GEORGE BURCHETT—People are getting sick and tired of endless wars based on dodgy ‘dossiers’, lies, deception and media manipulations. So kicking that old can of germs from the Korean War until the lid eventually comes off and spills its dark secrets is not a waste of time.
KOREA/NORTH KOREA
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JEFF J. BROWN—Now, Baba Beijing (China’s communist leadership), must be shaking in its boots, pissing its drawers, shitting its pants and strategizing a humiliating retreat. Fear the force! Run for your lives! It’s gonna be rout, boys and girls! OMG, O-H-M-Y-G-A-W-D, Uncle Sam is planning to send even more thousands of America’s toughest, meanest badass ATEN-HUT Marines to Asia
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DAVID W. PEAR—Every four years the US regime uses the Olympics as an opportunity to rain chaos and hate during the Olympics’ historical tradition of bringing the world’s best athletes together in celebration of world unity, human dignity, fraternity among all nations and the possibilities when nations come together in peace. Happiness, unity and peace are a threat to the paranoid US regime, which is dedicated to war, death, and chaos. Like a drone hurling bombs at wedding parties and funerals, the unpredictable US regime tries to sabotage anything good and decent that might come from a peaceful gathering of nations.
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CHRISTINE AHN—I mean, one child per day in North Korea will die because of the effect of these sanctions, and UNICEF just issued a report last month that said that 60,000 North Korean children could starve as a result of these sanctions. So it is not the alternative to war. It is a slow war that is being waged against the people in North Korea, and we have a responsibility as a global community to push back on it. It is unethical, it is immoral, and South Korea wants to begin the process of sending humanitarian aid. My understanding was, at the meeting in Vancouver when Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha from South Korea said that South Korea wanted to resume humanitarian aid and fulfill this commitment that Moon Jae-in made at the General Assembly last September to send $8 million in humanitarian aid to North Korea, that was basically opposed by the United States, by the UK, by Japan.
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SERAPHIM HANISCH—This naturally is a very hopeful sign for Korean people on both sides of the DMZ, but the Americans remain unimpressed, to say the least. The rhetoric from the US President Donald Trump has been strongly supported in equally strong statements by Mr. Pence, both in deed (he was to have brought with him the father of Otto Warmbier, the American student who died just days after being returned to the USA in a coma following imprisonment in North Korea.