Debate, and discuss, just dont Bore me.
Published on October 9, 2006 By Dr Guy In Politics

Yep!  Sunday proved that adage!  North Korea, and Kim Jung Mentally Il, detonated a nuke.  About the size of the Hiroshima bomb.  And the reaction?  Expected.  Those who condemned Bush for Iraq, a nation that had a nuclear program by EVERY acount just a few years before the invasion, now are condemning Bush for not invading, or at least Nuking North Korea.

Bush's Crime?  He tried Diplomacy, not appeasement (Clinton tried the latter and that is why NK was in the position to test a nuke, but I digress).  And for his efforts in insisting upon multilateral talks, and not uni-lateral talks?  He did wrong.  Yep!  They quote a traitor to America on what he MIGHT have done (but of course he never set forth the steps to do anything), and they point to Clinton and Madam Not-so-Bright as the real course to follow (omitting the fact that it was their policies that advanced the NK Nuclear program).

So out of one side of their mouth, they condemn the 'unilateral' invasion of Iraq (unilateral as in 40 nations, but again I digress), and then out of the other condemn the Multilateral talks that Bush insisted upon.

Bush haters are so easy to spot.  Just check for the forked tongue, or the both sides of the mouth talking.  They cant help but contradict themselves.  Hatred is not logical, and neither are they.


Comments (Page 5)
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on Oct 13, 2006
I documented my sources.


point out one documented anything in your original article.

linking to my article after the fact (and despite the fact nothing in it supported any of your claims) don't count.
on Oct 13, 2006

seeing as how there's no real evidence nk currently has any nuclear bombs--or for the 12 seemingly claimed by these two reknowned scientists in 2000, much less 72 they projected by this year--perhaps they weren't as expert as portrayed by your fair n balanced source? on top of which, they're a bit vague as to how many bombs nk would be cranking out in 2010. 60? 65? 100? all of the above?

65 is between 60 and 100, and so is their forecast.  Do you honestly think we know every pimple on Kim Jung Il's butt?  No, but we can know their progress and the scientist were dead on.  Where as the only excuse, lame as it is, is that they had no Bombs in 2000.  Well, sir, we did not have any bombs in 1941 either.  But are you going to deny there was no Manhattan project then?  That is what you are arguing.

And frankly, you can denounce the sources all you want.  But you cannot refute them, nor have you tried.  At least in that you are honest.

And finally, I never said unbiased.  But even the Washington post sometimes (very few) prints bad stories about democrats.  Have I told you that you cannot use it as a source just because it thinks Mao was too conservative?

on Oct 13, 2006

whatcha mean 'we'?

it was the replacement that insisted on developing new nuclear weapons and made a point of claiming our right to do so to the point of opting outta non-proliferation treaties.

I say we as in Americans.  YOu can take the next plane abroad if you dont like being called one.

And no, America has not opted out of the Non-proliferation treaty.  I understsand your desire for empty inflamatory rhetoric, but that is a bit extreme even for you.

on Oct 13, 2006

point out one documented anything in your original article.

linking to my article after the fact (and despite the fact nothing in it supported any of your claims) don't count.

I see, so I cannot editorialize (which this clearly was) without your approval or supporting links.  I provided links after that to other points made in the comments, and you just want to ignore them.  Which I do find a liberal trait.  Ignore anything that does not agree with your opinions.  And your article was an example of my point (not your editorial part of it, the debate you quoted).  I TRUSTED that you had quoted it correctly.  Was my trust mis-placed?

on Oct 13, 2006
I provided links after that to other points made in the comments, and you just want to ignore them


one need only wander thru the entire thread to see you referred to an an external source in your comment 38, but didn't provide a link.

the sole external source to which you linked (other than my article) will be found in your comment 52 with an additional excerpt from the same article in your comment 53.

so, no. you did not provide documentation to support your assertions or opinions.


i'm still unsure why you woulda linked to my article in response to someone asking:

Could you provide some links to articles or sources about these people "condemning Bush for not invading, or at least Nuking North Korea."?

Since you are new, I will provide one on JU. https://forums.joeuser.com/?forumid=3&aid=132921#1027271


nothing there condemned bush for not invading or nuking north korea.

