Have you checked out my latest channel Business Blaze? It's interesting business stories with a dose of ridiculousness thrown in. Check it out here: ruclips.net/channel/UCYY5GWf7MHFJ6DZeHreoXgw
StopTheHate this was back in the day where technology was more advanced in NK than the South, and it looked like paradise, rules weren’t as strict, pay attention to @10:44. and use your brain, think of the era this happened
For 2 years in the late 90s, I was company clerk of the unit this guy had defected from. There is the face saving, official story, and the “real” story passed down from outgoing CO to incoming CO and 1st Sgt to 1st Sgt. respectively. Basically Dresnok was wasn’t attempting to defect, he was actually attempting to get himself shot or blown up by a land mine and was attempting suicide. The fact that this guy made it through the DMZ without getting himself killed by a mine is a damned miracle in itself actually. Basically what led up to this was the result of a mental breakdown after repeatedly butting heads with an abusive alcoholic platoon sgt, who was beating and extorting lower enlisted. After Dresnok stood up to the guy, the Platoon sgt told him in front of other lower enlisted that he would kill Dresnok, who told him that he wasn’t afraid of death and would soon prove so. The platoon Sgt received a dishonorable discharge and did 9 months in the brig almost immediately after the army conducted an investigation into Dresnoks defection, and uncovered the whole picture.
Woon well at that point he had 3 options. 1) go to a Nkorea prison and be tortured and executed for being a spy 2) escape or beg to be sent back to Skorea and get arrested by the US military and be charged with treason and spend the rest of his life in federal prison or possibly being executed, or 3) say he was defecting to Nkorea and live life the best he could.
A British soldier did the same in the late 80's. The North Koreans gave him back after 3 days saying that he was mentally deficient. The British army disagreed and locked him up for years for his misdeed.
@@monkeytennis8861 Sure it did. He kept suggesting NK should implement a tele loicense. It was a step too far for the Kims and he was branded mentally handicapped, a typical diagnosis of a Brit.
Honestly, he probably did have a better life than he would have had in America. He had everything provided for him, was part of he elite class, and literally became a celebrity. It's not hard to understand why he had no patriotism for the US considering his life was awful and he was constantly abused by those around him.
r2b2ct1 while that is true i dont think we should go on 100% with it considering the fact north korea aims brainwashing propaganda to their own children. there’s a video on yt where a guy is just touring NK and some kids randomly walk up to him when he’s laying down and calling him a western devil.
Because James life was so horrible as a child I can very easily imagine him, crossing the border into North Korea, and thinking that this was some kind of vacation considering that in the United States, he suffered, almost constant rejection, and abandonment.
The only reason he received such a good life in NK is because he went along with want they wanted him to say and they only allowed him to see what they wanted him to. He was essentially living the trueman show life but he never caught on to the scam.
As someone struggling with severe depression and anxiety, this have made me to rethink life and be grateful for having a shelter, a stable family, and eating 3 meals a day.
This all stemmed from this man’s pain. This really shows the importance of showing everyone love, they might desperately need it. James Dresnok, along with all of those mentioned who suffered in one way or another as well, Rest in peace ❤
That seems somewhat common among a class of defectors which are apolitical. Lt. Belenko was in a similar "What do I have to lose? I have no life here" state of mind when he defected to the US. He also did not defect due to politics, but simple dissatisfaction.
A guy went from a lonely and desperate man, abused by a system of deep discrimination and classism, and became a celebrity, with immense influence, station, power, and a loving family. No wonder he left.
The US has a tendency to keep beating down on the least fortunate, pushing them into desperation and crime. It should come to no surprise that he took his chance in North Korea than face being sent back to the US with nothing but a military conviction record.
@@Beadledom2024 Right, social ills are totally independent of society and systematic influences, and it bears no responsibility for how it affects the people within it. /S/. Mind your brain.
An unintelligent young man, who had been treated like crap by nearly every person he knew. Was put in a position where he could do whatever he wanted and treat others like crap, if he wished. You figure it out.
@@randymoran67 I'm no Trump supporter by any means but y'know calling people trumptards isn't going to get them to be open minded about stuff. Instead you doing that just further makes them think Trump is right. Instead try discussion stuff with people politely. It'll get you far in life.
@@randymoran67 At this point I give your trolling a C- , I applaud your effort with the second post though. If you are being serious I give you a F at being a human-being.
Thank you! I saw the documentary "Crossing the Line," narrated by Christian Slater, and your video truly does justice to the complexity and strangeness of this situation--the little we can know of it. To answer your question towards the end I don't think it was a case of "brainwashing," so much as it was really two different people with vastly different perspectives on the same situation (I think of Akira Kurosawa's film Rashomon). The one who stayed and was happy in the PRNK, l mean, to a certain extent (irony of ironies) he truly "achieved" his view of the "American dream" there--the North Koreans basically created a Truman Show and he was the star. I mean, in his sad struggle as a traumatized neglected young boy in the USA, all he really wanted was to be a paterfamilias, and get that love and affirmation he never found and was bitterly betrayed of in the US. He was so sad and embittered it hardly mattered to him if he lived or died, nor, for that matter, if he was just played by the North Korean government. They fed his dreams, they gave him his Blue Pills.
@@denisehagwood4542 It's an arbitrary standard. Nothing good has ever come from governments making decisions about who is or isn't desirable based on nothing more than where people are coming from and where they are going.
There was a lot of that, but not all families that were cruel, in that era out of financial desperation unfortunately. WW2 brought a lot of rationing and hard times.
Sadly today women and family courts are pushing men to give up their right to their kids. I've been to family court 4 times in 13 years for my son.....i'm not going a 5th time, I was bassically told by the judge on the 4th visit there that as soon as your son is 13 he can choose where to live permanently.
@@resiefan3258 I wish u all the best, my friend. I hope he'll be reunited with you soon. How long till he turns 13? Hang in there brother, hang in there. Do it for him. Chin up, keep living and be strong 👍🏻
1:00 - Chapter 1 - Early life 3:30 - Chapter 2 - Growing up 5:25 - Chapter 3 - Good morning DMZ 8:25 - Chapter 4 - Welcome to the DPRK 10:05 - Chapter 5 - In too deep 12:30 - Chapter 6 - Becoming a celebrity 16:00 - Chapter 7 - Later life & death
James was probably emotionally and psychologically vulnerable because of what he'd been through his whole life. He was desperate for a place to fit in and the North Koreans saw the more they put into him the more they got out. They decided to keep him happy to use him for their own purposes and it worked since he died loving the DRNK.
I honestly think it was just two people with very different viewpoints. I think James was one of many US residents that fall through the cracks. Every single country in the world has its plus and negatives. It's up to each citizen to decide if the American dream is there dream.
@@edwarddavidson868 Well, when one of the main aspects of the joke (i.e. the uno card) is misused, the joke's impact is diminished. Also, I've literally seen this "reverse Uno card" joke multiple times, so it's not very original to begin with.
Keep in mind that even if he changed his mind the moment he got there, it was already too late. He would not be allowed to leave. He would survive by spending the rest of his life saying and doing what was required to make the country look good. We will never know what really happened.
@@deathbysodomy4124 "Venom and lies", so all the US poverty, war crimes, imperialism, intervention, disparity, etc is okay with you? If you see any sort of criticism against your country as venom and lies, you realize that's dogmatic and brainwashed thinking?
"He would not be allowed to leave" but North Koreans left to China and the USSR all the time, they can get passports and even to this day you'll see scores of them going on vacation or business trips, literally are allowed to visit 42+ countries, and from those countries, leave into other ones if they wish.
Dresnok is such a fascinating character. I saw a documentary about him from a few years before he died. The interviewer had to have a translator because Dresnok had basically forgotten how to speak English.
Dresnok didn't forget to speak English, he managed quite well during interviews. Even his sons spoke English [with accent], after all they did study at a foreign language university.
@OJDUDE there are plenty of bad kids. there are bad people all the time. And plenty of people live through shitty circumstances without being shitty people themselves.
@@user-my7dg9su3g people are killed for being different, for not smiling, for following every rule to a T, being lied to every single day, etc. that's why (and more) the country is crappy. So stop. I'm sure they'll welcome you with open arms nowadays so please have at it.
