Global Events & Politics Überthread

It amazes me how many varying opinions there are among genuine experts when it comes to how best to deal with North Korea.

https://www.thecipherbrief.com/article/exclusive/asia/north-koreas-dictator-bent-survival

“Waking up one morning and deciding he wants to nuke” Los Angeles is not something Kim Jong-un is likely to do, said Yong Suk Lee, Deputy Assistant Director of CIA for the Korea Mission Center. “He wants to rule for a long time and die peacefully in his own bed,” Lee said, in rare public remarks in Washington.

That doesn’t make him any less dangerous. “With each increasing escalation, they’re raising the threshold for the United States and others to accept or press back against that,” said Michael Collins, Deputy Assistant Director of CIA for East Asia Mission Center. The officers were speaking at the CIA’s annual Ethos and Profession of Intelligence Conference at George Washington University.

....

Retired Ambassador Joseph DeTrani was more blunt. “The possibility of stumbling into conflict is very great,” especially with the added provocation from Trump’s rhetoric, he said, speaking on the same panel.

“When they hear what’s coming from the president, I think it resonates with them,” said DeTrani, the former special envoy for Six Party Talks with North Korea and the former director of the National Counterproliferation Center. “But they also know we have a process and I think right now they’re probing.”

....

“What’s bound North Korea’s behavior is fear of Chinese abandonment on one end, and fear of a U.S. strike on the other end,” Lee said. “And right now…he’s not afraid of China’s abandonment and he’s not afraid of a U.S. strike. So then it begins tolerance of will — how far will Kim Jong-un go?”

The Kim regime’s long-term goal is to come to some kind of a big power agreement with the U.S. and remove U.S. forces from the peninsula, Lee said. As for the risk of North Korea firing nuclear-tipped ICBMs at the U.S., Lee reiterated that as a rational actor, it would not be conducive to Kim’s regime interests or his longevity to do so.

But he uses the threat to “keep us out of his sandbox.”

...

But if the U.S. pulls out of the Iran nuclear agreement — which Trump has repeatedly called a bad deal for the U.S. and threatened to pull out of or renegotiate — that could make it much more unlikely for North Korea to even contemplate coming to the table, he said.

“That would be a message to Pyongyang that the U.S. could be fickle, that the U.S. may sign into agreements and walk away from those agreements,” DeTrani said, adding that North Korea may understand “enhancing the agreement, rather than cutting it.”
 
I’m less afraid of snakes. I do have sone serious arachnophobia. When I was like 7 my brother and I were playing catch in the yard. I was pitching like Maddux and he was catching. He threw the ball back and I missed it and I ran over to pick it up. And it was a black widow. Me being young and naive I went to go touch it and my bro freaked out. Pulled me away ASAP and told me not to get close to one of those ever. So since then I hate spiders. 20 years later.
 
http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory/spike-airborne-radioactivity-detected-europe-50298850

The Federal Office for Radiation Protection said Thursday that elevated levels of the isotope Ruthenium-106 have been reported in Germany, Italy, Austria, Switzerland and France since Sept. 29.

Spokesman Jan Henrik Lauer told The Associated Press the source of the Ruthenium-106 isn't known but calculations indicate it may have been released in eastern Europe.

Ruthenium-106 is used for radiation therapy to treat eye tumors, and sometimes as a source of energy to power satellites.
 
A look at the past and present of Chinese cyber attacks-

https://theconversation.com/how-the-chinese-cyberthreat-has-evolved-82469

According to the institute, China’s espionage supports the country’s 13th Five-Year Plan (covering the years 2016 to 2020), which calls for technology innovations and socioeconomic reforms. The goal is “innovative, coordinated, green, open and inclusive growth.” The ICIT report said most of the technology needed to realize the plan will likely be acquired by stealing trade secrets from companies in other countries.

In its 2015 Global Threat Report, the American cyberintelligence firm CrowdStrike identified dozens of Chinese adversaries targeting business sectors that are key to the Five-Year Plan. It found 28 groups going after defense and law enforcement systems alone. Other sectors victimized worldwide included energy, transportation, government, technology, health care, finance, telecommunications, media, manufacturing and agriculture.
 
More madness in England. When will it stop? When will we realize the true problem and deal with it?
 
http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/c...ould-kill-90-of-all-americans/article/2637349

Congress warned North Korean EMP attack would kill '90% of all Americans'

Congress was warned Thursday that North Korea is capable of attacking the U.S. today with a nuclear EMP bomb that could indefinitely shut down the electric power grid and kill 90 percent of "all Americans" within a year.

At a House hearing, experts said that North Korea could easily employ the "doomsday scenario" to turn parts of the U.S. to ashes.
 
The street crime is a side effect of the war on drugs and predatory policing of poor areas. There are literally protests about it every week.
 

This story is just tragic. I read it elsewhere - http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4976478/Girl-17-sexually-assaulted-THREE-times-hour.html

Police are hunting suspects after a 17-year-old girl was sexually assaulted three times in the space of an hour by separate men.

Police believe the student was attacked on three separate occasions in the hour between 11.55pm on Friday, September 29 and 12.55am the next day.


I don't even want to read it again to copy and paste it in here. It's just awful.
 
This story is just tragic. I read it elsewhere - http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4976478/Girl-17-sexually-assaulted-THREE-times-hour.html



Police are hunting suspects after a 17-year-old girl was sexually assaulted three times in the space of an hour by separate men.

Police believe the student was attacked on three separate occasions in the hour between 11.55pm on Friday, September 29 and 12.55am the next day.


I don't even want to read it again to copy and paste it in here. It's just awful.

Scourge to society. It's a disgrace that anyone would think integration has both worked and is a good idea moving forward. The elephant in the room is obvious and until we deal either it we are not going to be safe.
 
still waiting

Your request merits more time than I have to give right now—especially realizing that you're not going to actually read the enlightening Jacobin issue to which I'd otherwise link you as shorthand.

Suffice it to say: (a) Chavez began as an incrementalist, and abruptly changed courses, destabilizing his own plan, with a fallout that's still being felt; (b) when the abrupt change of course ran aground, he dictatorially defaulted to his cult of personality, which is always a bad thing (you'll recall I've always said, for instance, Sanders is an avenue, not an end); (c) it's not easy, even in the best of circumstances—say, Scandinavia—to implement socialist reforms of government, but it's downright difficult-as-hell to do so going-alone, in Latin America, with the capitalist specter of the US lording over and actively working to effect your demise; (d) tying all three of these lines together, Chavez ultimately failed to tie a lot of threads together that would have secured more stability for his ostensible cause.

In short: failures in Venezuela are specific to Venezuela, and don't fall purely at the feet of socialism qua ideology. Just like any of the numerous failures of capitalist-embracing nation-state economies don't fall purely at the feet of capitalism qua ideology.
 
Back
Top