Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Why does the Alt-Right extol North Korea?
Why does the Alt-Right extol North Korea?
Nov 4, 2025 8:49 AM

North Korea may seem like an odd choice for a white nationalist’s utopia, but then these are odd times. A significant portion of the Alt-Right has e enchanted with, or at least willing to defend, the world’s foremost bastion of Stalinism. In North Korea, racialists believe they have spied a model of their own nationalism, anti-Americanism, and hatred of free enterprise.

“North Korea is the only ethno-nationalist state opposing the current world order, and as long as it exists, it will stand as an example (and a possible future ally) for ethnic and racial nationalists everywhere,” wrote Greg Paulson at the online journal Counter Currents, which styles itself an intellectual powerhouse of the Alt-Right, “especially those of us in the West who see the only hope for our people in the destruction of the current world order.”

Appreciation for North Korea has spread in recent years. Matthew Heimbach, an organizer of the Charlottesville rally just released from jail two week ago for a separate assault, said that “North Korea is a nation that stands against imperialism and globalism around the world.” And he believes it does so on racial grounds. “The very identity of the es from an actual national socialist perspective, specifically also deriving elements from Japanese fascism,” he said.

The assessment borrows from B.R. Myers’ book, The Cleanest Race: How North Koreans See Themselves and Why It Matters, which says the 35-year-long Japanese occupation led Koreans to organize society around their own racially superior self-image.

Hence, North Korea’s birth as an Alt-Right symbol of The Resistance. David Duke, who is regarded as an elder statesman by the Racialist Right, has offered support ranging from the innocuous to the indefensible. One of the growing number of articles on Duke’s website devoted to the subject states that Israeli manipulation is “the real reason” for hostilities between the U.S. and North Korea. Another implies that the late Otto Warmbier was an Israeli spy.

Others have joined his chorus of North Korean apologetics.

“North Korea is munist, plain and simple,” wrote Paulson. Instead, the nation follows a governing philosophy known as Juche, “the spirit of self-reliance.” This is important, as the Alt-Right believes free enterprise destroys national cultures and eventually leads to miscegenation. (Michael Matheson Miller analyzes the relationship merce and cultures in his annual Acton University presentation, “Cultural Critiques of Capitalism.”) Paulson writes:

While I don’t agree with the extent of the state-control of the economy in North Korea (i.e. controlling consumption), I certainly have no loyalty to the capitalist system, which I see as racially corrosive, among other things. And let us not forget the whole reason the United States got involved in the Korean civil war was to defend (or impose) capitalism and by extension the ruling international financial order.

Essentially I admire North Korea because it is in direct opposition to the hostile ruling elite in the West and the globalist destruction of distinct peoples and nations.

Such devotion can spin the nation’s foremost problem into an asset.

The article listed among its “Reasons to admire North Korea” the nation’s reportedly high average IQ and its pandemic starvation.

True, North Korea “has struggled to adequately feed some portions of its population, but that is the price of independence for them, and they are willing to pay it – and for that alone the North Koreans get my respect. … [T]hey seem willing to die to maintain their independence.”

As many as 2.5 million North Koreans starved to death during the 1990s. Presently, 10.5 million North Koreans are “undernourished,” 28 percent of children under five have their growth stunted, and 4.4 million citizens are in a state of “crisis, emergency and famine.” Yet North Korea’s military budget is an estimated one-quarter of its GDP – and both the Korean People’s Army and Kim Jong Un appear well-fed.

These are not sacrifices willingly undertaken to secure their independence but deprivations ruthlessly imposed to maintain their enslavement.

The same aim lies behind the cult of personality, which attributes magical powers to successive incumbents of the Kim dynasty. This, too, the Alt-Right is willing to countenance, because the cult replaces other ideologies…and religions.

“Nothing North Koreans es close to matching the absurdity of Christianity, Marxism, Freudism, Diversityism, feminism or racial egalitarianism,” wrote Richard Hoste in his review of Myers’ book for Counter Currents.

