Talk:List of universities in North Korea

Neutrality
The sentence "Before North Korea's socialist revolution, there were no universities in North Korea. Now there are more than 300 colleges and universities." portrays the terroristic socialist regime of North Korea as a benefactor of its people, ignoring the fact that the citizens that are murdered, starved to death or imprisoned in concentration camps rarely have the opportunity to enjoy from this thriving educational system. Similar severe breaches of Wikipedia policy of neutrality exist in the article Education in North Korea and other articles concerning North Korea. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 87.70.40.71 (talk) 20:50, 11 August 2018‎
 * Huh? On the contrary, it would be against WP:NPOV to start writing about the grave human rights violations you mention in every single article about North Korea. Those things have nothing to do with "List of universities in North Korea". Like all states, North Korea does good things and bad things (mostly bad things), but the fact that there were no universities before and there are some now is as neutrally said as it can and many times more relevant to the topic of this article than concentration camps are. (I'll remove the tag shorty if no useful discussion follows.) – Finnusertop (talk ⋅ contribs) 00:13, 1 September 2018 (UTC)