propaganda music, which was always a bit creepy.

            I still have one of the leaflets I picked up during police call one morning (that we weren't supposed to keep).

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            • #7
              Fucking Greaves
              I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

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