Imagine how his first wife must have felt upon hearing this information. “Wow. I was such a bad person my husband willingly defected to North Korea for a better life.”
My brother works with kids who are "troubled", so to speak. He said "You wonder why a kid behaves so badly....then you meet the parents and it allllllll makes sense."
@Nick Logan I'm not apologizing for treason. I'm making an observation about how shitty his childhood was. Regardless of how much I might disagree with or find what he did disgraceful and appalling. Im still a human being. I never made any apologies for his actions as an adult I merely pointed out how much a child suffered. And somehow you wanted to one up his suffering because you're apparently such a good and virtuous person. That's all good and virtuous people think about, you know? How much better they are than a child who experienced damn near unimaginable suffering.
Honestly? I kinda get it. This man literally had nothing in his life. Nothing that made him happy, nothing to give it meaning, nothing to sustain himself, nothing to look forward to in the future. He quite literally had nothing to lose, so he took a chance. And it seems it worked out for him.
It would not have been.....he literally became a movie star.....think about that... How crazy is life....I think about stuff like that all the time....just get fed up one day( isn't that most of us right now?) Switch up and finds some happiness
When my mother was a young girl in rural South Korea, North Korean airplanes would drop fliers urging citizens to defect. They featured drawings of beautiful people, and rolling fields of grain.
@@ArtyomCCCP until the end of the 60s. By the 70s North & South Korea became mostly equal in their economy, by the 80s SK started to overtake (Name due to the Boom in Japan which SK had massive trade deals with), and by the 90s the two were no longer even close.
@@jesussaldana4558 At the time the only thing about the North Korea that people hated was the Ideology, and they actually were better economically than South Korea. So no, you didn't really that much of a shitty of a life to defect there. For gods sake, a guy defected there because he couldn't smoke weed. Of course now that we know more about North Korea and their action since the 60s. Yeah you really need a shitty life to go there.
@@mrjack901 you do realise that as early as 1950 thousands of people were being imprisoned in North Korea for things like not printing Kim II Sungs's picture on good enough paper or writing on his picture in newspapers. there was already wide spread starvation and even the Russians openly criticised the cult of personality on display. To say that N Korea was better off than South Korea shows you know absolutely nothing about the subject please go read a book and stop embarrassing yourself on public forums
@Abserd O then simple logic would dictate to follow suit, i mean since you're *SOOOOO* smart, you'd do a better job of it than he, *right* ? It was not a gamble. he saw what was happening and took advantage of it. that's opportunism and it's the most effective survival strategy outside of predator satiation.
@Abserd O during an unjust war with no reason behind it, mind you. you cant just throw the dereliction of duty card like that, even a patriot like myself acknowledges this.
Im Korean and Marajuana definitely grows naturally in Korea. Notice Ancient Korean pictures of Koreans smoking pipes long before America was discovered. And if you didn't know. Tobacco was introduced from the new world.
I live in Oregon. Marijuana is legal here and we can own guns. We also have some of the best beer breweries in the world. I'm not defecting to anywhere!
Dresnok took the only chance ever availed to him for happiness and stability. The USA sure as hell wasn't going to do a thing for him. I say good for him. May he rest in peace.
Some soldier by the name of King just did the same thing, defect to North Korea to get out of an arrest warrant in the States. Dresnok must have been his role model.
It's heavily implied that King might be somewhat mentally ill. Supposedly the dude was shouting and drawing attention to himself when he made a sudden dash towards NK border line via a commercial tour group.
“He was so tired of obeying orders all the time” so he went to a country where everyone obeys orders all the time. Edit: lmao at all the people defending North Korea implying it’s better there than the US or that the US is the same as North Korea. Bruh, learn to appreciate what you have now. You’re too blind to see how bad North Korea actually is.
No, no! he was tired of obeying the military apparatus that subordinates itself to the Anglo Saxon elite of bloodthirsty killers. NWO rules the West and we are useful bodies to them.
If you think NK is such a well oiled machine that everyone follows orders all the time. You're delusional at best. There might be a lot of rules, but everything is so corrupt that pretty much no one who isn't a top paid military official gaf.
Alot of men did/still do. Its a different type of freedom. Sone want the freedom of a job and the wages it brings. So for an individual with no skills it may be the only option.
I've heard the story of these men before, but never in so much detail. Understanding Dreslok's childhood is essential in trying to understand his choices and attitude.
After the brief on his childhood, I wont question why he defected. Why on earth would he feel the US is better than North Korea? His dad left him at a nursing home reception...nobody held his hand
@@brndonlu9635 How much compassion do you expect from somebody who got left by his family as a child. And aside from that, at the time he defected NK was doing better than South Korea.
@@ant1carry I would honsteslt not defect to North Korea. It's terrrible in there and I'm not living as some proganda machine. James Dreanok had a right reason but a dumb decision
@@clarky23 For sure they did and that's why a kidnapped her. I bet it was a north korean that had a happy ending. It's not like they randomally picked her although it seems pretty random until you find out what she did.
@@marcusblackwell2372 that's kinda the point of the comics as well. Joker claims that everything about him was all because of one bad day. But Batman disagrees and told him that he became the Joker because something was wrong with him in the first place.
Well, if you think about it, North Korea would push the narrative of people from other countries defecting into theirs as a sign to show how much more “prosperous” they are than other countries, and in return would probably treat said defectors much better than their actual citizens. That or they’d hold you hostage and force you to pump out fake propaganda while treating you in worse living conditions. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ idk man
Hearing the whole story, it sounds like it worked out pretty well for Dresnok. He was very unlucky and unwanted in America. He was just so lucky that he was allowed to be a part of the elite class in NK. Interesting story
William Evans - Did this video host tell how US had invaded Korea 1898 with Japan and how they killed half Korean and then divided Korea in North and South. Japan got North and US kept South till today!! Americas are Soo smart they don't even know where's Korea!! Check this RUclips video: "can you name this country" this video host is US paid liar and manipulator to smear those few brave Americans as drug users who have seen what US is doing to Korean people and defected to North Korea! It those days there wasn't drugs in America as it's later on and presently!! Read some we my comments that will tell you what's really going on with US criminal behaviour around the world not only to today but since US inception! Have a nice day! 👍
@@mariorobotnik8090 reread their comment. they're saying he was lucky to be elite there, not that he was lucky to be there period. North Korean elite have it well, because they're the only ones who have reliable access to necessities. That's not a good thing.
Gotta agree. As much of his life as was certainly fabricated and planned out by the North Korean government for solely their own advantage, he still happened into a much, much better life then the terrible situation he had been in for- practically all of his life until then. It may be exactly because of this that he never questioned any of it all, or maybe he just didn’t want to question his newfound luck.
I hate communism, and through the most insane form of irony, all these men met the loves of their lives thanks to North Korea. Some could say Stockholm syndrome, but I doubt any of these people would've found each other if not for North Korea. It's so bizarre, but yeah, James would've went to prison and became either a career criminal or starved to death as a hobo.
Dresnok definitely would have fared far worse in the US. He didn't have any ambitions and didn't want to take care of himself...just the sort of person a communist dictatorship wants, but a terrible person for a free capitalist country.
It's hard for me to imagine being the child of that Japanese woman and American man. You have two parents, both from foreign nations, both whom hate the nation they are in and are prisoners there, and you are probably sent to school every day and propagandized against the nations (they hate both the Japanese and Americans in North Korea, or at least the state teaches that) of their parents. They were probably outcasts amongst their peers for this reason. They were also mixed raced in possibly the most racially homogeneous nation on earth which no doubt would lead to much suffering or at the very best be treated as a curiousity which is still racist in itself. But even with all that there is still probably some part of them that looks at North Korea as home. And they couldn't express this view with their parents at all. Then they're uprooted to a nation they probably don't know the language of and certainly do not know the culture of. The place they grew up and no doubt had at least some fond memories in would forever be lost and impossible to even visit for closure because they would just be made a prisoner.
They moved to Japan and thier child was actually kidnapped by NK and was a big deal back in 90's. I grew up and went to school where she did and taught to watch out for "strangers".
