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Horowitz: N. Korea To Implode In a Year(gone by next Xmas?)
Yonhap News ^
| Kim Dae-young
| 12/24/04
Posted on 12/24/2004 4:03:10 AM PST by TigerLikesRooster
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What is standing out in his speech is that he picked a deadline, the next Christmas, in 2005. Can we infer that operations are already in progress to meet this deadline? Next Christmas could be a special one.:)
To: TigerLikesRooster; AmericanInTokyo; OahuBreeze; yonif; risk; Steel Wolf; nuconvert; MizSterious; ...
To: TigerLikesRooster
He said, "The collapse of communist regimes is a historical inevitability.How the world changes, it wasnt that long ago that marxists and commies were saying the same thing about world socialism
3
posted on
12/24/2004 4:06:10 AM PST
by
cardinal4
(W's 3.5 million pop vote isnt a mandate, but algores .5 million is??)
To: cardinal4
Re #3
I noticed that, too. A final nail into the legacy of Karl Marx.:)
To: TigerLikesRooster
Is Michael Horowitz related to David???
Just curious.
5
posted on
12/24/2004 4:12:55 AM PST
by
ConservativeMan55
(DON'T FIRE UNTIL YOU SEE THE WHITES OF THE CURTAINS THEY ARE WEARING ON THEIR HEADS !)
To: cardinal4
They were "saying the same thing" about capitalism.
6
posted on
12/24/2004 4:13:50 AM PST
by
DB
(©)
To: TigerLikesRooster
This will be great news if it happens.
A real positive would be that another role model for outfits like the democrap party, the Michigan Department of Environmental (Stalinist) Quality, and the EPA may no longer exist. Of course, they'll still have cuba, canada, france and germany.
7
posted on
12/24/2004 4:14:12 AM PST
by
RushLake
(Permission from the UN...we don't need no stinking permission slip from the UN.)
To: ConservativeMan55
Re #5
I can't help you there.:) I don't know.
To: RushLake
Re #7
You aim high, don't you?:)
To: TigerLikesRooster
Where would Kim and his ilk go? Would they be exiled to China? Tried? If DPRK was to cave, would the Chinese move in?
10
posted on
12/24/2004 4:22:22 AM PST
by
cardinal4
(W's 3.5 million pop vote isnt a mandate, but algores .5 million is??)
To: cardinal4
Re #10
Kim Jong-il has a fortified bunker complex in N.E. N. Korea near Chinese border. He has many in the country. However, this one is the newest and probably the most secure. He could head there to stick it out if going gets tough. After that, I don't know.
China would most likely move in, the moment things would get out of hand in N. Korea.
To: TigerLikesRooster
Next Christmas could be a special one.:)
Just in time for the Team America sequel, as KJI croons "I'm so ronely I could cwy"
12
posted on
12/24/2004 4:27:58 AM PST
by
doosee
To: TigerLikesRooster
Thank you very much for translating and posting this.
13
posted on
12/24/2004 4:30:40 AM PST
by
jigsaw
(God Bless Our Troops.)
To: TigerLikesRooster
replacing the nkorean regime with 200,000 chinese troops ... i'm sure political prisoners feel better already
14
posted on
12/24/2004 4:32:58 AM PST
by
InvisibleChurch
(Good ol' Coney Island College. Go WhiteFish. / pay no attention to the primedial newscasts)
To: TigerLikesRooster
The prediction is bold but plausible. North Korea seems close to the brink.
The border with China has become increasingly porous due to a combination of border guard corruption and desperate poverty that has forced hundreds of thousands of North Koreans to seek food and work in China. A return flow of cell phones, radios, and DVDs has brought a view of the world outside and has given North Korea's elite an understanding of just how awful their country's ruling clique is. Massive, self-imposed famine could not do it, but South Korean soap operas and their incontestable visual proof of affluence to the south has destroyed the legitimacy of the North Korean regime.
Official US comments have been mild recently, as if we are waiting for the process of decay to come to fruition. Due to the security risks, an impromptu assassination and coup are as likely to succeed as a carefully planned effort. China, South Korea, and Japan all seem disinclined to bail out the regime with massive aid and political support, so it looks to be mostly a matter of time.
Odd, isn't it, that communist regimes all seem to have a natural life span of about fifty to seventy five years? Who knows, perhaps we will one day see the liberation of our college campuses.
To: cardinal4
Sort of like East and west germany, when the wall fell. East germany was an economic basket case. How much do you think it will cost either South korea or China to help put right north korea?
16
posted on
12/24/2004 4:47:24 AM PST
by
Joe Boucher
(politically correct? Ha.)
To: TigerLikesRooster
It could became an open air museum of the tragedy of communism (another one, perhaps the worst).
To: TigerLikesRooster
It could become an open air museum of the tragedy of communism (another one, perhaps the worst).
To: Rockingham
Re #15
Yeah, some day, all hard-core left-wing ex-hippie college professors will be overthrown and tried for crimes against Academia.:)
To: PhilDragoo; doosee
Phil here is your cue!:)
Just in time for the Team America sequel, as KJI croons "I'm so ronely I could cwy"!
20
posted on
12/24/2004 5:19:22 AM PST
by
Grampa Dave
(Rummy Phobia is the new mental disorder of the left. It is similiar to Hate GW Syndrome!)
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