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  1. #441
    Senior Member istoryaaah's Avatar
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    Kung naa kai ICBM + butangan nuclear warhead = no one will touch you.
    exactly...

    ang point ana... if you are powerful US will respect you... Look at home Pakistan and India settles their disputes... Did we hear anything from the US? Big hell none... why? because, Pakistan has a nuke that can blow up American a$$es in a matter of seconds.

    Power + ICBM + nuke warhead makes a nation tick like a bomb... what made Japan surrender, what made Hitler fall... what made Sadam beheaded... what made us the third world country inferior to them (nation's with nukes)... what made China and Iran realized that they need a nuke also... and what made this whole damn world the worst...

    Now tell me... are they friendly? Suppressing a weapon of mass destruction should not only be limited to those who cannot afford to create and maintain them... If they don't want nukes then they should not use nukes, nor develop nukes as a means of resource. And considering the US as a nation of bullies, picking fights on Nations who cannot fight back...

    Look at how Filipinos protected Nicole... and look at how Nicole protected herself from getting declined for a US Visa... LOL!!! Now I wonder why I shouldn't call myself a SERVANT... When my only purpose in life is to study hard so I can GO ABROAD BE A SLAVE... (pathetic reason for living)

    Mo sugot kaha ang taga Lilo-an nga ingnon "undang mog buhat/himo og pusil" sa mga taga batangas nga nag produce og balisong? ka LOL!

    for those who need sources: U.S. Policy and Pakistan's Nuclear Weapons: Containing Threats and Encouraging Regional Security and yeah... news articles are not 100% facts, In the end, the one reading it can only deter which is right and which is wrong... which is a fact and which is not...

  2. #442
    Quote Originally Posted by istoryaaah View Post
    exactly...

    ang point ana... if you are powerful US will respect you... Look at home Pakistan and India settles their disputes... Did we hear anything from the US? Big hell none... why? because, Pakistan has a nuke that can blow up American a$$es in a matter of seconds.

    Power + ICBM + nuke warhead makes a nation tick like a bomb... what made Japan surrender, what made Hitler fall... what made Sadam beheaded... what made us the third world country inferior to them (nation's with nukes)... what made China and Iran realized that they need a nuke also... and what made this whole damn world the worst...

    Now tell me... are they friendly? Suppressing a weapon of mass destruction should not only be limited to those who cannot afford to create and maintain them... If they don't want nukes then they should not use nukes, nor develop nukes as a means of resource.

    Mo sugot kaha ang taga Lilo-an nga ingnon "undang mog buhat/himo og pusil" sa mga taga batangas nga nag produce og balisong? ka LOL!
    Hahaha! Kung naa kai ing-ana nga weapons mo shift jud ang balance sa power...

    Mao nay kahadlukan sa Amerika.. ilang dauton ang country nga gusto mag develop ana.. ilang tawgun dayon Axis to all evil, rouge states, supporting terrorist etc.. maayo kaayo mo gamit ug media.. sa tinuod cla ra nagda ug samok sa kalibutan....

  3. #443
    Senior Member istoryaaah's Avatar
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    Here: Nuclear Technology ~ A Primer for the grease-monkey's of information copy pasted from a not so friendly site.

    Silingan man gani na sa US ang number 1 producer of Uranium... DI MAN GANI SILA KA BADLONG... hahaha... adto na nuon sila sa NoKor nga layo ra kaau... hahahaha... tan awa ang top buyers of Uranium... wahahahaha... IRONIC KAAU SA? US number 1!!

    Uranium is a naturally occurring radioactive metal. It has two principal uses: nuclear bombs and nuclear electricity generation. These uses are not mutually exclusive. In recent years, uranium has also been used as armour for tanks, bullets and artillery shells.
    Canada was the first country to mine uranium. The world's first uranium mine was at Port Radium, NWT, on the shore of Great Bear Lake. Canada was also the first country to refine uranium on an industrial scale. Uranium for the World War II Atomic Bomb Project was processed in secrecy at Port Hope, Ontario.
    Much of the uranium for the Cold War nuclear arms race came from Canada: Port Radium and Rayrock, NWT; Uranium City, Saskatchewan; Bancroft and Elliot Lake, Ontario. By 1960 the American military contracts had been terminated. All uranium mined in Canada since 1965 has been sold for reactor fuel.
    Canadian uranium miners have died from lung cancer at a rate many times higher than non-miners. Ottawa knew of the health dangers of uranium and radium as early as 1932, but did not begin to inform workers or compensate their widows until 1973. An epidemic of cancer deaths among men of the Sahtu-Dene tribe from Deline, NWT, who carried sacks of radioactive concentrates on their backs for decades, is currently under investigation by authorities.
    Canada remains the world's largest producer and exporter of uranium. Since the mines at Uranium City and Elliot Lake have been closed, all Canadian uranium now comes from rich deposits located in the Athabasca Basin of Northern Saskatchewan.
    Canada exports uranium all over the world. Major buyers have been the U.S., Japan, Germany, France, Sweden, and Spain. Less than twenty percent of Canada's uranium is used domestically.
    Countries buying Canadian uranium must promise not to use it for weapons. But there is evidence that some of this uranium still finds its way into bombs.