I personally knew a British soldier some years back in his old age who surrendered one night to the Nth Koreans as he'd had enough and was more or less cold shouldered by his family upon return to the UK. He admitted losing everything dear to him, especially his family, and, when he died, circa 2012 odd, he amassed a small fortune to pass onto a totally unsuspecting relative. Only 2 people went to his funeral, both arranged it and I doubt his direct family know he's dead.
During the Korean War? That's sad. I personally don't and can't judge soldier's who surrender - especially if they were drafted. Unless they committed war crimes, but this is not the case for said gentleman. RIP.
Their entire job is to yell at you from the second you arrive on the bus (hell they start yelling at you before you even get off the bus) to the day you leave
Drill sergeants or TIs or DIs are there to break you then remake you into something more. They are there so that when your life depends on it that training they ingrained in you takes affect.
Yeah but he probably didn't realize that, he probably had a childlike understanding of the military, you get guns, tanks, cool uniforms, everyone thinks you're cool, you look cool, you get to fly planes, you get to jump out of planes, you get to blow stuff up, etc. and didn't know what the military was actually about, otherwise he probably wouldn't have signed up.
@@libertyprime619 The movie 'The Interview' is about an interview in North Korea about Kim Jung Un, and as it's a comedy, he ends up having a breakdown because of the lyrics "plastic bag, drifting through the wind, wanting to start again" so since this is a video about North Korea, I assumed that the connection was relevant, but okay.
I imagine James really did enjoy living in North Korea. Going from one extreme to another probably was refreshing. It's sad that it took something so grand for him to I guess feel better.
@@lynnhauenstein4136 How does being involuntarily celibate have anything to do with defecting to North Korea? You do know that there are still woman over there, right?
Sometimes we believe what we want to believe because it's easier than facing the truth. Freedom means different things to different people. Dresnok's childhood gave him a skewed view of America and freedom. As far as he was concerned he had everything he wanted in North Korea and he was willing to say or do whatever he had to to keep it. Even if he was tortured and whatever, he still had more than he'd ever had before. That was his truth.
I actually think his mother cared about him. Working as a prostitute is a fast way to make a lot of cash compared to other jobs, especially if she doesn't want to be anywhere too long or leave a paper trail that could be tracked. And night time at bars is where most of your clientele will be. I think the courts just disapproved of her job, and assumed she was a bad mother. If she didn't want the children she wouldn't have taken them.
@@cleitonfelipe2092 no. She didn't do it out of pleasure. It's reminiscent of the mother in Les Miserables who had no other option but to sell herself; the alternative being to starve. It's not really a funny thing to joke about. She did it to survive.
It honestly appears that Dresnok was happy where he ended up. After a couple of rough decades in the U.S., I can't even say I blame him. To each his own.
Everybody experiences bad parts in their life. No reason to skip off to a dark nation because of a few hard knocks. You learn to roll with the punches in your environment, not run away. Facing problems makes you stronger and tougher.
As a long term resident of Japan, I remember when the abductees returned to Japan. Of which there were also male Japanese and not just women. Jenkins became a household name and that was mostly due to Hitomi Suga`s popularity from her frequent appearances on television. There are still a number of Japanese abductees of which their whereabouts and well being are unaccounted for. North Korea did allow the daughter of one of them to visit her Japanese grandparents although she returned to North Korea and hasn't been heard of since.
Yokota Megumi's daughter, right? Yeah, the Kim Dynasty is cooking something up with her and grooming her and her own daughter for something, since she is being personally monitored by Kim Jong-Un's sister.
They kidnap from all countries. Italy, Romania, US, everywhere. Charles was reported as an abductee in some shows I saw. He was then forced to work in films as the evil American and he now lives in Japan, he married a Japanese woman who was also an anductee in North Korea, she was given to him by North Korea but she eas made to tach the soldiers Japanese so they could be better spies. They need to learn the different languages in the world and whats going on in these countries.
@Neetu H correct, iv read about the actress being abducted, ya makes sense in a way, best way to get Intel on a society is to have someone from that society as ur permanent guest
Dark-Fox in other countries, a period is the equivalent of an American comma sign for numbers, and vice versa. Learned this from learning languages other than English.
H369 N369 The fact that you use the terms Liberalism and Communism interchangeably indicates that you have no idea what you’re talking about whatsoever.
Honestly if I was in James’ position, I’d probably have done the same. To be more specific, I obviously don’t think North Korea is good. But if I had lived the life that James had, and I had nothing left to lose, I’d have just done it.
Have you checked out my latest channel Business Blaze? It's interesting business stories with a dose of ridiculousness thrown in. Check it out here: ruclips.net/channel/UCYY5GWf7MHFJ6DZeHreoXgw
No, how bout stop being a BBC mouthpiece
North Korea
justin walker a
Qq
Near impossible to find anything on RUclips that isn’t your channel !
James Dresnok passed away this past year, sadly China wants North Korea to suffer to despite America.
It's amazing what a "nothing to lose" mentality can make you do.
9/11 hijackers: First time?
Suicide bombers: First time?
School Shooters: First time?
Kamikaze pilot : First time?
Soviet meat shields: First time?
Dude got tired of all the rules...so he defects to a country which arguably has even more rules. Logic 101
i think he got tired of hopelesness. The north korea offer a new start
should've gone to mexico. Lawlessness at its finest.
Many people look to travel and moving as a way to fix what is wrong in their life and it's almost always futile.
StopTheHate this was back in the day where technology was more advanced in NK than the South, and it looked like paradise, rules weren’t as strict, pay attention to @10:44. and use your brain, think of the era this happened
NK was in s better state in the 60's then now arguably, when compared to other nations at that time.
For 2 years in the late 90s, I was company clerk of the unit this guy had defected from. There is the face saving, official story, and the “real” story passed down from outgoing CO to incoming CO and 1st Sgt to 1st Sgt. respectively. Basically Dresnok was wasn’t attempting to defect, he was actually attempting to get himself shot or blown up by a land mine and was attempting suicide. The fact that this guy made it through the DMZ without getting himself killed by a mine is a damned miracle in itself actually. Basically what led up to this was the result of a mental breakdown after repeatedly butting heads with an abusive alcoholic platoon sgt, who was beating and extorting lower enlisted. After Dresnok stood up to the guy, the Platoon sgt told him in front of other lower enlisted that he would kill Dresnok, who told him that he wasn’t afraid of death and would soon prove so. The platoon Sgt received a dishonorable discharge and did 9 months in the brig almost immediately after the army conducted an investigation into Dresnoks defection, and uncovered the whole picture.
Woon well at that point he had 3 options. 1) go to a Nkorea prison and be tortured and executed for being a spy 2) escape or beg to be sent back to Skorea and get arrested by the US military and be charged with treason and spend the rest of his life in federal prison or possibly being executed, or 3) say he was defecting to Nkorea and live life the best he could.
Wow!
The
V
M
A British soldier did the same in the late 80's. The North Koreans gave him back after 3 days saying that he was mentally deficient. The British army disagreed and locked him up for years for his misdeed.
Woah. I'm surprised/"glad?" they imprisoned him afterwards?
here after a us soldier defected to north korea only for them to return him afterwards
Except that never happened
@@monkeytennis8861 Sure it did. He kept suggesting NK should implement a tele loicense. It was a step too far for the Kims and he was branded mentally handicapped, a typical diagnosis of a Brit.
*ķ,ĺ bhutto u8ii u8ii u Hu&
This is a sad sad story. His family failed him early on.
Not just his family, but American society as well.
His life may of been sad, but I think he died happy,. He was finally at peace with himself since he achieved his dream;having a family.
@SpaceDreamerFr : It seemed like he only became violent after he joined the military, but I'm just basing that assumption off of what the video said.
@SpaceDreamerFr He was violent and resentful because of his shitty ass life that stemmed from childhood. He wasn't violent when he was a child.
What the hell was wrong with them anyways? Why didn't any of them want him? Bunch of selfish bastards......
imagine having such a bad life you literally defected to North Korea
Too bad he didn't live outside the ELITE CITY like an average N. Korean. Liberals should move there ASAP!
Hey this reminds me of someone oh me
Well, that's one way to get an Asian wife. XD
Welcome to life in the Military..
@@LynnJepson I get you don't agree with them, but that's pretty fucked mate
Honestly, he probably did have a better life than he would have had in America. He had everything provided for him, was part of he elite class, and literally became a celebrity. It's not hard to understand why he had no patriotism for the US considering his life was awful and he was constantly abused by those around him.
r2b2ct1 while that is true i dont think we should go on 100% with it considering the fact north korea aims brainwashing propaganda to their own children. there’s a video on yt where a guy is just touring NK and some kids randomly walk up to him when he’s laying down and calling him a western devil.
Yet he didn't ever try to do anything to have a better life
@@zuya4580 Sounds like North Korean propaganda, but ok
@@bigweevillol apparently the Korean War is just propaganda
@@zuya4580 yeah sure the Korean War, where the UN intervened to stop North Korean aggression was TOTALLY the US bombing and raping North Koreans
Because James life was so horrible as a child I can very easily imagine him, crossing the border into North Korea, and thinking that this was some kind of vacation considering that in the United States, he suffered, almost constant rejection, and abandonment.
"Joined the Army and they had rules and regulations and people always yelling at him."
Yup. About sums it up.
What did he think lmao
Well and his childhood was hell.
But it's not like he had any options.
He is the Original snowflake
So I gather you would have an Army with no regulations and no discipline. That is usually called a mob, similar to what we see today with "Antifa".
The only reason he received such a good life in NK is because he went along with want they wanted him to say and they only allowed him to see what they wanted him to. He was essentially living the trueman show life but he never caught on to the scam.
No more of a scam than the American Dream which he learned early.
Bliss in ignorance...but from what he came from , that was more then enough.
I don't think he really cared considering how his life was initially. The guy's life would probably make an interesting Oscar bait movie.
Or he did catch on, but didn't care because he thought it was the best life he could ever hope to have.
@@IncognitoSprax the American dream is what you make of it, you still gotta work hard, just because you aren't successful doesn't mean it isnt true
Dude got high and just walked across the DMZ.
he smoked the weed, as in marijuana which made him high ? hahaha that was genius you made my day good sir
Weeeeeed haha dude weed
DUDE WEED
Going to tell you right now, i know some retired vets, dont think just because they have had military experience that they are bright bulbs....
*Don't forget to bring a towel.*
As someone struggling with severe depression and anxiety, this have made me to rethink life and be grateful for having a shelter, a stable family, and eating 3 meals a day.
Stay strong, my friend. Have you tried mindfulness techniques?
@@GizmoMalteseI think he khm 😢
This man had a cartoonishly bad life.
Orion Rodriguez
Maybe Eastern Europe’s favourite cat and mouse team, Worker and Parasite!
@paul crowley jesus dude
Almost like Doofenshmirts
@paul crowley How cringe can you get?
One moustach man double crosses another
Imagine coming back from NK 50 years later and being demoted. He probably even forgot he was in the army lmao
Shadow747
Does that mean that they paid him back pay ?
@@heartofdixie67 lmao imagine he got the military to give him hazard pay for technically being in a war zone this whole time
He would be court marshaled & would have been locked up for the rest of his life.
@@xsailor85 He got only demoted. This is Jenkins, not Dresnok they are talking about.
Shadow747 you never forget that
He's never heard of Square Space or Raid Shadow Legends over in NK. There are *some* benefits
This all stemmed from this man’s pain. This really shows the importance of showing everyone love, they might desperately need it.
James Dresnok, along with all of those mentioned who suffered in one way or another as well,
Rest in peace ❤
Dark star
If you don't love mja, I'm defecting to North Korea
Wow, how do you abandon your kid like that at a retirement home? His dad is a dirt bag.
alreid09 people would still do it today
@@je6874 So true and so sad. No one deserves anything like that to happen to them.
@Sander Skovly not necessarily. Living a life of agony as a junkie is worse.
Him and his dad had a lot in common they like to lie and abandon their responsibility
@@314rappin He abandoned his responsibility? When?
I like how they used a current photo of Richmond, Va and just popped a greyscale filter on it.
Wait really? Where?
Popped up on screen right when i read this lmao
@@hamos4744 it's towards the beginning of the video, 1:12
Hamos 47 brother
Modern problems...
This guy was in so much pain to the point where he literally walked away from everything he knew
That seems somewhat common among a class of defectors which are apolitical. Lt. Belenko was in a similar "What do I have to lose? I have no life here" state of mind when he defected to the US. He also did not defect due to politics, but simple dissatisfaction.
Dude literrally walked across a minefield to get out.
He's weak and pathetic, people suffered much more than him.
Liberally.
@Nick Logan
Easy for you to say since you have something.
A guy went from a lonely and desperate man, abused by a system of deep discrimination and classism, and became a celebrity, with immense influence, station, power, and a loving family. No wonder he left.
The US has a tendency to keep beating down on the least fortunate, pushing them into desperation and crime. It should come to no surprise that he took his chance in North Korea than face being sent back to the US with nothing but a military conviction record.
It was basically like Truman show I'd rather have my freedom
Now imagine being a black American...
@@gallonthegreat7036 idk if nk would be better. Hopefully the new guy over there is doing ok.
@@Beadledom2024 Right, social ills are totally independent of society and systematic influences, and it bears no responsibility for how it affects the people within it. /S/. Mind your brain.
An unintelligent young man, who had been treated like crap by nearly every person he knew. Was put in a position where he could do whatever he wanted and treat others like crap, if he wished.
You figure it out.
A trumptard!
Trumptard, Libtard.
Same kind of fool.
Just following different ideologies
@@randymoran67 I'm no Trump supporter by any means but y'know calling people trumptards isn't going to get them to be open minded about stuff. Instead you doing that just further makes them think Trump is right. Instead try discussion stuff with people politely. It'll get you far in life.
@@Spartan265 Open minded ? One must have a mind to open first! Lol!
@@randymoran67 At this point I give your trolling a C- , I applaud your effort with the second post though. If you are being serious I give you a F at being a human-being.
He loved it when they called him “big papa”.
😬
@@ImNotaRussianBot there were some ladies in North Korea that be having his babies
Did he put his hands in the air because he was a true player?
57badarse baby.
John Marshall lmao
*Wife dies*
Guess I'll go out to that resturant i love so much.
In his defense, I think it was the Only restaurant.
Guess North Korea will kidnap another wife for me.
😭👌
@@___LC___ yup that's pretty much how it seems to have went down based on the video.
,ill have 1 thai wife and nr 69 on the side
Thank you! I saw the documentary "Crossing the Line," narrated by Christian Slater, and your video truly does justice to the complexity and strangeness of this situation--the little we can know of it. To answer your question towards the end I don't think it was a case of "brainwashing," so much as it was really two different people with vastly different perspectives on the same situation (I think of Akira Kurosawa's film Rashomon). The one who stayed and was happy in the PRNK, l mean, to a certain extent (irony of ironies) he truly "achieved" his view of the "American dream" there--the North Koreans basically created a Truman Show and he was the star. I mean, in his sad struggle as a traumatized neglected young boy in the USA, all he really wanted was to be a paterfamilias, and get that love and affirmation he never found and was bitterly betrayed of in the US. He was so sad and embittered it hardly mattered to him if he lived or died, nor, for that matter, if he was just played by the North Korean government. They fed his dreams, they gave him his Blue Pills.
As a general rule governments should not interfere with people's movements. People should be allowed to settle where they best fit in.
@@newshodgepodge6329 Why should you be entitled to live in a country that doesn't want you?
@@denisehagwood4542 It's an arbitrary standard. Nothing good has ever come from governments making decisions about who is or isn't desirable based on nothing more than where people are coming from and where they are going.
@newshodgepodge6329 your comment makes no sense.
@@denisehagwood4542 Spoken like someone who never ventures far enough from the sofa to make the topic relatable. 😑
What a childhood this man had. As a parent, I could never fathom abandoning my kid. That's a whole new level of evil
There was a lot of that, but not all families that were cruel, in that era out of financial desperation unfortunately. WW2 brought a lot of rationing and hard times.
