Posted on 10/29/2016 6:40:04 AM PDT by bigtoona
I’m still waiting for the Yoga email dump....
Well said — as always.
South Korea’s government is illegal?
The entire Washington apparatus is criminal, corrupt and, therefore, illegal.
I wonder if that’s what the email scandal is being reported to distract us from?
Tunnels negate most or all of that. Did he talk about tunnels?
BTTT
The Dems have screwed with elections in: UK, Italy, Israel, Spain, and the Palestinian territories. We can now add SK to the list.
the entire world is a satanic bs shell game with no basis in reality except keeping the slaves in order..
Trying to find an octopus cartoon from the past that shows the Clinton Foundation’s tentacles around the world, but there are too many tentacles for those old cartoons!
Sorry about the formatting I will try to correct
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Preview before you hit send and then you can make your corrections.
Did who talk about tunnels?
I know the North Koreans had plans to build many tunnels under the DMZ to access South Korea. They failed on every one.
Your tour guide.
This is a couple of years old ...
Four tunnels from the North have been found in all, although none since 1990. The South Korean Defense Ministry still officially looks for them as it believes there may be 20 in all, but the budget is small and tunnel hunters believe it is merely a token effort.
http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/02/world/asia/north-korea-dmz-tunnels/
If you visit South Korea, you learn quite a bit about the North Korean continuing attempts to attack. Back in the 1970s (?) a North Korean defector claimed that 22 tunnels were being planned or built under the DMZ. A few tunnels were found, mostly by accident.
I took a tour of the DMZ, including the Joint Security Area (JSA). During the JSA visit, tourists are brought to within yards of the border between the Koreas. In fact, tourists are taken inside a UN building, which straddles the border. I have a picture of myself standing next to a South Korean guard in front of the door that opens out into North Korea, on the North Korean side of the border. For me, this is the only legal way I could ever visit North Korea (not that I want to visit); I was maybe 10 feet across the border.
In another area of the DMZ, you are further from the border, but you can still look across into a North Korean city from the observation deck. The North Koreans installed a huge radio antenna to block the South Korean transmissions of Kpop (Korean pop music, pronounced kay-pop) and propaganda. You can climb down to walk about 250 meters into tunnel #3, where you can see two of the three doors the South Koreans installed to block the tunnel.
You cannot take pictures within the JSA, except when you are looking at the North Korean side of the border. So I have pictures of the three UN buildings that straddle the border, and of the big grey North Korean building on the other side. A single guard was standing on the porch in front of the grey building (but I do not think he was the only North Korean guard). Devices which I suspect are cameras are mounted on the grey building.
You also cannot take pictures of the tunnel area. You also have to wear a hard hat while there.
The other stop on the DMZ tour was the reunification train station, where they featured pictures of GW Bush and the South Korean president at the time. GW Bush was trying to help with the reunification, so they honored him. After Kim Il-sung died and his even more lunatic son took over, the relations between the Koreas deteriorated and the reunification never took place.
One of my tour guides said that Koreans are lukewarm about reunification. They saw how Germany handled it, and realize that it may be rocky. Right now, South Koreans are not allowed to visit North Korea because North Koreans murdered a visitor, claiming that she had entered a restricted area (she was walking on a beach). North Koreans, of course, have never been allowed to visit the south.
Before you go anywhere near the border, you must sign a waiver, stating that you understand there is some risk in going close to the border. North Koreans attack several times a year (although the attacks have been dropping in frequency over the last decade). They have murdered workers near the UN buildings in a surprise attack.
Going to Korea is really a sobering experience. I do not think many Americans live in fear that a close neighbor is unpredictable and trigger happy and may decide to lob a nuke at a major city at any time. South Koreans live with that fear every day. North Korea’s most recent nuclear bomb test took place during my visit.
I found these try articles worth reading on this situation.
http://tinyurl.com/zgsgkaf
http://tinyurl.com/hj758fk
http://tinyurl.com/zgkuplp
I meant these three articles.
They warmed up In Arkansas.
If you wanted to do business with the State you had to use the once reputable Rose Law Firm.
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