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Extreme left nonprofit bizarrely promotes North Korea as utopia with free housing to NYC’s cash-strapped

The latest propaganda campaign from a radical New York City-based pro-North Korea nonprofit bizarrely pitches the Hermit Kingdom as a utopia where housing is free.

“Is your rent due? Not in North Korea,” Nodutdol’s April 1 Instagram post boasts to its 42,000 followers, alongside an idyllic picture of children happily playing in the snow in front of a modern, residential apartment building that looks strikingly American-style.

Nodutdol, a Midtown-based group whose name means stepping stone in Korean, has worked to radicalize American leftists into supporting North Korea through their mutual hatred of “US imperialism.”

insta post showing nodutol's claim of an idyllic life in nk

Nodutdol’s April 1 Instagram post boasts about the Hermit Kingdom’s free housing to its 42,000 followers. Nodutdol /Instagram

The social media post goes on to slam US capitalism for “manufacturing a housing crisis at home.”

“Things don’t have to be this way, and socialist countries are proof of that,” it says before showing images of 163,000 recently built housing units in capital Pyongyang and rural areas across the country.

But in reality, housing in the land of dictator Kim Jong Un is built by the state and allocated based on job, status and loyalty to the regime — with organizations like Human Rights Watch finding that “the North Korean government systematically violates…the right to adequate standard of living.”

While military and party officials — including Ri Chun Hi, the country’s most prolific state propaganda anchor, known as “the pink lady,” who received a luxury home in 2022 — are granted preferential housing, ordinary people typically get the bottom of the barrel, with decrepit homes that often lack electricity.

Construction tends to be rushed for political optics, leaving people living in unfinished or unsafe buildings, and deadly apartment collapses have occasionally made the news despite tight media control — such as the 2014 collapse of a 23-story building in Pyongyang, which killed more than 160 people.

The propaganda campaign seemed too much even for some of Nodutdol’s supporters.

Residential buildings with tiled roofs and a distant mountain landscape in Kaesong, North Korea.

Most housing in North Korea looks less like Shangri-La and more like the slums. Corbis via Getty Images

Collage of three images: people harvesting crops in a greenhouse, new rural housing in North Korea, and a field of crops in front of housing.

The group bragged about the 113,000 rural units recently built, in addition to another 50,000 in the capital city. Nodutdol /Instagram

Decrepit apartment buildings in the North Korean countryside with crops in the foreground.

In reality, the rural housing units look more like these decrepit buildings in the middle of crops in Kaesong. Corbis via Getty Images

“I’m really trying to support this platform … but there is some clear misinformation going on,” commented one Instagram user.

Others, meanwhile, didn’t seem to see through the smoke and mirrors.

“Me crying as I pay my rent,” lamented a commenter.

Nodutdol runs out of the sprawling Midtown digs of the People’s Forum on West 37th Street, where it regularly hosts seemingly innocuous events like its “Kimchi Bowl” year-end fundraiser, while peddling pro-Noko propaganda.

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The under the radar organization has close ties to the nonprofit run by tech millionaire Neville Roy Singham and his wife Jodie Evans’ Code Pink. T

hat group was part of the recent “Nuestra America” convoy that saw hundreds of tone-deaf radicals meet with the communist regime in Havana, Cuba — where they stayed in 5-star hotels while the island nation was in crisis.

Code Pink and the People’s Forum have been linked to Chinese influence operations in a State Department report to Congress. 

One of Nodutdol’s central demands is putting an end to the US-South Korea alliance. It also pushes for the reunification of North and South Korea and “for a world free of imperialism.”

Nodutdol did not respond to The Post’s request for comment.

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