Sadly today women and family courts are pushing men to give up their right to their kids. I've been to family court 4 times in 13 years for my son.....i'm not going a 5th time, I was bassically told by the judge on the 4th visit there that as soon as your son is 13 he can choose where to live permanently.
@@resiefan3258 I wish u all the best, my friend. I hope he'll be reunited with you soon. How long till he turns 13? Hang in there brother, hang in there. Do it for him. Chin up, keep living and be strong 👍🏻
@@resiefan3258 Wow. I'm sorry to hear you're going through that with your kid. Good luck. I sincerely hope it works out for you
Males with whore mothers shouldn't be allowed to participate in the decision making process of society.
1:00 - Chapter 1 - Early life
3:30 - Chapter 2 - Growing up
5:25 - Chapter 3 - Good morning DMZ
8:25 - Chapter 4 - Welcome to the DPRK
10:05 - Chapter 5 - In too deep
12:30 - Chapter 6 - Becoming a celebrity
16:00 - Chapter 7 - Later life & death
Blesss
Wow, you must have a lot of time on your hands.
Thank you
Thank you
@@trailerparksupervisor7046 you’re a trailer park supervisor, I think you have too much time on your hands.
James was probably emotionally and psychologically vulnerable because of what he'd been through his whole life. He was desperate for a place to fit in and the North Koreans saw the more they put into him the more they got out. They decided to keep him happy to use him for their own purposes and it worked since he died loving the DRNK.
I thought it's called DPRK (democratic People's Republic of Korea)
@@sadmanpranto9026 Yeah, they don't like being called North Korea, in fact, I think it might even be illegal there if my memory serves me right.
@@sadmanpranto9026 Oopsy
Impossible not to feel sympathy for him … for his life.
@@MrPoupard No, it is possible. Many people have undergone similar trauma yet lived decent, productive lives.
I honestly think it was just two people with very different viewpoints. I think James was one of many US residents that fall through the cracks. Every single country in the world has its plus and negatives. It's up to each citizen to decide if the American dream is there dream.
Wise viewpoint :- )
What a dream the American one is anyways…..
Its called the american dream cuz' you have to be asleep to believe it...
With very rich people comes very poor people.
There is no "American dream" lmao
*North Koreans flees to South Korea*
James Dresnok: *Reverse uno card*
Gold😂😂😂😂
**surprised Pikachu face**
You do realize that the theoretical North Korean "players" would go again right?
@@edwarddavidson868 Well, when one of the main aspects of the joke (i.e. the uno card) is misused, the joke's impact is diminished. Also, I've literally seen this "reverse Uno card" joke multiple times, so it's not very original to begin with.
@@hotcoals2291 Hello, fun department? My Cole 9000 is a total buzzkill. I want a refund.
Keep in mind that even if he changed his mind the moment he got there, it was already too late. He would not be allowed to leave. He would survive by spending the rest of his life saying and doing what was required to make the country look good. We will never know what really happened.
i can easily do that. I talk about how horrible the USA is all the time and no one pays me to do it.
@@boyar1978 why would they pay you to spit venom and lies?
@@deathbysodomy4124 "Venom and lies", so all the US poverty, war crimes, imperialism, intervention, disparity, etc is okay with you? If you see any sort of criticism against your country as venom and lies, you realize that's dogmatic and brainwashed thinking?
"He would not be allowed to leave" but North Koreans left to China and the USSR all the time, they can get passports and even to this day you'll see scores of them going on vacation or business trips, literally are allowed to visit 42+ countries, and from those countries, leave into other ones if they wish.
@@Stellar_Politics north koreans aren't allowed to leave are you slow
Hey Simon, when you hit 1 Million, you should do a video about yourself.
Whiiiisssttlllllleeee
We already know about Jonny sins
Listen he put his professional jigalow to the stars lifestyle behind himself and doesn't want to bring it up again.
@@Aleikey We're gonna make it happen.
Yessss
Dresnok is such a fascinating character. I saw a documentary about him from a few years before he died. The interviewer had to have a translator because Dresnok had basically forgotten how to speak English.
he spoke fine English. In fact, his main job was teaching English. You are probably thinking of his sons, they don't speak English. Only Korean
Dresnok didn't forget to speak English, he managed quite well during interviews. Even his sons spoke English [with accent], after all they did study at a foreign language university.
Mans' life was worse than Dr. Doofenschmirtz
Doof had it rough bro
his parents were late for his birth
Avstrolopipek hahahah
*”Both of my parents both failed to show up at my birth”*
But at least doof didn’t defected to north korea
3 minutes in and I can’t even imagine the pain of being rejected 4 times by adults and seeing your brother being accepted... :(
he was a bad kid. why not
@@alexandersmagin4769 i wonder why he was a "bad kid". Maybe it was the fact nobody loved him
@@eduardcruceru9004 exactly. nobody loved him because...? everybody was an asshole and he was the only good one?
@OJDUDE 💩
@OJDUDE there are plenty of bad kids. there are bad people all the time. And plenty of people live through shitty circumstances without being shitty people themselves.
Let's be serious
His sons are living a high life in a crappy country being with the elites
Just because they dont want to let NATO into the country doesn't make the country crappy
@@user-my7dg9su3g no but mass starvation does
@@user-my7dg9su3g it’s a crappy country, just a fact
@@user-my7dg9su3g people are killed for being different, for not smiling, for following every rule to a T, being lied to every single day, etc. that's why (and more) the country is crappy. So stop. I'm sure they'll welcome you with open arms nowadays so please have at it.
@@user-my7dg9su3g you would have a kirito pfp smh
This entire story was equally both wholesome and disturbing at the same time
Imagine how his first wife must have felt upon hearing this information.
“Wow. I was such a bad person my husband willingly defected to North Korea for a better life.”
This dude was such a deadbeat knock lol, I dont think she blames herself
Raj Gill deadbeat? She cheated while he was serving! He wasn’t neglecting her, he was stationed abroad and couldn’t refuse his orders.
@@2yoyoyo1Unplugged if she cheated sounds like they were both on a path to destruction. my point stands
Cc: Pilot episode of The Big Bang Theory
Hahaha you think she felt bad a single millisecond of her rotten life? Naah
This guy was married and divorced before the age of 20? That's rough
That's not uncommon. The army is a miserable organization for some, so I felt James Dresnok on this one.
Lmao that’s the army 😂
My wife filed for divorce when I was in Viet Nam. I was 19. Don't mean nothing.
That’s the Military for you. Happens all the time. In the Army, the Air Force, the Marines, and the Navy.
That’s normal Brodsky
Dude...
This poor poor man. I can't even imagine having a childhood that traumatic.
My brother works with kids who are "troubled", so to speak. He said "You wonder why a kid behaves so badly....then you meet the parents and it allllllll makes sense."
dcxxxx so you hit them with the belt so they won't be a pain in the ass
@@Jerbt you beat the /*parents*/ with the belt to fix all of the problems lmao
@@alexryan15 excuse me what? You want a death sentence?
@Nick Logan I'm not apologizing for treason. I'm making an observation about how shitty his childhood was. Regardless of how much I might disagree with or find what he did disgraceful and appalling. Im still a human being. I never made any apologies for his actions as an adult I merely pointed out how much a child suffered. And somehow you wanted to one up his suffering because you're apparently such a good and virtuous person. That's all good and virtuous people think about, you know? How much better they are than a child who experienced damn near unimaginable suffering.
Who's here after Travis King went over the DMZ to North Korea?
👋
Right here
Me--- and the North Koreans sent King back. They didn't want him!!!
Honestly? I kinda get it. This man literally had nothing in his life. Nothing that made him happy, nothing to give it meaning, nothing to sustain himself, nothing to look forward to in the future. He quite literally had nothing to lose, so he took a chance. And it seems it worked out for him.
But the America dream was quite literally a dream for him XD
So he decided to take a risk for a brewer future an it all went in his favour
What happened to his little brother though ?
@Christopher Grant He's essentially living the American dream in north Korea while there are homeless all over the US
@@angry-white-men Why are you all over this channel being a North Korean propagandist?
