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AndyDufresne wrote:I'm currently making my way through MASH. I can't wait for MASH: The New Millennium where they send back the few remaining cast members that are still alive.
--Andy
BigBallinStalin wrote:Which armistice are you referring to?
In recent days, with the resolution set to pass, North Korea characterized the sanctions as part of an “act of war” in its escalating invective against the United States and its allies. Earlier this week it declared the 1953 armistice that stopped the Korean War null and void and threatened to turn Washington and Seoul into “a sea in flames” with “lighter and smaller nukes.”
...
The spokesman [of the DPRK] said that North Korea was no longer bound by the 1953 armistice ending the Korean War — and its military was free to “take military actions for self-defense against any target any moment” — starting from Monday, when it declared the cease-fire was terminated.
tkr4lf wrote:Surely Un realizes that launching even one nuke anywhere spells the death of his entire country, right?
I mean the U.S. has how many nukes? N.K. has how many? And they don't even have any long-range missiles to deliver the nukes? Exactly.
Egan, who has run Cubby’s for twenty-five years, is well known in Hackensack, though not solely for the quality of his ribs. For nearly fifteen years, he has served as a kind of unofficial ambassador—a go-between and a gofer—for the government of North Korea. He is, as he puts it, “Kim Jong Il’s guy in New Jersey.” Dozens of photographs on his restaurant walls offer testimony to Egan’s improbable involvement in international diplomacy. Among the pictures of friendly Giants and Yankees are several images of besuited, slightly ill-at-ease-looking Asian men posing at Cubby’s. “That’s Minister Han, before he became Ambassador here,” Egan said to me, pointing to a youthful, bespectacled man in a blue suit. (Han Song Ryol, who joined North Korea’s U.N. delegation in 1993, ended his tenure as Ambassador last year and returned to Pyongyang.) “And that’s Ambassador Ho Jong.” (Ho left his post in 1994.) In another photograph, a gentleman with the same black hair and grin as Egan stands with a beaming young female athlete, Kye Sun Hui. “That’s my dad at the Atlanta Olympics, in ’96,” Egan said. “She won the judo title when she was just sixteen. She’s a hero in North Korea. She still asks about me.”
In one corner of the restaurant is a photograph showing a dreary skyline, shot from what looks like a viewing platform. “That’s Pyongyang,” Egan said. “That’s when they gave me my pin.” The pin to which he refers bears an image of Kim Il Sung, the father of North Korea’s Stalinist state, who died in 1994, and whose son is Kim Jong Il, its current leader. North Koreans wear similar pins as a sign of respect for their head of state. Egan keeps his pin in a small, cluttered back office at Cubby’s. “I’m told there are only two Westerners that have pins—me and some guy from Romania,” Egan said. “I got the pin at the end of my first trip. They inducted me into their family. They said, ‘You are part of us.’ I thought, When in Rome, I’m Roman.”
Above a corner booth at Cubby’s is a clipping from the front page of the Times, dated November 3, 2002, with the headline “north korea says nuclear program can be negotiated.” (At the time, North Korea—formally known as the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, or D.P.R.K.—was still three years away from announcing that it had detonated a nuclear device.) Ambassador Han is quoted as saying that his country was willing to dismantle its secret uranium-enrichment facilities, in spite of having been branded by President George W. Bush, in that year’s State of the Union address, as a member of “an Axis of Evil.” The Ambassador, the article recounts, had asked to be interviewed by the paper: “The North Korean Mission contacted the Times through a New Jersey restaurateur, Robert Egan, who is the chairman of a trade group that has worked to improve ties between the United States and North Korea.” Egan, explaining his identification in the newspaper of record, said, “You have to have a reason to move around in a country like that, so the North Koreans made me the president of the U.S.A.-D.P.R.K. Trade Council, or some president of some trade council.”
thegreekdog wrote:There is nothing wrong with a barbecue restaurant in Hackensack New Jersey.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
muy_thaiguy wrote:AndyDufresne wrote:I'm currently making my way through MASH. I can't wait for MASH: The New Millennium where they send back the few remaining cast members that are still alive.
--Andy
Good show. Have all 11 seasons on DVD. Plus it helped me stay sane through 2 knee surgeries where I was stuck in bed for about a month a piece.
Lootifer wrote:muy_thaiguy wrote:AndyDufresne wrote:I'm currently making my way through MASH. I can't wait for MASH: The New Millennium where they send back the few remaining cast members that are still alive.
--Andy
Good show. Have all 11 seasons on DVD. Plus it helped me stay sane through 2 knee surgeries where I was stuck in bed for about a month a piece.
[hijack]
Whatd you have done?
[/hijack]
Oh and on topic I am usually an non-interventionist (across borders); but f*ck it, just get rid of them. If you are demonstratably insane and in control of a nation then executive order kgo.
Symmetry wrote:thegreekdog wrote:There is nothing wrong with a barbecue restaurant in Hackensack New Jersey.
You should read the whole article. It's hilarious, and kinda depressing. Also long, and slightly unwilling to directly say the guy has mafia ties.
Lootifer wrote:Yeah, and, depressingly, I am, to be honest, on your side.
WHY BBS WHYYYYY!?!?!?!
Also check out that comma usage, shits off the chain.
Shape wrote:I think the whole North Korea thing is kinda awesome in a guilty pleasure sorta-way. I mean, who doesn't love drama? Also, I think Kim Jong Un is just the silliest man on Earth. The U.N. needs to realize North Korea ain't stopping shit and sanction the crap outta them.
-Shape
thegreekdog wrote:Symmetry wrote:thegreekdog wrote:There is nothing wrong with a barbecue restaurant in Hackensack New Jersey.
You should read the whole article. It's hilarious, and kinda depressing. Also long, and slightly unwilling to directly say the guy has mafia ties.
You can take my post as a willingness, on my part, to say the guy has mafia ties.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Shape wrote:I think the whole North Korea thing is kinda awesome in a guilty pleasure sorta-way. I mean, who doesn't love drama? Also, I think Kim Jong Un is just the silliest man on Earth. The U.N. needs to realize North Korea ain't stopping shit and sanction the crap outta them.
-Shape
Yeah, the high stakes of having millions of people dead really turns you on, right?
[/sarcasm]
It's definitely exciting though, but it's important for people to remain cool-headed while making the Big decisions. Otherwise, you get huge support for really dumb wars based on lies (e.g. Iraq-US War 2.0).
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