Begging for War

trapped.jpg

Trapped. That's how I feel now when I read what's happening in the foreign policy/geopolitical world. Trapped. I feel like screaming out to anyone, "hey, can't you see!!"

But there's no one who will listen except the die hard anti-imperialists who truly understand what has happened and what is happening. They're all trapped also.

It's maddening. Nikki Haley says "Kim is begging for war". Man. Wow. I read that and it infuriated me. The obvious reason is because it's the United States of Lies that is begging for war, not Kim. This is so fucking Orwellianly ridiculous it's hard to stand it. It's almost like you have to just turn it off and forget about it because there's no way to stop it. It's like you know a secret that could save the world but no one will believe you. It's a totally helpless feeling.

I wonder how many people's first thought when listening to or reading Haley's words, "begging for a war" was that it's the U.S. begging for war, not North Korea, not Iraq, not Russia, not Syria, not China, and not Venezuela?

Not nearly fucking enough.

These people, THESE PEOPLE, the ones who are doing this, from our own government officials to the deep state and the shadow government, are outright criminals. Murderous, lying, treasonous, inhuman criminals. Nikki Haley is as despicable as Hillary Clinton. They have to be stopped and they have to be brought to justice. And it has to be soon.

I've been criticized on this site for being too critical, contemptuous and insulting to those involved in democratic party reform and third party efforts. Because I have no answers, I should shut up and leave them alone, let them waste their fucking time trying to elect politicians to get us out of this mess.

I say more power to ya, go elect those politicians. Good luck, I mean it.

My neighbor came over to deliver some zucchini bread. His wife makes the best in the neighborhood. We got to talking as good neighbors do and I brought up how Haley had made that statement, "begging for war". He knew about it and remarked, "ya, that crazy Kim, who knows what he will do". I couldn't help but say, "ya, we've got our own crazy fucker threatening a nuke war".

Nods. Pause. (Let's see, lecture about the Korean war, U.S. imperialism, the power struggle with China and Russia, the evil duopoly, the New World Order, etc.?)

Nah, "so how are your tomato plants?"

"Ya, doing great, want some salsa?"

Trapped.

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mimi's picture

it's more than trapped right now. It's outright dangerous. Dangerous like in deadly. At least deadly to the mind, but even to the body. For my taste you are not ... "too critical, contemptuous and insulting to those involved in democratic party reform and third party efforts" ... Speak your mind, otherwise I go crazy that nobody screams like I feel it is necessary.
We have all no answers and solutions. That's what will bring the chaos and collapse. I am without TV since a good four weeks, I am not an online "watch dog". But I literally am confronted with folks, who in fact can't buy food, pay the gasoline to go to their slave work and still believe with "enough hard work" they can "make it". The sanity got lost on the highway in the heat, where people walk for tens and tens of miles in the brutal heat... to go somewhere... where they might find some shelter of some sort and something to eat or meet someone who gives them a job for the day.

That's no life, that's hell. And people don't want to admit it, see it or care about it.

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Big Al's picture

@mimi That's how it is Mimi, there's always a carrot to dangle to keep people in their places.
It comes down to a simple saying, "if people really knew", like what Rockefeller said, they'd change their tune. But like my neighbor, even when you tell them it doesn't sink in because the brainwashing has been so complete. It can't be reversed in one conversation, it literally can take years.

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Strife Delivery's picture

I like that.

Also United Lies of America.

Because what bonds all Americans together are the lies we are fed to believe.

Sometimes I can't understand folks who believe the garbage.

Kim begging for war? The guy with the country in dire poverty basically with a pitiful army that is mostly for show with all the parades and photo ops. The guy who would face the strongest military in the world. The guy who would face a nation that has what 2000 nuclear weapons.

That guy is begging for war? Come on people. It's like saying the guy in a coma is begging for a fight against Mike Tyson.