Man, this guy had a messed up life. Can't even blame him, honestly. I don't think his life would have been any better had he stayed in America.
It would not have been.....he literally became a movie star.....think about that... How crazy is life....I think about stuff like that all the time....just get fed up one day( isn't that most of us right now?) Switch up and finds some happiness
But muh American dream!! This guy could have made a bazillion dollars maybe!!
@Taps fan He wasnt speaking for you, he was speaking for himself, and alot of other people.
Daimon Verlies you certainly can blame him. Once he joined the Army that was his chance, but he screwed that up all on his own.
Thucydides he was not evil that ridiculous hyperbole. He wanted a good life but didn’t want to work for it.
When my mother was a young girl in rural South Korea, North Korean airplanes would drop fliers urging citizens to defect. They featured drawings of beautiful people, and rolling fields of grain.
Yes..but the truth was so different.!
What a horrible trap 😔
@@pietroboggio1642 NK had a better economy than south between 50s until end of 80s.
Just like URSS and USA...
@@ArtyomCCCP until the end of the 60s. By the 70s North & South Korea became mostly equal in their economy, by the 80s SK started to overtake (Name due to the Boom in Japan which SK had massive trade deals with), and by the 90s the two were no longer even close.
What a sad story. Many of us who think we have problems need to count our blessings.
At least jenkins found real love as she stayed with him when they moved to japan
I think Dresnok really did jhst hate his life so much that literally ANYTHING was better than what he had.
I mean to defect to North Korea, really shitty life you must have had.
@@jesussaldana4558 At the time the only thing about the North Korea that people hated was the Ideology, and they actually were better economically than South Korea. So no, you didn't really that much of a shitty of a life to defect there. For gods sake, a guy defected there because he couldn't smoke weed.
Of course now that we know more about North Korea and their action since the 60s. Yeah you really need a shitty life to go there.
North Korea declined after the sixties as a result of the whole damn communist block imploding
@@jesussaldana4558 i mean he had a really shitty life so yeah
@@mrjack901 you do realise that as early as 1950 thousands of people were being imprisoned in North Korea for things like not printing Kim II Sungs's picture on good enough paper or writing on his picture in newspapers. there was already wide spread starvation and even the Russians openly criticised the cult of personality on display. To say that N Korea was better off than South Korea shows you know absolutely nothing about the subject please go read a book and stop embarrassing yourself on public forums
Next up: German solider who voluntarily worked in a gulag for his entire life.
Well that's something.
Ярослав Л lol millions died in gulags
@Ярослав Л lmao have you ever spoken to a gulag survivor? They were hell on earth. Prisons in america are a 4 star all inclusive resort in comparison
@Ярослав Л Gulags are nowhere near as bad as regular American prisons?
Doubt you have been in a Gulag in your life.
Ярослав Л bro what
Whos here after another US soldier just ran across the border in order to defect.
Yay new season! I'm so excited
@@chosonminhang hahaha
King has joined the chat
If living in North Korea was good for him...what the hell was going on in Virgina in the 1960?!?!
Segregation
Look at him, he looks slow in the head
he made more money than *you*
So let that sink in- a person you consider 'slow' was more successful than you. You know what that means, right?
@Abserd O then simple logic would dictate to follow suit, i mean since you're *SOOOOO* smart, you'd do a better job of it than he, *right* ? It was not a gamble. he saw what was happening and took advantage of it. that's opportunism and it's the most effective survival strategy outside of predator satiation.
@Abserd O during an unjust war with no reason behind it, mind you. you cant just throw the dereliction of duty card like that, even a patriot like myself acknowledges this.
His life in North Korea sounds like the Truman show
Everyone's life in NK is the Truman show. The only difference is that most of them are trying not to die
@@lauraelizabethbrown More like the TRAUMA show lol, Amirite? Comedy.
Lol I know right. At least when he wanted a new wife or girlfriend he just has to go to his favorite restaurant.
They started together for the rest of their life because divorce isn't really an option in NK even though it allegedly is.
Defected to North Korea because "He was caught smoking the wild marijuana on the North Korean border" what a legend
Im Korean and Marajuana definitely grows naturally in Korea. Notice Ancient Korean pictures of Koreans smoking pipes long before America was discovered. And if you didn't know. Tobacco was introduced from the new world.
Probably from CO.
Matt Supertramp Marijuana is actually 100% legal in DPRK
I live in Oregon. Marijuana is legal here and we can own guns. We also have some of the best beer breweries in the world. I'm not defecting to anywhere!
Only problem the munchies are forever there
Dresnok took the only chance ever availed to him for happiness and stability. The USA sure as hell wasn't going to do a thing for him. I say good for him. May he rest in peace.
the grass might be greener, but the snakes are even bigger
...of course 'the grass' is more green...it says a U.S. soldier defecated on North Korea.
@@thereforeayam so he took a number 2 that side? lul si north koreans toilets beter and its defected NOT defecated
@@thereforeayam please tell me you didn’t rly think it said defecated, right
@@thereforeayam "HE POOPED *ON NORTH KOREA"*
I dont think anyone thinks the grass is greener in north Korea
"born in Richmond, VA"
Yeah I would defect to North Korea too
Facts
I'd say the heroin and crime but yeah
Robert Bundick completely agree, but I’m planning to go into the Marines and be a loyal defender of my Country America
@@FrothyFawn Try not to kill innocent people.
@@mr_sir1533 What's wrong with the black people from there?
Jenkins's life is excellent material for a biopic. The tension between him and Dresnok, him finding love with a fellow captive, etc.
Ikr, the movies just write themselves
@@Elizabeth-vf6zi what
Someone get Nicolas Winding Refn
someone get Harvey Weinstein.
Dresnok would be painted a villain in this movie though.
Some soldier by the name of King just did the same thing, defect to North Korea to get out of an arrest warrant in the States. Dresnok must have been his role model.
It's heavily implied that King might be somewhat mentally ill. Supposedly the dude was shouting and drawing attention to himself when he made a sudden dash towards NK border line via a commercial tour group.
@@DarkZerolhe also looks like he's a fruit so he'll have a great time over there😮😮😮😅
Yes, but the North Koreans didn't want King!!!
“He was so tired of obeying orders all the time” so he went to a country where everyone obeys orders all the time.
Edit: lmao at all the people defending North Korea implying it’s better there than the US or that the US is the same as North Korea. Bruh, learn to appreciate what you have now. You’re too blind to see how bad North Korea actually is.
...or get shot.
No, no! he was tired of obeying the military apparatus that subordinates itself to the Anglo Saxon elite of bloodthirsty killers. NWO rules the West and we are useful bodies to them.
@@davikha4wind369 Ah yes far better to defect to North Korea instead of just leaving the military.
If you think NK is such a well oiled machine that everyone follows orders all the time. You're delusional at best. There might be a lot of rules, but everything is so corrupt that pretty much no one who isn't a top paid military official gaf.
Maybe he wanted more discipline. Maybe the military wasn't tough enough do he figured he go see if hell is any hotter 😂
"He went to the army to gain freedom"
Nuff said.
That's more personal that ree democracy
Alot of men did/still do.
Its a different type of freedom.
Sone want the freedom of a job and the wages it brings.
So for an individual with no skills it may be the only option.
Propaganda exists in America too, especially at that time
Military saved my life. Ironic. But true
Good man! He know who best country is!
Best Korea, ftw!
@Hoàng Nguyên My grandfather from Montenegro volunteered to fight together with NVA against the invaders and I am proud of his decision.
😂
What. Hahaha
@@slavicemperor8279 pravi junak
This was an eye opener for me! What incredible stories! Thank you for this obscure and hidden history a truly remarkable documentary.
Me too.
4
I've heard the story of these men before, but never in so much detail. Understanding Dreslok's childhood is essential in trying to understand his choices and attitude.
I have a feeling his fellow soldiers were giving him hell.
Only if he was a douchgad
Bullying in america is common
FULL METAL JACKET
Unfortunately, in the American Armed Forces, we eat our own.