Similar hostility to the modern world has forged an intellectual, if not ethnic, kinship between North Korea and the Alt-Right. Should the peninsula reunite and “choose to reject all aspects of multiculturalism I will be the first ones [sic] to cheer them on,” Hoste wrote.

Heimbach even offered his services as North Korea’s equivalent of Tokyo Rose. (Pyongyang Pete?) “I’ve thought about going and giving a tour, or something like that, especially if the DPRK government wanted to be able to reach out to Americans,” Heimbach said last year. “That would definitely be an invitation that I would be more than happy to accept.”

The Alt-Right’s embrace of North Korea shows how far from reason their cocktail of fervid racialism, obscurantism, and anti-capitalism can take them.

For a more accurate view of North Korea, see here, here, here, here, and here.

domain.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Today's Verse   Commentary on Matthew 5:13-16   (Read Matthew 5:13-16)   Ye are the salt of the earth. Mankind, lying in ignorance and wickedness, were as a vast heap, ready to putrify; but Christ sent forth his disciples, by their lives and doctrines to season it with knowledge and grace. If they are not such as they should be, they...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Today's Verse   Commentary on Proverbs 16:32   (Read Proverbs 16:32)   To overcome our own passions, requires more steady management, than obtaining victory over an enemy.   Proverbs 16:32 In-Context   30 Whoever winks with their eye is plotting perversity; whoever purses their lips is bent on evil.   31 Gray hair is a crown of splendor; it is attained in the way...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Today's Verse   Commentary on Psalm 63:1-2   (Read Psalm 63:1-2)   Early will I seek thee. The true Christian devotes to God the morning hour. He opens the eyes of his understanding with those of his body, and awakes each morning to righteousness. He arises with a thirst after those comforts which the world cannot give, and has immediate recourse...
Verse of the Day
  Hebrews 13:5-6 In-Context   3 Continue to remember those in prison as if you were together with them in prison, and those who are mistreated as if you yourselves were suffering.   4 Marriage should be honored by all, and the marriage bed kept pure, for God will judge the adulterer and all the sexually immoral.   5 Keep your lives free from...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Today's Verse   Commentary on Galatians 5:1-6   (Read Galatians 5:1-6)   Christ will not be the Saviour of any who will not own and rely upon him as their only Saviour. Let us take heed to the warnings and persuasions of the apostle to stedfastness in the doctrine and liberty of the gospel. All true Christians, being taught by the...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Today's Verse   Commentary on Proverbs 11:9   (Read Proverbs 11:9)   Hypocrites delude men into error and sin by artful objections against the truths of God's word.   Proverbs 11:9 In-Context   7 Hopes placed in mortals die with them; all the promise ofTwo Hebrew manuscripts; most Hebrew manuscripts, Vulgate, Syriac and Targum When the wicked die, their hope perishes; / all...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Today's Verse   Commentary on Deuteronomy 30:15-20   (Read Deuteronomy 30:15-20)   What could be said more moving, and more likely to make deep and lasting impressions? Every man wishes to obtain life and good, and to escape death and evil; he desires happiness, and dreads misery. So great is the compassion of the Lord, that he has favoured men, by...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Today's Verse   Commentary on Hebrews 12:12-17   (Read Hebrews 12:12-17)   A burden of affliction is apt to make the Christian's hands hang down, and his knees grow feeble, to dispirit him and discourage him; but against this he must strive, that he may better run his spiritual race and course. Faith and patience enable believers to follow peace and...
Verse of the Day
  Acts 4:12 In-Context   10 then know this, you and all the people of Israel: It is by the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, whom you crucified but whom God raised from the dead, that this man stands before you healed.   11 Jesus is 'the stone you builders rejected, which has become the cornerstone.'Psalm 118:22   12 Salvation is found...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Today's Verse   Commentary on John 15:9-17   (Read John 15:9-17)   Those whom God loves as a Father, may despise the hatred of all the world. As the Father loved Christ, who was most worthy, so he loved his disciples, who were unworthy. All that love the Saviour should continue in their love to him, and take all occasions to...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved