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-   -   North Korea ends peace pacts with South (https://www.revscene.net/forums/681427-north-korea-ends-peace-pacts-south.html)

hotshot1 03-08-2013 06:25 AM

...Is this real life?

Hahaha what a crazy asshole, his people are starving to death and he wants war... actually that kinda makes sense to me.

And it's hilarious that they call themselves the Democratic People's Republic of Korea - their whole history sounds like someone tried to make the most ridiculous movie script kinda like the book 1984, except this is real.

Razor Ramon HG 03-08-2013 06:42 AM

There's really no need for concern, and I highly doubt that if North Korea really wanted to invade the South, that they would publicize everything. No one here in Korea even gives a shit.

My buddy was talking about if a war does break out, he has the role of a secretary. Apparently he just sits in a room typing up shit, and if the North invades the building, he has a handgun to shoot himself with (or his buddies around him that don't suicide). Oodly enough, we were both laughing about it.

And then you also have to take into account Kim Jong-un. He probably lives like a King eating what he wants, fucking women all day (North Korean women are actually more beautiful than the South's), and chilling with Dennis Rodman. There's no reason for him to get involved in some bullshit war he know he's going to lose, and get blown to pieces.

Mind the Gap Between Rhetoric and Reality | Nautilus Institute for Security and Sustainability

Interesting read above. No Coles notes. If you can't bother to read that, go fuck yourself.

CharlesInCharge 03-08-2013 10:41 AM

Member ZenOps from the Alberta Beyond.ca forums states some beautiful views on this subject... here is one.

Spoiler!

dinamix 03-08-2013 11:11 AM

This is just another reason to jack up the price of oil.
Posted via RS Mobile

GabAlmighty 03-08-2013 11:57 AM

Yeepie!

Yodamaster 03-08-2013 11:52 PM

http://imgur.com/tCp90.gif

Drow 03-09-2013 04:19 PM

https://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphot...37020957_n.jpg

Culverin 03-09-2013 06:57 PM

From the National Post

http://nationalpostnews.files.wordpr...hkorea1200.jpg

They seem to have far more reach with their arsenal than I had previously thought.

noventa 03-09-2013 07:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Razor Ramon HG (Post 8179487)
There's really no need for concern, and I highly doubt that if North Korea really wanted to invade the South, that they would publicize everything. No one here in Korea even gives a shit.

My buddy was talking about if a war does break out, he has the role of a secretary. Apparently he just sits in a room typing up shit, and if the North invades the building, he has a handgun to shoot himself with (or his buddies around him that don't suicide). Oodly enough, we were both laughing about it.

And then you also have to take into account Kim Jong-un. He probably lives like a King eating what he wants, fucking women all day (North Korean women are actually more beautiful than the South's), and chilling with Dennis Rodman. There's no reason for him to get involved in some bullshit war he know he's going to lose, and get blown to pieces.

Mind the Gap Between Rhetoric and Reality | Nautilus Institute for Security and Sustainability

Interesting read above. No Coles notes. If you can't bother to read that, go fuck yourself.

right.... there goes your credibility

AzNightmare 03-10-2013 12:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Culverin (Post 8180672)
From the National Post



They seem to have far more reach with their arsenal than I had previously thought.

But besides their smallest missile...
They don't really have any accuracy with any of the farther ranged ones.

Razor Ramon HG 03-10-2013 01:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by noventa (Post 8180712)
right.... there goes your credibility

Sorry, I forgot to add naturally in there.

As hard as it is to believe, yes, North Korean women are naturally more beautiful than the South. Many people here in South Korea think that way.

In any case, tomorrow will be an interesting day (Monday the 11th). The US and SK are conducting military drills together, which the NK are denouncing as a threat.

http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/nati...02600315F.HTML

inv4zn 03-10-2013 03:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Razor Ramon HG (Post 8180918)
Sorry, I forgot to add naturally in there.

As hard as it is to believe, yes, North Korean women are naturally more beautiful than the South. Many people here in South Korea think that way.

In any case, tomorrow will be an interesting day (Monday the 11th). The US and SK are conducting military drills together, which the NK are denouncing as a threat.

N. Korea threatens all-out war ahead of S. Korea-U.S. military drill | YONHAP NEWS

Not entirely sure what your basing your opinion on, but you can't really come across many North Korean women in a lifetime.