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Big Al's picture

@Strife Delivery in the corporate media monopoly and they'll fully agree then turn around and believe the propaganda from the corporate media monopoly. What can you do about that? Knock them up side the head? Wake up! It's an old fucking problem which is still a major problem.

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@Strife Delivery
But if Trump used them he wouldn't be able to build any more hotels. He is actually the safest President since W (who Kim forced to back down in the first place)
The next was will not be NK, it will be when China needs more food and soil and air than it can buy - when they have to admit that they have a choice, death by respiratory disease, cholera and famine, or war and migration. Soon.

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On to Biden since 1973

Strife Delivery's picture

@doh1304 Is it 7000?

I had merely done a quick search before posting.

Saw a number that said 4000 but that included usable and unusable missiles. Later found 2000 ready missiles.

But well 2000 or 4000 or 7000...more than enough to destroy us several times over.

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@Strife Delivery
on whether you count dinky little tactical nuclear weapons, barely larger than the bombs that destroyed Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The lower figure is for warheads and bombs that can be delivered at intercontinental distances.

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@Strife Delivery
But that figure could be exaggerated. People are always saying that "the Russians have x and we only have y" and then it turns out that we actually have more than them. It might have been 10,000 - 7000 or 7000 - 4000, or bla bla bla - bla bla. Who can keep track of the bullshit?

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On to Biden since 1973

snoopydawg's picture

I too wonder how many people thought that the reason why North Korea has been testing their missiles and saw that

I wonder how many people's first thought when listening to or reading Haley's words, "begging for a war" was that it's the U.S. begging for war, not North Korea, not Iraq, not Russia, not Syria, not China, and not Venezuela?
Not nearly fucking enough!!.

Most of the people who commented about this said that this country should just nuke them and wipe them off the face of the earth.
Not one person wrote that North Korea had every right to defend themselves.
This is their go to idea about every country that "showing signs of threatening us. Look at how many people agreed with Trump when he said that

would bomb the terrorists including their families.

I also agree with you about trying to reform the DP. This is not going to happen. Period!
The democrats had the chance to stop the wars in 2006 and again in 2008.
The democrats held all 3 branches of congress and not one of the democrats said anything about them.
Even Bernie has been okay with what Obama was doing in regards to his use of drones and his illegal invasion of Libya. This too was done on false pretenses.

They don't see the hypocrisy of what happened on 9/11 (the ones who believe the original story).
The "terrorists" that destroyed the towers did so because of what our country has been doing to the countries in the Middle East and elsewhere.
They don't understand blowback.

Haley is the new Powers who followed the same path that others in her position have done. John Bolton is begging for Trump to start a war with against Iran, but they have been following the rules that Obama and the other country's leaders made.

Great to see you writing again. And I agree with Mimi.
Sorry for this to be so very conglobulated, I can't focus my mind tonight.

Edited for clarity. I hope Smile

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

Big Al's picture

@snoopydawg The problem I see is even those who profess to know the deal are willing to compromise about imperialism and war, like voting for a Bernie Sanders as democratic presidential candidate. Until enough people rise up and refuse to compromise, we have no chance.

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snoopydawg's picture

@Big Al

Try this out: Walk up to a Democrat and tell him/her that by voting for Democrats they are voting and tacitly supporting rape, torture, the use of chemical weapons, terrorism, slavery, war crimes, and the potential extinction of the human race.*

The response? "What, no, not me. How could you even say that?"

Then you point out Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Vietnam, the potential nuclear devastation from a war with Russia, the tens of thousands of rapes that have occurred throughout our decades of wars, people being sold in Libya due to destroying the nation, arming terrorists around the world, etc.

These were the same people who protested against what Bush was doing, yet they stayed silent when Obama did the exact same things except he did it on steroids.

I did try to tell people that they needed to look at Bernie's and Warren's foreign policy viewpoints.
The only way that Bernie would have been able to accomplish his economic goals was that he had to stop the illegal wars. This was where the money would come from. This and raising taxes on the f*cking rich people and the corporations who aren't even paying 2% of their taxes and they were still getting tax returns.

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thanatokephaloides's picture

@snoopydawg

The only way that Bernie would have been able to accomplish his economic goals was that he had to stop the illegal wars. This was where the money would come from. This and raising taxes on the f*cking rich people and the corporations who aren't even paying 2% of their taxes and they were still getting tax returns.

This is what I was saying throughout the 2016 election. Bernie was never a foreign policy man, and I thought that was great. (Look what we've gotten from Presidents who were foreign policy men!) I said that it's high time we had a domestic policy President for once!

Bernie's current go-along-to-get-along with respect to imperialism and wars I liken to Willie Horton's remark about bank robbery: It's where all the money is right now, so he wants Vermont to get its piece. That's what you get from Military Mafiocracy.

And as Big Al is so keen to remind us, the key is ending Military Mafiocracy.

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"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar

"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides

Strife Delivery's picture

@snoopydawg Not to toot my own horn there snoopy but I wrote that XD haha

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Unabashed Liberal's picture

@Big Al @Big Al

I could be wrong, but I'm convinced that the upcoming midterm election cycle will expose the deceitful agenda that many Dem Party lawmakers/Leadership are running on--especially, in regards to domestic issues, such as healthcare.

And, if that happens, maybe much of the Dem Party Base will more closely examine the Dem Party's foreign policy stances, and realize that Dems are as imperialistic as corporatist Repubs. We can hope, anyway.

Agree with SD, good to see you posting. (like the photo)

Mollie


"If there are no dogs in Heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went."--Will Rogers

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Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong.

@Unabashed Liberal

Well, they are working/competing for pay-offs from roughly the same billionaire/corporate interest/war profiteering people against the interests of the American people and planetary life... That's what has to be cleaned out of policy and politics, not just their current political lackeys.

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

Hillbilly Dem's picture

@snoopydawg , America has swallowed Dick Cheney's "One Per Cent Doctrine". Hook. Lie. And Sinker. "If there is a 1% chance of an adversary doing us harm, America has the right to treat that 1% as an absolute certainty." Collectively, America bought it. Now it's a part of the national mindset.

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"Just call me Hillbilly Dem(exit)."
-H/T to Wavey Davey

snoopydawg's picture

We first went in to get Bin Laden even though Bush knew that he was in Pakistan. Then the mission was changed to fighting the Taliban. Now the mission is to fight Isis and train the Afghanistan's military.
It only takes a few months to train our troops and it cost $1 million a year for just one soldier, so why after 16 and who knows how much money it costs to train them, aren't they trained yet?

The Afghan military is not going to be trained and our government knows this. But Trump is sending another 4,900 troops back there. Why? If 100,000 troops wasn't enough to accomplish the goals, then why or how is this going to work this time?

This isn't the goal. Guarding the poppy fields is one reason, but here's the main reason for why we aren't leaving. Ever.....!!!!

Afghanistan: Why We Won’t Leave

The real reason is that Afghanistan is a forward operating base for the U.S. military in Asia in its attempts to counter China’s inevitable rise, whatever the official justifications for maintaining troops there are. China’s $900 billion
Belt and road initiative aims to lay the trans-continental infrastructure to allow its transition from great power to world-hegemon. Its projected land routes go north around Afghanistan and south through Pakistan. Given that the United States recently began a “Pivot to Asia” strategy aimed at building an economic and military partnership with Asian states to balance China, and that the economic side of that – the Transpacific Partnership – was temporarily defeated, there has been an increased emphasis on its military part by the national security state.

yes the TPP was temporarily defeated , but Trump is supposedly working on this but saying that he is re-negotiating NAFTA, but it's going to be worse than the TPP because of the IDSD clause. This is the rule that says that corporations can sue our cities and states if they had rules that would get in the way of their profits. Rules such as a $15 minimum wage or if states ban fracking. It's supposed to be illegal for foreign companies to use eminent domain to take people's property, but this hasn't stopped them doing this.
Rules are just for little people.
,

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Big Al's picture

@snoopydawg Saw that description of Afghanistan many years ago. Have also seen it described as a giant land based aircraft carrier.
Relative to Afghanistan, when people ask why we're still there, I tell them to look at a map.

