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Lil Kim

Dennis Rodman Sings Happy Birthday To Kim Jong-Un

bcglorf says...

Rodman says he hopes this shows that we can co-exist with each other...

How far is he removed from his situation? Kim Jong Un as good as murdered his uncle for power just a few weeks ago. Kim Jong Un is holding as many of his own people in concentration camps as the Nazi's did and with no better conditions. His country is the largest example of slavery existent today.

We DO NOT WANT to co-exist with the monsters that would rule in this way. I do not care if the man is really nice to you personally and to the friends and family loyal to him(at least until they 'betray' him like his uncle). He is at the same time, that nice guy to those he cares about, and cruel slave driver of the North Korean majority at the same time.

JFK calls out steel companies for defiance of public interes

Yogi says...

The way people fawn over Kennedy would make Kim Jong Un proud. He is not a saint or an angel, he is not what the media makes him out to be.

Hanover_Phist said:

and that was the LAST time the United States President ever spoke out on the price fixing of US industries. You could get yourself killed.

World's First Kim Jong-un Impersonator

bjornenlinda (Member Profile)

Unmanned: America's Drone Wars trailer

bcglorf says...

I would say diplomacy as a solution to Islamic jihadism is as naive as was diplomacy with the nazis. Pakistan's current rule of law is the death penalty for blaspheming the name of the prophet, and not only is that too secular for the taliban jihadists, it is so intolerably so that they are waging a war against civilians over it. The proudly claim credit for shooting children on school buses, and proudly note their intent to finish Malala off if given the chance. What kind of diplomacy do you expect to see followed exactly?

Should Pakistan's military and police really refuse to meet the countless taliban attacks on civilian targets with no use of force? Should they really just proceed to try and talk to the criminals prosecuting these crimes every single week? I think it's a strategy doomed to horrific failure, and one that invariably leads to far more death and suffering.

History doesn't exactly bare out that ignoring dictators and extremists leads to them just giving up and playing nice. Brutality was terribly successful and effective for the Pharoahs. Same for the Caesars. Same for Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Kim Jong Il and on and on and on. There comes a point when failure to face evil with force just emboldens and strengthens it.

enoch said:

@bcglorf

i did not posit drones are bad.
i didnt posit anything actually,except to refrain from the conversation entirely.
(our government,not you or i).

you or i can discuss ad nauseum and would have every right to.
we can and many do actually volunteer their time to help those in need,helpless or hurt.
some very brave souls travel to these broken countries to help ease the suffering of ordinary folk.

and you already know my answer to your query.
diplomacy is the only resolution and the reason is twofold:
1.diplomatic talks almost always are started with a cease and desist of all aggression.
2.it allows a multilateral approach therefore diffusing the hypocrisy i spoke about.

many people in this country are reluctant to look at what their own government has perpetrated in their name.
maybe out of fear...or pride.
but in my opinion any real conversation has to begin with absolute truth.

so by my vicious criticism of my governments foreign policy over the past 50 years does not mean that i ignore all the great achievements,great accomplishments and great ideals.

so if i was to posit anything on this thread it would be this:
we have lost our way.
the very things that made us great have become whispers lost in a cacophony of paranoid musings by the powerful and we sold our freedom to be cocooned in the safety of consumerism.
and while the wolves howl at the door we are fed platitudes of american exceptionalism and handed flags to wave in remembrance of good-deeds from days long past.
individualism has been ratcheted up to a fever pitch of self-aggrandizing twitter feeds and selfies.
that a persons self worth is based on their ability to purchase status symbols.
where news has become opinion and everybody has a right to one.
where facebook is a place to post your own,personal cartoon all the while never really communicating with anyone.

we have become afraid little children.

and its time to grow up.

NSA (PRISM) Whistleblower Edward Snowden w/ Glenn Greenwald

dystopianfuturetoday says...

I think that cat is already out of the bag.

Would you be surprised to learn that Australia is monitoring internet activity in other countries? I bet you $10 they do.

It would piss me off to learn that the NSA was reading our hot daily sexts, but does that potential for abuse mean they shouldn't be able to check out what Kim Jong Un is doing in NK, or check up on unstable regions with nuclear capabilities?

What do you think?

dag said:

Quote hidden because you are ignoring dag. (show it anyway)

Just the fact that Obama and his intelligence chief try to justify the program by saying that it only targets foreign individuals blows my mind - I mean WTF?? Don't we deserve privacy here in Australia? It's like a giant fuck you to the near 7 billion people who don't happen to live within the US borders.

Model Rocket Crashes At Sea- (w/mission control chatter)

TYT - North Korea Openly Threatening Nuclear Strike on US

Orz says...

North Korea is (46,541 sq. miles). It’s about the same size as Pennsylvania (46,055 sq. miles), the state in which I reside. It seems to me that even if they did attack, the possible "no-holds-barred response" makes this basically the equivalence of "suicide by cop". It's almost as if Kim Jong-un is asking for us to kill him.

Bizarre Dennis Rodman Interview About North Korea

siftbot says...

Tags for this video have been changed from 'Travel, VICE, Shane Smith, Basketball, North Korea' to 'Travel, VICE, Shane Smith, Basketball, North Korea, Dennis Rodman, Kim Jong Un' - edited by xxovercastxx

Bizarre Dennis Rodman Interview About North Korea

Darkhand says...

TBH I kind of sympathize with Dennis Rodman. Look he's not a diplomat he was sent over there to open up the door. Dennis isn't going to be politically correct and he's not the most intelligent person in the world don't ask him to articulate everything he is saying.

George "So you agree with how he puts 200,000 people in prison labor camps?"
Dennis "Well it's amazing how we do the same thing here in the US"

Now most of the super liberal people on this site I imagine would agree with Dennis there. Locking up the poor, black people, unfair trials, the patriot act, etc. But everyone is looking past that because he is saying he love Kim Jong Un?

Dennis Rodman knows he's right he just has a hard time saying it.

If he came back to America and was like "that kids a punk bitch and I told him to stop xyz" we would be right back to square one.

Whoever sent Dennis there knows what he is doing.

Bizarre Dennis Rodman Interview About North Korea

bobknight33 says...

Sometimes its the foolish who can cause us to let our guard down and see truth.

May be its the embarrassing, ignorance of Rodman is what N. korea needs.
What if Rodman goes back with more ball players? If they can have the attention of kim Jong Un may be they can speak of human rights...

Does the kid (kim Jong Un) really wants to follow in his fathers footsteps? May be he is looking for a way out of the mess his father made with out dishonoring him. No one know since no one has his ear to listen.

Bizarre Dennis Rodman Interview About North Korea

bcglorf says...

Frankly, I think George's dismissal wasn't patronizing enough. George's reply came off weak and ineffective. North Korea is a state where the majority of the population lives under conditions the entire rest of the world defines as slavery. Any dictator or world leader is going to be very charismatic, persuasive and come across as someone you just want to like and respect person to person. More needed to be made of the fact that Kim Jong Un is BOTH the man Rodman describes AND the most brutal, cruel and repressive dictator on the planet.

Deano said:

George didn't need to dismiss him quite so patronisingly at the end.

Rodders needed to be a bit more savvy in how he spun his visit - he just comes across as missing a few gears.

North Korea's Military Parade in Slow Motion

North Korea Hell March



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