And your article was an example of my point (not your editorial part of it, the debate you quoted). I TRUSTED that you had quoted it correctly.


please feel free to point out where either of the candidates condemned anyone for not invading or not nuking north korea. or where i incorrectly pasted that portion of the transcript i posted.
on Oct 13, 2006
Well, sir, we did not have any bombs in 1941 either


exactly. anyone who claimed we possessed an atomic bomb in 1941 would be totally incorrect. whether we had the manhattan project or not in 1941 is irrelevant. it wasn't a bomb. there is still--at this moment--very little evidence nk has a bomb.

you can denounce the sources all you want. But you cannot refute them,


i didn't denounce your source (cnsnews.com). i referred to it as a fair n balanced source. if you suspect otherwise, why did you draw on it?

i certainly can--and did--refute those it claimed to be experts. for two reasons:

a. if north korea was producing 12 bombs a year since 2000, they would currently have 72 bombs. there's no evidence to support that supposition and their credibility suffers for it. as does their math. (if country a produces 12 bombs a year for 10 years, will it have produced 60? 65? 100? 120+? )

b. as i've already pointed out, the light water reactors which woulda been installed to replace nk's existing reactor would have produced only minimal amounts of plutonium--as i explained earlier--whereas nk's existing plant is exactly the type of reactor one would choose to for that purpose.

they're either quacks or liars. you choose.
on Oct 14, 2006
Good lord, do you really think that lil kim gives a damn about non-proliferation treaties? When you say "in check" you really mean "bribed until sated". The poorer his nations gets, the more dangerous he is. It has little to do with Iraq or our nuclear situation.

I mean, you'd have to be insane to think that his having a nuclear weapon would somehow prevent us from using nukes on him. We could turn Asia into a wasteland from offshore subs and he'd not have time to shoot back. Instead, lil kim claims it is invasion he's preventing.

Nukes wouldn't be necessary to prevent an invasion, and he knows it. The millions of brainwashed Koreans already do that nicely. So in the end there's nothing left except nuclear weapons as leverage for money; a simple stick-up. Gimme the money or else.

So, we can placate him, and the next midget, and the next, or we can not. DOn't for a moment though pretend that their ambitions are in "in check", hardly. We've just met their current demands. They'll need to eat next month, too.

If you believe that North Korea was just after electricity, you're beyond reason. If you believe that paying people like him off will take care of the problem, you overestimate his ability to live on an allowance.
on Oct 14, 2006
When you say "in check" you really mean "bribed until sated".


no. what i really mean is 'no evidence of plutonium production for about 8 years and international monitoring' as opposed to the last four years in which k-to-the-j-to-the-il been prorifelating rong time.

The poorer his nations gets, the more dangerous he is.


true. more dangerous to china and south korea especially. that sorta danger is completely overshadowed by how dangerous he becomes to the entire world--but us in particular--as he acquires more plutonium.

mean, you'd have to be insane to think that his having a nuclear weapon would somehow prevent us from using nukes on him. We could turn Asia into a wasteland from offshore subs and he'd not have time to shoot back.


i've never claimed to be sane, but that's a whole other issue. what's really crazy is to think in terms of subs and missiles and nuke strikes anywhere (but especially in asia; even if there was no retaliation, it's sorta like pissing fallout into the wind no?) rather than the likelihood of nukes hand-delivered by third-party agencies.

If you believe that North Korea was just after electricity, you're beyond reason. If you believe that paying people like him off will take care of the problem, you overestimate his ability to live on an allowance


i don't subscribe to either of those. i will, however, grant you considerably more credit than you do me in that you'll have to convince me you truly believe this administration has done anything but excaberate the situation.
on Oct 14, 2006
Why cant they have it? What is the reasoning behind them not having it, others do why not them? If they had it would they actually use it?


Someone help me with this. I'm not pointing you out jennifer, I've seen this before in other articles and comments.

Where does this attitude come from?

I'll use the analogy of gun control. Republicans think everyone has the right to bear arms; everyone except dangerous people, criminals, the mentally unbalanced, etc., while Democrats believe no one should have firearms and they should all be done away with. Or, at the very least, limit guns only to Law Enforcement .. and Military. Ok, I'm not sure about the Military, but that's another point.

I'll qualify this as a general statement as I realize there are variants on both sides, but these do seem to be the major positions.

So where does letting everyone (including criminals, madmen, and dangerous dictators) have weapons come from?
on Oct 14, 2006
provided links after that to other points made in the comments, and you just want to ignore them


one need only wander thru the entire thread to see you referred to an an external source in your comment 38, but didn't provide a link.


Guess again and "re-check" reply number 52.
on Oct 14, 2006
. if north korea was producing 12 bombs a year since 2000, they would currently have 72 bombs. there's no evidence to support that supposition and their credibility suffers for it. as does their math. (if country a produces 12 bombs a year for 10 years, will it have produced 60? 65? 100? 120+? )


There is no evidence to the contrary either, now is there?
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