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@snoopydawg
There is a very good book on why the US stayed in Vietnam for so long after it was clear we could not win. It's by Leslie Gelb and Richard Betts titled The Irony of Vietnam: The System Worked. Their argument was that though the United States was not going to win and they knew it, that no president could accept the political blow back from the loss of Vietnam.

To apply the analogy to Afghanistan, they don't expect to win. They expect to do enough to not lose indefinitely.

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Meteor Man's picture

The most technologically advanced military on the planet:

As if the city of Houston hasn’t seen enough tragedy due to catastrophic flooding from Hurricane Harvey, things took a turn for the worse today after a U.S. Navy ship collided with a building in the downtown area.

The ship was identified as an Arleigh Burke-class destroyer belonging to the Navy’s 7th Fleet.

It was unclear why the destroyer was not able to see the building and take evasive action, or why it was over 20 miles inland and trying to navigate through a major metropolitan area.

https://www.duffelblog.com/2017/08/navy-destroyer-collides-with-building...

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"They'll say we're disturbing the peace, but there is no peace. What really bothers them is that we are disturbing the war." Howard Zinn

lotlizard's picture

@Meteor Man

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Meteor Man's picture

@lotlizard @lotlizard
It's a military humor site. Some stories appear to be thinly based on fact and some reflect an adolescent "real man" mentality.

https://www.duffelblog.com/

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"They'll say we're disturbing the peace, but there is no peace. What really bothers them is that we are disturbing the war." Howard Zinn

Lily O Lady's picture

@Meteor Man

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"The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power. Now do you begin to understand me?" ~Orwell, "1984"

@Meteor Man

Lol, thanks for the site! And don't miss this or many others potentially just as giggle-worthy, even in the face of hell-on-Earth:

https://www.duffelblog.com/2017/08/eric-prince-afghanistan-contractors/

Erik Prince: Contractors committing war crimes, not US troops, will save Afghanistan

by Drew Ferrol
6 days ago

WASHINGTON — Former Blackwater CEO Erik Prince is publicly calling for the Trump administration to turn around the Afghan war by using private contractors to massacre civilians at relatively low cost, sources confirmed today.

In an op-ed article published Wednesday in The New York Times, Prince explained that contractors would offer a boost to the fledgling Afghan National Army, which has struggled with killing the necessary amount of innocent civilians in order to win the war.

Prince’s plan would embed contractors within Afghan Army units, where they can better advise-and-assist in war crimes. It also would provide contracted pilots that could deliver air supported-war crimes more efficiently than the US military could.

“My proposal is for a contractor force of less than 6,000,” Prince wrote. “Besides its role in saving American military lives from committing war crimes, this team would provide a support structure for the Afghans to continue their corrupt business practices and shady political dealings, allowing the United States’ conventional forces to remain for the foreseeable future.”

Prince’s plan has so far been rejected by Trump’s top generals, though he noted that his proposal could save taxpayers negative $40 billion a year.

He added: “Just as no one criticizes Elon Musk because his company SpaceX helps supply American astronauts, no one should criticize a private company — mine or anyone else’s — for profiting from an ugly multigenerational war through paid mercenaries.”

I laughed until I cried... it's so true...

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

went to a party this weekend, tried to talk about a movie -Under the Sun- a documentary that shows the humanity of North Koreans within a repressive society that is trying not to get turned to rubble again. fellow partygoers (all boomer dems) didn't want to go there, North Korea just a nuisance, should be swatted hollywood style, no connection to China, imperialism, trade or financial policy. conversation turned to tomatoes- hornworms weren't bad this year, early girls did well, may try microclimating next year...

