Lately, technology has been a vital source in bringing people together. The use of mobile phones and social networks have given new meaning to the word organization. Websites like Twitter and Facebook have given its users ways to communicate in which we’d never thought possible. For example, in places like Moldova, Belarus, and Iran, youths wanting to protest against their government used text messages, tweets, and facebook statuses to communicate to each other. Instantly, they would be able to gather a large number- we’re talking about hundreds, or perhaps even thousands- of people to meet at a certain location at a specific time without the authorities following their tracks. The use of these tools was revolutionary, and it continues to evolve.
North Koreans are in a tougher spot. As mentioned below, mobile phones are hard to come by and their internet is extremely limited. Even if they had these tools and used them like how the Moldovan and Iranian youths used them, they risk their own lives and the lives of their families and relatives. Moldovans and Iranians don’t have to worry about being sent to a camp where they’ll be tortured endlessly just for speaking against the government. If hundreds of North Koreans gathered at a public square and protested against Kim Jong-Il, what will be the fate of those hundreds? Undoubtedly, they’d be taken to a camp if not killed on the spot. There are already hundreds of thousands of prisoners in these camps- the authorities will have no problem sending a few hundred more.