  4. #444
    Quote Originally Posted by istoryaaah View Post
    Here: Nuclear Technology ~ A Primer for the grease-monkey's of information copy pasted from a not so friendly site.

    Silingan man gani na sa US ang number 1 producer of Uranium... DI MAN GANI SILA KA BADLONG... hahaha... adto na nuon sila sa NoKor nga layo ra kaau... hahahaha... tan awa ang top buyers of Uranium... wahahahaha... IRONIC KAAU SA? US number 1!!
    Hahahha.. mao lage.. then maabot didto sa Nokor unya mag bully²...

  5. #445
    so, ok ra jud diay??..

  6. #446
    Quote Originally Posted by vergievergz View Post
    so, ok ra jud diay??..
    naay ok naa sad dli ok... like sa UN Security Council so mao wala clay nabuhat...
    Last edited by flanker; 04-08-2009 at 02:36 PM.

  7. #447
    u mean even ang UN SC way nabuhat??ahh..wise pod diay ning NoKor..hehehe

  8. #448
    Quote Originally Posted by vergievergz View Post
    u mean even ang UN SC way nabuhat??ahh..wise pod diay ning NoKor..hehehe
    yes.. naka kita cla buslot sa UN resolution by declaring a "SATELLITE LAUNCH"...

    coz dli man illegal mag launch ug satellite.

  9. #449
    It's a hard truth to stomach, but we will have to talk to Kim Jong Il | Richard Lloyd Parry - Times Online

    It's a hard truth to stomach, but we will have to talk to Kim Jong Il
    The North Korean leader's regime is cruel and absurd, but his actions have to be understood as well as condemned to secure a safer world

    Richard Lloyd Parry

    Twenty years after the demise of the communist Evil Empire, the world has begun to struggle when it comes to credible international supervillains. Robert Mugabe? Horrible, certainly, but also rather pathetic. Vladimir Putin - sinister, perhaps, but hardly foe to all humanity. Even Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in Iran lacks the edge somehow, and it's been far too long since Osama bin Laden put in an appearance. In the global obnoxiousness rankings there is only one serious contender, leagues ahead of anyone else: the North Korean leader, Kim Jong Il.

    He's got the bizarre personality cult (“Dear Leader”, “Lodestar of the Twenty-First Century” etc). He's got the crazed haircut and Dr Evil pantsuit. He's got the devastating superweapons (about half a dozen nuclear warheads, by most estimates). And yesterday morning, puny mortals across the world quailed in terror as his latest evil scheme streaked across the sky - an intercontinental rocket fired high into the atmosphere above Japan. That the rocket failed to make it into orbit seems not to matter that much. If the reviews are anything to go by, this was the most dastardly act of villainy since the days of Goldfinger and Ernst Stavro Blofeld. The UN Security Council met in emergency session. Red telephones rang on desks across the world as governments from the United States to New Zealand issued sternly worded communiqués. The Japanese military got so overexcited that it jumped the gun - not once, but twice - and mistakenly announced that the rocket had gone up on Saturday. But this near-hysterical reaction, and the crude caricaturing of Mr Kim, serve only to distract from the reality of North Korea as it confronts the world, and to blind us to the very few feasible solutions.

    For he is neither a madman nor a fool. Understood on his own terms, his actions have a logic and even a warped wisdom, and have seen him through a decade-long emergency that would have put paid to a lesser leader. No one could ever reasonably defend the North Korean regime, which competes with the worst in history for its cruelty and absurdity. But it is time for the rest of the world to try a bit harder to understand Mr Kim's actions, as well as condemning them.