All the pretty ones are sent to the government's "happy squad" (read: Dear Leader's whores) - although you're right that a large percentage of South Korean women are...unnaturally pretty.

Razor Ramon HG 03-10-2013 03:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by inv4zn (Post 8180929)
Not entirely sure what your basing your opinion on, but you can't really come across many North Korean women in a lifetime.

All the pretty ones are sent to the government's "happy squad" (read: Dear Leader's whores) - although you're right that a large percentage of South Korean women are...unnaturally pretty.

My original statement was based on what the majority of people in South Korea believe. It's not so much an opinion as it is considered a common fact here in Korea, even in the media.

Graeme S 03-10-2013 03:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Razor Ramon HG (Post 8180937)
My original statement was based on what the majority of people in South Korea believe.

I've taught Koreans for nearly seven years now. I have yet to meet the views you describe, B-dawg.

Razor Ramon HG 03-10-2013 03:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Graeme S (Post 8180938)
I've taught Koreans for nearly seven years now. I have yet to meet the views you describe, B-dawg.

Interesting.

I was talking about the whole NK/SK situation with my friend, and we ended up on the conversation of North Korean women. He said that amongst South Koreans, there's sort of this idea that the women in the North were much better looking.

Then I asked a few other guy friends, and they thought the same thing. I never asked a woman though.

Graeme S 03-10-2013 03:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Razor Ramon HG (Post 8180944)
Interesting.

I was talking about the whole NK/SK situation with my friend, and we ended up on the conversation of North Korean women. He said that amongst South Koreans, there's sort of this idea that the women in the North were much better looking.

Then I asked a few other guy friends, and they thought the same thing. I never asked a woman though.

Always keep in mind that the section of people that you or I would meet is the tiniest of the tiny of the miniscule.

Talk to a cab driver, a convenience store worker, a restaurant server...and you'll get a completely different answer than the people we'd meet that can speak English and have an international mindset.

inv4zn 03-10-2013 03:47 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Razor Ramon HG (Post 8180944)
Interesting.

I was talking about the whole NK/SK situation with my friend, and we ended up on the conversation of North Korean women. He said that amongst South Koreans, there's sort of this idea that the women in the North were much better looking.

Then I asked a few other guy friends, and they thought the same thing. I never asked a woman though.

What you've heard may be stemming from an old(ish) Korean saying...남남북녀 (Nam nam buk nyuh), literally translated to South Man North Woman...essentially meaning South men are better looking, as are North women.

It stems from older Korean culture, much before the split, saying women from northern parts are prettier as they have fairer skin. The standard for good looking men was ruggedness and bronzed/tanned skin, from the south. It has nothing to do with North and South Korea, and all to do with geographical climates and what the standard of beauty was back then. Such standards change over time - the reason the Kim's of the north are all fat is because in North Korea, obesity is a symbol for wealth and power. This used to be so in South Korea in the 70's - obviously not so anymore.

Anyway, the notion that North Korean women are prettier is in no way factual, and even much less applicable these days.

HonestTea 03-10-2013 03:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by inv4zn (Post 8180929)
Not entirely sure what your basing your opinion on, but you can't really come across many North Korean women in a lifetime.

All the pretty ones are sent to the government's "happy squad" (read: Dear Leader's whores) - although you're right that a large percentage of South Korean women are...unnaturally pretty.

Really? Where can I find the article about that?

Razor Ramon HG 03-10-2013 04:05 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by inv4zn (Post 8180953)
What you've heard may be stemming from an old(ish) Korean saying...남남북녀

I think that's probably it. I was trying to think of how such a belief could still be around as like you said, not many people get to see NK women. I was actually surprised when my friend told me that.

It's interesting how the concept of beauty can change over time. Now it's all about having lighter toned skin.

AzNightmare 03-10-2013 04:06 AM

I think it's always a stupid statement to generalize a whole nation having more beautiful people.
It's not just this specific example, but I keep seeing statements like these online, especially threads with a gallery of girls.

People see 3 Spanish models posted. OK, SPAIN has all the pretty girls.
See 3 French models. OK! France has all the pretty girls.
etc.

:seriously: Not to even mention, "beauty" is subjective.

inv4zn 03-10-2013 10:05 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by HonestTea (Post 8180955)
Really? Where can I find the article about that?