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bygorry

Lookout's picture

After decimating their country in the 50's, for some reason they don't like us setting up missiles on their borders and flying nuclear bombers over their country. If Korean would only disarm. Just look at the lessons learned when Saddam and Gaddafi did.

As a nation we refuse to look. We swallow the MSM BS hook line and sinker. We are afraid, very afraid (and easily manipulated). I recommend living in a place where you can have a garden.

Good to see you out and about Al!

Did you catch Kevin Shipp CIA whistleblower speech the other week?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XHbrOg092GA (1.1 hr)

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

Big Al's picture

@Lookout Thanks for the link, it's got a lot of views already. He talks fast and gets to the point, well worth watching.
Breaking up the corporate media monopoly has to be high on whatever lists are made to oppose oligarchy.

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Right there with ya.

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all the time. WHY are we at war?!? And the response is 'they' are a 'threat', or 'they' hate us for our freedumbs.
W.T.F.
I Cannot talk politics with the wife anymore(not for quite some time) because she Refuses to SEE what is happening. She believes that electing demonRats is the answer and 'all will be well'. Fuck.
It is the SYSTEM that Must be overturned and replaced with a Humanistic focused one that leaves No One to suffer needlessly. Obviously, some will suffer, but steps can be taken to mitigate that suffering in a Humanist system.
Scream it Loud, Scream it Often:

STOP THESE FUCKING WARS!!!

peace(?)

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Ya got to be a Spirit, cain't be no Ghost. . .

Explain Bldg #7. . . still waiting. . .

If you’ve ever wondered whether you would have complied in 1930’s Germany,
Now you know. . .
sign at protest march

snoopydawg's picture

@Tall Bald and Ugly

and nothing regarding wars changed. Except that Obama who had inherited two wars which he said he would end, left office with 3 full scale wars happening, Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria, as well as using drones in 8 countries, helping the Saudis commit genocide in Yemen and Gawd knows how many countries in Africa have special forces in them during Obama's Pivot to Asia.
134 countries according to Nick Turse.
On top of this, remind her that the once shining country Libya, which once had a thriving society,, is now a smoking ruin because of Obama and Herheiounous.

Then remind her that Obama was anointed the Nobel Peace Prize for all the good that did.

Also show her this quote:

Try this out: Walk up to a Democrat and tell him/her that by voting for Democrats they are voting and tacitly supporting rape, torture, the use of chemical weapons, terrorism, slavery, war crimes, and the potential extinction of the human race.*

The response? "What, no, not me. How could you even say that?"

Then you point out Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Vietnam, the potential nuclear devastation from a war with Russia, the tens of thousands of rapes that have occurred throughout our decades of wars, people being sold in Libya due to destroying the nation, arming terrorists around the world, etc.

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

every time I look at that idiot Haley and what crap comes out of her stupid mouth. Begging for war my ass, we all know damned good and well who starts wars in this world Nikki and it ain't N Korea. It's all I can do to even read what she says, I know for sure I'd be screaming even louder if forced to listen.

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Only a fool lets someone else tell him who his enemy is. Assata Shakur

@lizzyh7

Lol-not-really, I did hear this insanity and the screaming of facts and imprecations referring to projection, etc. at the screen is definitely required. You missed nothing by not listening, although I'm rather surprised that you didn't hear me. (I haven't heard a peep out of our next-door neighbours since...s/)

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

http://archive.fortune.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/2003/05/12/...

Rummy's North Korea Connection What did Donald Rumsfeld know about ABB's deal to build nuclear reactors there? And why won't he talk about it?

By Richard Behar Research Associate Brenda Cherry
May 12, 2003

(FORTUNE Magazine) – Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld rarely keeps his opinions to himself. He tends not to compromise with his enemies. And he clearly disdains the communist regime in North Korea. So it's surprising that there is no clear public record of his views on the controversial 1994 deal in which the U.S. agreed to provide North Korea with two light-water nuclear reactors in exchange for Pyongyang ending its nuclear weapons program. What's even more surprising about Rumsfeld's silence is that he sat on the board of the company that won a $200 million contract to provide the design and key components for the reactors.