    Like all the biggest international headaches, Mr Kim did not come out of nowhere. He is the product of Korean history, one of the most stubbornly violent and traumatic in Asia. As a small but strategically positioned country surrounded by big powerful neighbours, Korea had been battered by invasion and exploitation for centuries. In 1945, Allied victory brought an end to harsh Japanese colonial rule, but replaced it with something even worse - national division between the Russian-backed North and the American-sponsored South. Today, South Korea is a vigorous democracy, but until 20 years ago it was a harsh dictatorship run by right-wing generals who, for ruthlessness and brutality, gave the Communists in the North a run for their money. The civil war of the early 1950s killed millions as it raced back and forth along the narrow peninsula. It ground to a stalemate not with a permanent peace, but with a temporary armistice that has never been replaced by a binding treaty. The Korean War, in other words, never formally ended - and Mr Kim and his army have never stopped fighting it.
    Times Archive, 1983: Kim Jong Il's car buying spree

    The vehicles include a computerized, four-seat, bullet-proof sedan

    The late 1980s, a moment of ecstatic liberation elsewhere in the world, increased North Korea's already acute sense of crisis and isolation. The end of the Soviet Union, and gradual liberalisation in China, deprived it of its economic and political supporters. Mr Kim's father, the founding leader Kim Il Sung, died in 1994. North Korea's economy collapsed; in the late 1990s, famine killed perhaps as many as several million people

    Across the barbed wire and mine-encrusted border is the highly trained South Korean Army, backed up by US Marines and warplanes. In neighbouring Japan sits another US army and an aircraft carrier fleet, and there are nuclear weapons to hand on the Pacific island of Guam. This is the world that Kim Jong Il sees when he peers out at the world from Pyongyang: to the north, the irritated indifference of the Chinese, and in every other direction lethally armed and impatient hostility.

    Is it remotely surprising that a leader in this situation - without friends, without functioning industry or agriculture, surrounded on all sides by great powers, overrun and invaded throughout history, and in a psychological state of permanent war - should turn to the one institution that continues to support him, the military, and do what he can to strengthen it?

    It has worked for him so far - there can't be much doubt that without a powerful army capable of inflicting a bloody nose on any invader, Mr Kim would have gone the way of Saddam Hussein several years ago. In the absence of a military solution, the rest of the world has two choices: to talk to the North Koreans, or not to talk to them.

    Negotiating is hard to swallow, because Mr Kim's regime is so obnoxious, stubborn and indefensible. You feel dirty dealing with such people, which is why the Bush Administration began by refusing to deal with the North Koreans unilaterally. Mr Kim didn't mind too much - as the Americans were holding their noses, he took out an insurance policy, reactivating a frozen nuclear power plant and setting his nuclear scientists to work. By the time President Bush's people had executed their U-turn and got round to talking to the North Koreans one to one, they had assembled, and subsequently tested, a handy arsenal of nuclear warheads.

    It is these that the world should be concerned about - not yesterday's rocket that genuinely does appear to be, as North Korea claims, the launch vehicle for a communications satellite rather than a ballistic missile. Even if it is a weapon capable of reaching Alaska or Hawaii, there is no realistic threat to either of those territories: Mr Kim understands very well the fiery vengeance that would fall on his head in return for any attack on US soil.

    The only practical way of bringing change to North Korea is by talking to North Koreans, and by compromising with them in ways that will at times be difficult to stomach. For several years, a series of multilateral meetings - the six-party talks - have made grinding progress towards a settlement, and this should continue. But it will all move all the quicker if we see Mr Kim for what he is - a scared orphan of history in a supervillain's outfit, who is much more afraid us than we are of him.

    Richard Lloyd Parry is Asia editor of The Times

  10. #450

    Default N. Korea launches rocket

    Having some kind of dialogue with N. Korea could possibly be of help.. But, then again, many have tried to be reasonable with N. Korea and it just doesn't seem to work. Perhaps Flanker and Isoryaaah (and the team Herp Doc and Desert something or other) can make an appointment to meet with the N. Koreans. They could bring all of their "we hate America" rhetoric with them and have a lovely day of discussions. Hmmm, but if they hold you guys hostage after lunch, who are you going to turn to for help? Dick Gordon? The Chinese? Maybe Iran? Iraq? You guys are trying to give the impression that if you were on fire, you wouldn't allow an American to pour water on you to put out the flames. America isn't your enemy, but apparently it has become fashionable in some circles (including Istorya.net) to pretend that it is. How do you think the rest of the world views you? You wouldn't be happy if you knew the answer, trust me.

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