Demick Barbara Quotes
Collection of top 37 famous quotes about Demick Barbara
Demick Barbara Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Demick Barbara quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
punishment was withholding food. Starvation was the way the regime preferred to eliminate its opponents. It
— Barbara Demick
He was polite, respectful, not daring even to hold Mi-ran's hand until they'd been dating for three years.
— Barbara Demick
Good reporting should have the same standard as in a courtroom - beyond a reasonable doubt.
— Barbara Demick
I agree with Kathi Zellweger that sanctions mostly punish the ordinary people who live at the edge of starvation.
— Barbara Demick
People have crossed the Himalayas in flip-flops seeking a blessing from the Dalai Lama.
— Barbara Demick
There was the natural human survival instinct to be optimistic.
— Barbara Demick
The cadence of life is slower in North Korea.
— Barbara Demick
In 1991, few North Koreans had ever used a telephone. You had to go to a post office to make a phone call.
— Barbara Demick
Liberty and love These two I must have. For my love I'll sacrifice My life. For liberty I'll sacrifice My love.
— Barbara Demick
The strength of the regime came from its ability to isolate its own citizens completely.
— Barbara Demick
Listening to South Korean television was like looking in the mirror for the first time in your life and realizing you were unattractive.
— Barbara Demick
Over the years, so many exceptions and amendments were made to China's one-child policy that it was hard to pinpoint a moment to pronounce it dead.
— Barbara Demick
As her students were dying, she was supposed to teach them that they were blessed to be North Korean.
— Barbara Demick
In the 1990s, the United States offered to help North Korea with its energy needs if it gave up its nuclear weapons programme.
— Barbara Demick
Often children came in with minor colds or coughs or diarrhea and then suddenly, they were dead.
— Barbara Demick
By the mid-1990s, nearly everything in North Korea was worn out, broken, malfunctioning. The country had seen better days.
— Barbara Demick
But now she couldn't deny what was staring her plainly in the face: dogs in China ate better than doctors in North Korea.
— Barbara Demick
We joked that unrequited, or in this case unconsummated, love affairs are the only ones that last forever.
— Barbara Demick
The more there was to complain about, the more important it was to ensure that nobody did.
— Barbara Demick
(The North Korean army had to lower its height requirement from five feet three in the early 1990s because of the stunting of the younger generation.)
— Barbara Demick
As a reader, I've always been interested in dystopian novels like 'Nineteen Eighty-four'.
— Barbara Demick
He would wait hours for her, maybe two or three. It didn't matter. The cadence of life is slower in North Korea. Nobody owned a watch.
— Barbara Demick
At first, they would walk in silence, then their voices
— Barbara Demick
Kim Jong Un came in as a fresh face, so I think there's a great disappointment that he's playing the same game as his father.
— Barbara Demick
The anti-Japanese resistance was as familiar a theme in North Korean cinema as cowboys and Indians was in early Hollywood.
— Barbara Demick
Charity begins with a full stomach," the North Koreans like to say; you can't feed somebody else's kids if your own are starving. When
— Barbara Demick
The Uighurs are a Turkic people more closely related to Uzbeks and Kazakhs than to Chinese.
— Barbara Demick
In 1995, the Chinese government picked a 6-year-old child to succeed the Panchen Lama, the second highest figure in Tibetan Buddhism.
— Barbara Demick
In North Korea, you don't own your own home; you are merely awarded the right to live there.
— Barbara Demick
Emotions somehow meant more when they were handwritten on precious scraps of paper and conveyed on slow trains running out of fuel.
— Barbara Demick
North Korea is probably the only country in the world deliberately kept out of the Internet.
— Barbara Demick
One death is a tragedy; a thousand is a statistic.
— Barbara Demick
Kim Jong-un's style is more suggestive of Saddam Hussein or his murderous son, Uday Hussein.
— Barbara Demick