The company is Zurich-based engineering giant ABB, which signed the contract in early 2000, well before Rumsfeld gave up his board seat and joined the Bush administration.

… ABB, which was already building eight nuclear reactors in South Korea, had an inside track on the $4 billion U.S.-sponsored North Korea project. The firm was told "our participation is essential," recalls Frank Murray, project manager for the reactors. (He plays the same role now at Westinghouse, which was acquired by Britain's BNFL in 1999, a year before it also bought ABB's nuclear power business.) The North Korean reactors are being primarily funded by South Korean and Japanese export-import banks and supervised by KEDO, a consortium based in New York. "It was not a matter of favoritism," says Desaix Anderson, who ran KEDO from 1997 to 2001. "It was just a practical matter."

President Bush was skeptical of Pyongyang's intentions and called for a policy review in March 2001. Two months later the DOE, after consulting with Rumsfeld's Pentagon, renewed the authorization to send nuclear technology to North Korea. Groundbreaking ceremonies attended by Westinghouse and North Korean officials were held Sept. 14, 2001--three days after the worst terror attack on U.S. soil.

The Bush administration still hasn't abandoned the project. Representative Edward Markey and other Congressmen have been sending letters to Bush and Rumsfeld, asking them to pull the plug on the reactors, which Markey calls "nuclear bomb factories." Nevertheless, a concrete-pouring ceremony was held last August, and Westinghouse sponsored a training course for the North Koreans that concluded in October--shortly before Pyongyang confessed to having a secret uranium program, kicked inspectors out, and said it would start making plutonium. The Bush administration has suspended further transfers of nuclear technology, but in January it authorized $3.5 million to keep the project going.

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Big Al's picture

@Linda Wood @Linda Wood I have to agree with Bannon on this, there is no military solution and they know it. It all appears to be political gamesmanship and propaganda aimed at China and Russia as well as to aid the military industrial complex and others like shown above. I even have to wonder (I suppose jokingly) what cut Kim is getting from all this. Like Afghanistan, our rulers haven't kept North Korea around this long for nothing and it surely has nothing to do with our safety.

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@Big Al

your question is not a serious one?

I even have to wonder (I suppose jokingly) what cut Kim is getting from all this.

He's worth his weight in plutonium. Without morons like this saber-rattling their asses off, the multi-trillion dollar nuclear weapons business would be gone.

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Big Al's picture

@Linda Wood is almost too much for even me. It goes to some of the theories about the Cold war and the New World Order. Exactly who is in on all this?

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@Big Al

of Death.

https://www.thenation.com/article/meet-the-private-corporations-building...

Meet the Private Corporations Building Our Nuclear Arsenal
Privatizing our nuclear arsenal development is not only dangerous, but incredibly inefficient.
By Richard Krushnic and Jonathan Alan King SEPTEMBER 22, 2015

… In the recent debate over whether President Obama’s nuclear deal with Iran will prevent that country from ever developing such weaponry, you could search high and low for any real discussion of the US nuclear arsenal, even though the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists estimates that it contains about 4,700 active warheads. That includes a range of bombs and land-based and submarine-based missiles. If, for instance, a single Ohio Class nuclear submarine—and the Navy has 14 of them equipped with nuclear missiles—were to launch its 24 Trident missiles, each with 12 independently targetable megaton warheads, the major cities of any targeted country in the world could be obliterated and millions of people would die.

Indeed, the detonations and ensuing fires would send up so much smoke and particulates into the atmosphere that the result would be a nuclear winter, leading to worldwide famine and the possible deaths of hundreds of millions, including Americans (no matter where the missiles went off). Yet, as if in a classic Dr. Seuss book, one would have to add: that is not all, oh, no, that is not all. At the moment, the Obama administration is planning for the spending of up to a trillion dollars over the next 30 years to modernize and upgrade America’s nuclear forces.

