Saturday, August 20, 2005

Bad Equation = 3

August 17 2005, August 18 2005, and NOW...

Pyongyang, August 19, 2005 (KCNA) -- Rallies of workers, peasants, women, youth and other people were reportedly held at Kyunghee University in Seoul in the early morning of August 15. The south Korean Confederation of Trade Unions and the south Korean National Federation of Peasants Associations called a meeting under the subject Pro-reunification rally of workers and peasants across south Korea for the withdrawal of the U.S. troops and the national cooperation. A declaration for national reunification was read out at the meeting. The declaration stated that workers and peasants will join efforts to conduct an anti-U.S., anti-war peace movement including the struggle against the U.S. war moves and the expansion of its military base in Phyongthaek

Three fucking times in three days!
Are you getting the feeling that the K.C.N.A is pushing the "U.S military withdrawal = Korean Reunification" equation... a little hard?
I can't imagine how much angst the average North Korean has towards the United States of America.
They are ALL feed shit like this non-stop, obviously.

and for the pullout of the U.S. forces, and jointly struggle against the globalization of neo-liberalism. What's this supposed to mean?

I guess Kim Jong Il feels he is FAR to the Right of George W. Bush.
That, or his foreign reports are 6 years old.

3 Comments:

Blogger Mark Richard Francis said...

See? I showed up...

Neo-liberalism is the return to classical libetarianism, missing, however, classical libertarianism's disdain for foreign intervention. Domestically, pro-free market, pro-privacy; foreign policy is more Burkean, which is what Kim Jong Il is ranting against.

Bush, however, isn't anything near a neo-liberal. Some people within his government are, though, such as the famous 'neocons.'

7:44 AM  
Blogger KnightofGoodMrIronMan said...

Well, I think calling Bush a NeoCon would be more accurate. However, Kim could be correct, for once. Neo-liberalism could be a preferable choice of word for George W. Bush's foreign policy...

"Bush, however, isn't anything near a neo-liberal."

I digress.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neoliberalism

10:58 AM  
Blogger KnightofGoodMrIronMan said...

Yea, we were Right, Kim was wrong(also as usual).
George W. Bush is NOT Neoliberalistic.
George W. Bush is NeoConservative.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neoconservatism_in_the_United_States

Thanks for visiting Mark(The Spot).

11:07 AM  

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