Kippumjo - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

North Korea's Pleasure Squad - Marie Claire Magazine - Yahoo!7 Lifestyle

EmperorIS 03-10-2013 02:28 PM

http://i.imgur.com/lOp1Ism.jpg?1

The perfect day for North Korea to invade South Korea

Razor Ramon HG 03-10-2013 09:03 PM

The Key Resolve drills have started here as planned, and the South Korean military has begun preparing for any surprise attacks by the North. The sea border is being heavily monitored. The communication hotline between the two nations have also been severed.

On the news, elementary school students were told to stay at home just in-case something does happen.

Definitely a very interesting chain of events. But I cannot see anything really happening unless North Korea directly fires at Seoul.

North Korea has tried to assassinate the president of the South a handful of times in the past, and even then, nothing has really come out of it. One of the more recent events, the incident at Yeonpyeong also yielded no real military response from the South (aside from the initial counterattacks).

bbcbrbe 03-11-2013 09:05 PM

hope dennis rodman will be alright

Razor Ramon HG 03-30-2013 03:03 AM

Quote:

SEOUL, March 30 (Yonhap) -- North Korea said Saturday that inter-Korean relations have entered into a state of war and all cross-border issues will be dealt with in a wartime manner, the latest in a near-daily series of strident threats against the South in recent weeks.

The warning came a day after North Korean leader Kim Jong-un put strategic rocket units on standby, threatening to strike targets in South Korea, the U.S. mainland, and its military bases in Hawaii and Guam, in anger after nuclear-capable U.S. B-2 stealth bombers participated in joint military drills in the South.

"From this moment, the North-South relations will be put at the state of war, and all the issues arousing between the North and the South will be dealt with according to the wartime regulations," the North said in a special statement issued by the country's government, parties and other organizations, according to the Korean Central News Agency.

"The state of neither peace nor war has ended on the Korean Peninsula," it said.

The communist nation also said it will "immediately punish any slightest provocation hurting its dignity and sovereignty with resolute and merciless physical actions without any prior notice."

Pyongyang has sharply ratcheted up belligerent rhetoric in recent weeks with repeated war threats against the South in anger over joint military exercises between South Korea and the United States as well as a new U.N. Security Council resolution adopted for its third nuclear test.

In Saturday's statement, the North denounced the mobilization of the U.S stealth bombers for the exercise as "an unpardonable and heinous provocation, and an open challenge."

"If the U.S. and the South Korean puppet group perpetrate a military provocation for igniting a war against the DPRK (North Korea) in any area, including the five islands in the West Sea of Korea or in the area along the Military Demarcation Line, it will not be limited to a local war but develop into an all-out war, a nuclear war," the North said in the statement.

The South's defense ministry denounced the recent series of menacing rhetoric by the North as unacceptable threats that hurt peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula, and pledged to thoroughly punish Pyongyang in the event of provocations.

It also said this week's exercises involving stealth bombers were defensive in nature.

"Our military is maintaining full preparedness to leave no blind point in safeguarding the lives and safety of the people," the ministry said in a statement.

Despite harsh threats, the North is showing no unusual military moves, a military source said.

In Washington, the White House said it takes the North's warning seriously.

"We've seen reports of a new and unconstructive statement from North Korea," said Caitlin Hayden, spokeswoman for the National Security Council, according to AFP. "We take these threats seriously and remain in close contact with our South Korean allies."

Hayden said the North's threat follows a pattern of bellicose rhetoric and threats.

"We continue to take additional measures against the North Korean threat, including our plan to increase the U.S. ground-based interceptors and early warning and tracking radar," she said.

Despite Pyongyang's latest threat, border crossings by South Koreans to and from the joint industrial complex in the North Korean border city of Kaesong proceeded normally, beginning with 78 people entering the complex at 8:30 a.m, Seoul's unification ministry said.

The North notified the South of its approval of the border crossings via the park's management committee earlier in the day, the ministry said. On Saturday, a total of 241 South Koreans were scheduled to travel to the factory park, with 510 people set to be coming back, it said.

The complex, where 123 South Korean companies run factories with cheap North Korean labor, is a major source of hard currency for the impoverished communist nation.
(4th LD) N. Korea says inter-Korean relations enter into war phase | YONHAP NEWS

You can read the declaration here - Full war declaration statement from DPRK (via KCNA... | Reuters.com


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