Given that the current US arsenal represents extraordinary overkill capacity—it could destroy many Earth-sized planets—none of those extra taxpayer dollars will gain Americans the slightest additional “deterrence” or safety.

… One significant factor in the American nuclear sweepstakes goes regularly unmentioned in this country: the corporations that make up the nuclear weapons industry.

… the major corporations profiting from nuclear weapons contracts can now be identified. In the area of nuclear delivery systems—bombers, missiles, and submarines—these include a series of familiar corporate names: Boeing, Northrop Grumman, General Dynamics, GenCorp Aerojet, Huntington Ingalls, and Lockheed Martin. In other areas like nuclear design and production, the names at the top of the list will be less well known: Babcock & Wilcox, Bechtel, Honeywell International, and URS Corporation. When it comes to nuclear weapons testing and maintenance, contractors include Aecom, Flour, Jacobs Engineering, and SAIC; missile targeting and guidance firms include Alliant Techsystems and Rockwell Collins.

… Key to the DOE’s nuclear project are the federal laboratories where nuclear weapons are designed, built, and tested. They include Sandia National Laboratory in Albuquerque, New Mexico, Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) in Los Alamos, New Mexico, and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories in Livermore, California. These, in turn, reflect a continuing trend in national security affairs, so-called GOCO sites (“government owned, contractor operated”). At the labs, this system represents a corporatization of the policies of nuclear deterrence and other nuclear weapons strategies. Through contracts with URS, Babcock & Wilcox, the University of California, and Bechtel, the nuclear weapons labs are to a significant extent privatized. The LANL contract alone is on the order of $14 billion. Similarly, the Savannah River Nuclear Facility, in Aiken, South Carolina, where nuclear warheads are manufactured, is jointly run by Flour, Honeywell International, and Huntington Ingalls Industries. Their DOE contract for operating it through 2016 totals about $8 billion dollars. In other words, in these years that have seen the rise of the warrior corporation and a significant privatization of the US military and the intelligence community, a similar process has been underway in the world of nuclear weaponry.

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of US/Korea relations, explaining the historical and cultural roots of the Korean war, how these roots resulted in the current situation, and how they are related to Japan's and China's evolving policies. It is written by historian and diplomat William R. Polk. Very informative stuff.

Judging from the ineptness (bordering on stupidity) of both past and current US policy, I have to wonder, how much anyone in the US State Department has been even aware of this history.

Polk's prologue:
"The US and North Korea are on the brink of hostilities that if begun would almost certainly lead to a nuclear exchange. This is the expressed judgment of most competent observers. They differ over the causes of this confrontation and over the size, range and impact of the weapons that would be fired, but no one can doubt that even a “limited” nuclear exchange would have horrifying effects throughout much of the world including North America.

"So how did we get to this point, what are we now doing and what could be done to avoid what would almost certainly be the disastrous consequences of even a “limited” nuclear war?

"The media is replete with accounts of the latest pronouncements and events, but both in my personal experience in the closest we ever came to a nuclear disaster, the Cuban Missile Crisis, and from studying many other “flash points,” I have learned that failure to appreciate the background and sequence of events makes one incapable of understanding the present and so is apt to lead to self-defeating actions. With this warning in mind, I will recount in Part 1 how we and the Koreans got to where we are. Then in Part 2, I will address how we might go to war, what that would mean and what we can do to stay alive."

http://turcopolier.typepad.com/sic_semper_tyrannis/2017/08/mayday-korea-...

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native

@native

of war, and in particular nuclear weapons part of it, wants a demonstration nuclear war in order to make the case that it is necessary to build more bombs and delivery systems and to fund ever-expanding research. If we don't have an active, aggressive, and essentially mentally disturbed nuclear adversary, there is no need for the expensive, secret, unaccountable industry that bleeds us of everything else and terrifies us into more spending.