Hamfists Man welcome to life in the armed forces
After the brief on his childhood, I wont question why he defected. Why on earth would he feel the US is better than North Korea? His dad left him at a nursing home reception...nobody held his hand
Nk gave him a chance to be special and valued. Can't say I blame the guy
@@katie-st8nx Except living as a wealthly elite while the masses stavred
@@brndonlu9635 How much compassion do you expect from somebody who got left by his family as a child. And aside from that, at the time he defected NK was doing better than South Korea.
@@brndonlu9635 So, just like an elite in the US then.
@@ant1carry I would honsteslt not defect to North Korea. It's terrrible in there and I'm not living as some proganda machine. James Dreanok had a right reason but a dumb decision
What a tragic story to be honest! This should be a movie! It's like trying to find the perfect life but each country keeps screwing you over.
"became a massage therapist in Bangkok" now thats a line I need on my resume.
I know youre supposed to add fluff onto your resume, but everyone knows you just mean 'hooker'
I wonder if her sessions had "happy endings?" LOL
well, aren't they all? haha
Huh, I’m a pure Thai that was born in Bangkok, I guess I had to be the massage guy
@@clarky23 For sure they did and that's why a kidnapped her. I bet it was a north korean that had a happy ending. It's not like they randomally picked her although it seems pretty random until you find out what she did.
There is an old Roman saying:
Better be first in the village instead of being second in the city
There's a lot more hot chicks in the city. I'll take the #2 chick in Rome over the #1 chick in...some village.
all Roman sayings are old
@@aluisious lots of used cars
To Reign in Hell, etc...
Please further elaborate the meaning of that saying.
Guess Joker was right: "One Bad Day Can Change Everything"
EDIT: Holy heck, I had not expected this to blow up like it did. Still, thanks guys
Except this guy had YEARS worth of "one" bad days stacked up.
@@CrossfeetGaming so it's more "A Few Bad Years Can Change Everything"
@@marcusblackwell2372 that's kinda the point of the comics as well. Joker claims that everything about him was all because of one bad day. But Batman disagrees and told him that he became the Joker because something was wrong with him in the first place.
The whole point of that comic is the jokers wrong
@@marcusblackwell2372 a whole young adult life, more like 😂
Feel so bad for this soldier, the world was against him his entire life. Hope he found some kind of happiness.
He didn't.
He didn't.
This would be a kickass movie.
Mini series
Only if Tarantino made it
I think it'd make a great movie. Christian Bale can play as Dresnok.
@@subliminal-i3h that sounds amazing!
he actually starred in a north korean movie about the korean war
There was some cute North Korean girl waving at him from across the border
I get the feeling this guy wasn't very smart already. Also, he was hearing NK propaganda all day.
Tristram Coffin probably because he never got to finish school or get even remotely decent parenting
@jm gee time to get that totalitarian bussy😏
@jm gee Ultimate Plot Twist: He knew and didnt care
@@weirdone6966 Cringe af
He was just living the North Korean dream yo...
Totally, its my dream life, I would be blessed to see the glorious leader.
In North Korea the government tells you what you dream.
Nothing like a dream built upon genocide and a police state
I got in one little fight and Kim Jong Un got scared he said you’re moving with auntie and uncle to Pyongyang
@@AeneasGemini So america then?
When a child is not meant to feel love or welcome by their own family, don't be surprised at what they do later in life.
Wow Babish you sure know a lot about history
Good one
Good one
Good one
*Good one*
Good one
Don't think Dresnok was brainwashed, I believe he was a lonely man that wanted a family and the North Koreans filled the bill for him.
ANU Sarcasm?
@ANU tell that to the thousands of people in north korean prisons
Well, if you think about it, North Korea would push the narrative of people from other countries defecting into theirs as a sign to show how much more “prosperous” they are than other countries, and in return would probably treat said defectors much better than their actual citizens. That or they’d hold you hostage and force you to pump out fake propaganda while treating you in worse living conditions. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ idk man
@Redsand not like north korea
@@sniperviper4922 guatanamo bay?
Hearing the whole story, it sounds like it worked out pretty well for Dresnok. He was very unlucky and unwanted in America. He was just so lucky that he was allowed to be a part of the elite class in NK. Interesting story
William Evans - Did this video host tell how US had invaded Korea 1898 with Japan and how they killed half Korean and then divided Korea in North and South. Japan got North and US kept South till today!! Americas are Soo smart they don't even know where's Korea!! Check this RUclips video: "can you name this country" this video host is US paid liar and manipulator to smear those few brave Americans as drug users who have seen what US is doing to Korean people and defected to North Korea! It those days there wasn't drugs in America as it's later on and presently!! Read some we my comments that will tell you what's really going on with US criminal behaviour around the world not only to today but since US inception! Have a nice day! 👍
propaganda bot
@@mariorobotnik8090 reread their comment. they're saying he was lucky to be elite there, not that he was lucky to be there period. North Korean elite have it well, because they're the only ones who have reliable access to necessities. That's not a good thing.
Gotta agree.
As much of his life as was certainly fabricated and planned out by the North Korean government for solely their own advantage, he still happened into a much, much better life then the terrible situation he had been in for- practically all of his life until then.
It may be exactly because of this that he never questioned any of it all, or maybe he just didn’t want to question his newfound luck.
@@justsomeguy898 North Korean elites aren't immune to getting sent to the gulags for saying the wrong thing
I think going to North Korea he found what he was looking for. A place he felt welcomed. Sounds like to me living there made him happy. Good for him.
Quite honestly I think Dresnok's life would've turned out worse if he stayed in America.
GayusSchwulius nothing went right for the poor dude. I hate to say it but he made the right choice saying in North Korea
Most likely. He woulda ended up in prison! Which is more or less where he ended up.
ah yes, with more freedom, better chance in life, dictator leader
I hate communism, and through the most insane form of irony, all these men met the loves of their lives thanks to North Korea. Some could say Stockholm syndrome, but I doubt any of these people would've found each other if not for North Korea. It's so bizarre, but yeah, James would've went to prison and became either a career criminal or starved to death as a hobo.
Dresnok definitely would have fared far worse in the US. He didn't have any ambitions and didn't want to take care of himself...just the sort of person a communist dictatorship wants, but a terrible person for a free capitalist country.
It's hard for me to imagine being the child of that Japanese woman and American man. You have two parents, both from foreign nations, both whom hate the nation they are in and are prisoners there, and you are probably sent to school every day and propagandized against the nations (they hate both the Japanese and Americans in North Korea, or at least the state teaches that) of their parents. They were probably outcasts amongst their peers for this reason. They were also mixed raced in possibly the most racially homogeneous nation on earth which no doubt would lead to much suffering or at the very best be treated as a curiousity which is still racist in itself.
But even with all that there is still probably some part of them that looks at North Korea as home. And they couldn't express this view with their parents at all. Then they're uprooted to a nation they probably don't know the language of and certainly do not know the culture of. The place they grew up and no doubt had at least some fond memories in would forever be lost and impossible to even visit for closure because they would just be made a prisoner.
Damn.... You made me feel sorry for two people who weren't even mentioned in the video for more than 2 lines.
Needs to be a movie or at least a book
Why the critics put on the guy in the comment sections though ;-;
They moved to Japan and thier child was actually kidnapped by NK and was a big deal back in 90's. I grew up and went to school where she did and taught to watch out for "strangers".
Best comment
I personally knew a British soldier some years back in his old age who surrendered one night to the Nth Koreans as he'd had enough and was more or less cold shouldered by his family upon return to the UK. He admitted losing everything dear to him, especially his family, and, when he died, circa 2012 odd, he amassed a small fortune to pass onto a totally unsuspecting relative. Only 2 people went to his funeral, both arranged it and I doubt his direct family know he's dead.
Wow, how he got out of there ?
During the Korean War? That's sad.
I personally don't and can't judge soldier's who surrender - especially if they were drafted.
Unless they committed war crimes, but this is not the case for said gentleman.
RIP.