Gorbachev got Reagan to agree to nuclear disarmament, essentially, and the industry/deep state has been acting to destroy that agreement ever since. The Rumsfeld ABB contracting in North Korea is a perfect example of the industry creating a need for itself and destroying the disarmament process.

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@Linda Wood
will prevail. Hopeful, but not at all confident. Both Putin and Xi Ping oppose new sanctions, and call for de-escalation.

Mr Putin called for talks with North Korea, and warned against 'military hysteria'.
He said it was important that all parties, including North Korea, should not face 'threats of annihilation' and 'step on the path of cooperation'.
The Russian leader added: 'Whipping up military hysteria makes absolutely no sense in this situation. This is a road to nowhere.'

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4850288/N-Korea-preparing-new-mi...

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native

@native

I have tried my hardest not to favor Putin every time he contributes to the discussion of war or peace, but every time he adds to the discussion, he sounds like a normal person with common sense, not a genius, just a normal human being, while our neo-conned addlebrained coke-head leadership sounds like they're flaming out on petroleum fumes. Isn't there anyone in our federal government who isn't delusional about the use of nuclear weapons?

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@native
on the Korean conflict -- this part is at Consortiumnews.
https://consortiumnews.com/2017/09/05/on-the-brink-of-nuclear-war/

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native

gulfgal98's picture

with the Peace vigil, I found that most people were sick of wars and wanted us out of them. My experience is in a limited geographic area. However many of the people who did talk with us described themselves as conservatives, so I do not believe political affiliation is a good indicator of where people stand regarding wars.

What I do believe is that most people have not equated that the people they vote for are complicit in allowing these wars to continue and to be propagated without Congress actually being forced to declare war. Congress has abdicated its Constitutional duty in this regard. IMHO, this is where the pressure point should be.

Without the check and balance of forcing Congress to do their duty, this has allowed us to spread war from country to country via proxies or drone warfare. I was shocked to learn that most people I talked with during our Peace vigils were either clueless about the drone program or thought it to be very limited and surgical.

If we are going to put blame out there, we cannot blame the public which has so very little access to the truth via the MSM. We must blame the media and our representatives in Congress first.

As far as voting in general, I am beginning to conclude that it is a waste of time on a useless exercise that does not reflect the wishes of the public. However, I am not sure of what the alternative is. Boycotting will not work. We are currently seeing many elections in which the winner is being selected by a small minority of eligible voters and yet the PTB and the media could care less.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Big Al's picture

@gulfgal98 against wars, which most people state with a caveat (i.e., unnecessary wars) and against imperialism. Most people have no idea the full realm of economic and political warfare that goes on in the name of power and greed. I'm sure you know you'll find people who say they are against war but have no idea what is happening in Syria and that Obama started a war there.

Relative to blame, plenty to go around gg. I've personally got no problem carrying some of the blame myself for being an apathetic tool much of my life. We as citizens do have responsibilities and if we don't honor them, it's on us.

As far as a boycott, I've never said a boycott would work in and of itself. It has to be part of a larger plan to reject the oligarchy and it's institutions and systems. But I don't think we'll ever change this political system if we don't push back against it, not just those using it for their benefit.

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Carol Joy's picture

Lionel had a recent rant about how the WHOLE reason behind the trumped up "North Korea must be nuked into rubble" battle cry happens to be about a railroad being built. Yep, right now plans are afoot to build a railroad that would run from South Korea to China, right through North Korea. If this railroad happens, those three nations will be more of a power house than ever. (Of course, as it is now, North Korea is not much of anything, other than a great source of new comedy material for comics.)

The USA can't abide such a situation. As long as we keep the rumor -- so as long as the sound byte "Nuke war could be imminent" runs wild through the world's media -- then this fear might put a damper on any investors that want to help the railroad get funding.

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Believing in the improbable can make your life a miracle.