His family didn't know (probably) or attend the funeral? The show business maxim, 'Give the public what they want and they'll turn out for it!'
this about to blow up
“Drill SGTs where yelling at him” look I know the army isn’t for most people but that’s kinda the point 😂
Their entire job is to yell at you from the second you arrive on the bus (hell they start yelling at you before you even get off the bus) to the day you leave
Drill sergeants or TIs or DIs are there to break you then remake you into something more. They are there so that when your life depends on it that training they ingrained in you takes affect.
Yeah but he probably didn't realize that, he probably had a childlike understanding of the military, you get guns, tanks, cool uniforms, everyone thinks you're cool, you look cool, you get to fly planes, you get to jump out of planes, you get to blow stuff up, etc. and didn't know what the military was actually about, otherwise he probably wouldn't have signed up.
Lol, right...
Yeah why do they yell?
Sounds like someone felt like a plastic bag, drifting through the wind, wanting to start again...
He probably felt as thin as a house of cards, and that one blow of wind, caved him in
Is that a reference from 'The Interview' by any chance?
@@byronsiamelis4507 no it's a katy Perry song tf
@@byronsiamelis4507 is that movie the first time you'd ever heard that song? Katy perry dropped that banger in like 09 🤣
@@libertyprime619 The movie 'The Interview' is about an interview in North Korea about Kim Jung Un, and as it's a comedy, he ends up having a breakdown because of the lyrics "plastic bag, drifting through the wind, wanting to start again" so since this is a video about North Korea, I assumed that the connection was relevant, but okay.
I imagine James really did enjoy living in North Korea. Going from one extreme to another probably was refreshing. It's sad that it took something so grand for him to I guess feel better.
Yeeeeaaahh, I doubt it.
He just knew north korea was going to treat him well to create propaganda against america.
Now we know how incels are made. If James only had internet he might have been dangerous.
@@lynnhauenstein4136 How does being involuntarily celibate have anything to do with defecting to North Korea? You do know that there are still woman over there, right?
Something about being the king among beggars
Sometimes we believe what we want to believe because it's easier than facing the truth. Freedom means different things to different people. Dresnok's childhood gave him a skewed view of America and freedom. As far as he was concerned he had everything he wanted in North Korea and he was willing to say or do whatever he had to to keep it. Even if he was tortured and whatever, he still had more than he'd ever had before. That was his truth.
Can’t imagine being so unloved as a kid. Living in a car with your brother while mom is out hooking and drinking.
Sounds like a fun time
@@nicetrydick for her lol
I actually think his mother cared about him. Working as a prostitute is a fast way to make a lot of cash compared to other jobs, especially if she doesn't want to be anywhere too long or leave a paper trail that could be tracked. And night time at bars is where most of your clientele will be.
I think the courts just disapproved of her job, and assumed she was a bad mother. If she didn't want the children she wouldn't have taken them.
Actually it was his dad that didn't love him ! His father should have been put into prison for abandoning his family !
@@cleitonfelipe2092 no. She didn't do it out of pleasure. It's reminiscent of the mother in Les Miserables who had no other option but to sell herself; the alternative being to starve. It's not really a funny thing to joke about. She did it to survive.
He didn't just walk over. He ran in broad daylight through a minefield.
Nope no mine-field...
@@ronmeier8850 also watch tower and alot of soldiers
Its a truly sad story. Having to do that and defect to NORTH KOREA of all places must mean life was pretty bad to him
@@sushimidnight9539 Still it's a sad story idiots like that exist and miltiplie.
Isn't the point of a dmz is to be weapons free? Aka no mines?
It honestly appears that Dresnok was happy where he ended up. After a couple of rough decades in the U.S., I can't even say I blame him. To each his own.
Everybody experiences bad parts in their life. No reason to skip off to a dark nation because of a few hard knocks. You learn to roll with the punches in your environment, not run away. Facing problems makes you stronger and tougher.
@@michelleevans5531 put you in his situation at the time and see what you do.
@@michelleevans5531 "A few hard knocks"? Did you even watch the whole video and what this man has gone through?
@@michelleevans5531 North Korea treated him pretty well.
@@genericscout5408 They love bombed him yeah. The cult strategy
This just became awful relevant.
As a long term resident of Japan, I remember when the abductees returned to Japan. Of which there were also male Japanese and not just women. Jenkins became a household name and that was mostly due to Hitomi Suga`s popularity from her frequent appearances on television. There are still a number of Japanese abductees of which their whereabouts and well being are unaccounted for. North Korea did allow the daughter of one of them to visit her Japanese grandparents although she returned to North Korea and hasn't been heard of since.
Yokota Megumi's daughter, right? Yeah, the Kim Dynasty is cooking something up with her and grooming her and her own daughter for something, since she is being personally monitored by Kim Jong-Un's sister.
So y does north Korea randomly kidnap ppl from various Asian countries?
They kidnap from all countries. Italy, Romania, US, everywhere. Charles was reported as an abductee in some shows I saw. He was then forced to work in films as the evil American and he now lives in Japan, he married a Japanese woman who was also an anductee in North Korea, she was given to him by North Korea but she eas made to tach the soldiers Japanese so they could be better spies. They need to learn the different languages in the world and whats going on in these countries.
@Neetu H correct, iv read about the actress being abducted, ya makes sense in a way, best way to get Intel on a society is to have someone from that society as ur permanent guest
Abducting Japanese citizens has always been one of the strangest things North Korea has done.
"Weren't allowed to marry North Korean women"
Escapees: *Woah woah woah*
Not allowed to marry North Korean women ,well I guess them good old boys were banging each other
@@charleswilliams5395 NK government literally abducted a romanian woman to be his wife.
Time to escape bois, mission FAILED
@Pepelucho Ramos Arquingathe diplomat couldn’t marry her legally but that doesn’t mean they couldn’t still have sex without anyone noticing
@@sirsurnamethefirstofhisnam7986 In North Korea?
IRS:You own us 25.000$ back taxes.
Me: Google" North Korean embassy near me".....
....can you do that???
@Dark-Fox "Google what countrys use decimal points,comma. In MERICAAAA we use decimal point.
Dark-Fox in other countries, a period is the equivalent of an American comma sign for numbers, and vice versa. Learned this from learning languages other than English.
@@ugurakpinar904 source?
@@jbjb679 Our Great Leader...
This must be what Travis King is trying to do
Two wives from the same restaurant?... IDK. Sounds like The Truman Show.
Sounds like a good place to eat.
@@bridge2499 Indeed it does!
@@bridge2499 😜😜😜😜😜😜
@@bridge2499 Depends on the wife :-p
What would you like to order?
-I'll take one wife, please.
Wait there's wild marijuana in Korea?
*D E F E C T S*
Why else do liberals promote weed? Because it is communist.
You could probably find better weed in a gas tanker coming from Mexico
The brazilian hood probably produces better weed
H369 N369 The fact that you use the terms Liberalism and Communism interchangeably indicates that you have no idea what you’re talking about whatsoever.
@@tatertot2484 liberalism nowadays isn't that far from socialism, which is communism for college kids.
Honestly if I was in James’ position, I’d probably have done the same. To be more specific, I obviously don’t think North Korea is good. But if I had lived the life that James had, and I had nothing left to lose, I’d have just done it.
@Nick Logan Better a coward who lives a better life than a brave man living a shitty life.
@@ThePandafriend can't be broken if you never had a spine to begin with
@@mrprescription4153 I would make friends with the enemy if my own people betrayed me. Won't you?
@@namgyallharipa8206 I wouldn't have the heart to do it
@Namgyal then u would be committing an even worse betrayal: it’s called treason. Traitors deserve only two things: A firing squad or a rope.
Dude was just making sure everything was cool for Rodman to come over.
This guys life sounds like one of those novels they'd make you read in school.
I wish
I just couldn't stop thinking about everyone abandoning that poor little boy.
"I was afraid. But life wasn't that precious". 😪
After hearing this guys heartbreaking upbringing, I'm glad the second half of his life was happy.
I am, too!
@@elmascapo6588 And if he was black he would have been shot by a cop when he stole that bicycle back when he was a kid.
@@elmascapo6588 except 95% of those are criminals, with weapons. while North Korea just shoots whoever they want.
@@MrAerohank how can any human being be so stupid. Seriously. What is wrong with you
@@MrAerohank literally twice as many whites are shot