Some people were criticizing the police for arresting people from a supposed peaceful protest. The minute they enter private property it is no longer a peaceful protest. Wouldn’t people want the police to remove protesters if they showed up inside their house, it is the same with a shopping mall.
blueberry muffin mix
6 years ago
Saw a link off the Drudge Report about how nork orphans try to survive. It brought up the autopsies of the dead sub crew and commandos all had worms, too. I either missed that or it was not in the reports I read.
When I see the ungrateful, hectoring, intersectional pawns of socialism attacking the United States as being some sort of terrible place, I want to dropthem off in Mali, Bangladesh, or North Korea. Let them survive for six months before they can come back.
In fact, 99.44 percent of the people who complain about the US have never even been to Mexico. They do not consider why people flee other places to come to America.
This holiday season, let us find people who need our help, not just the noisy ones.
Images taken Wednesday appear to show North Korean soldiers refortifying and digging trenches where a defector escaped last week across the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) border to South Korea.
The NorKs dug trenches, and planted at least two trees to keep anyone else from getting the idea of running across the Z.
I noticed that for this clearly important mission, they didn’t is a backhoe or anything like that, just shovels and buckets and hatred of America.
I think Fatty’s bluff has been called. Let’s see what happens next.
blueberry muffin mix
6 years ago
Countries that are such a Worker’s Paradise that they kill you if you try to leave… 🙄
Here is an interesting article published that shows how Native Americans are not taking a knee during the national anthem:
As fierce debate rages about “taking a knee” during the national anthem to protest social injustice, Native Americans have a unique take on the issue as the ethnic group with the highest military-service rate, and an enduring regard for warriors.
Supporters of the movement say it’s not intended as a criticism of the military. But such a protest would be unthinkable for many at tribal events because the flag and veterans are so deeply intertwined – and revered.
I keep seeing this story published all over the web and I wonder what this homeless guy’s military service back story is?:
A homeless veteran, who received a reward he never expected after he spent his last $20 to help a stranded woman buy gas, now says he wants to touch other people’s lives the way his was touched. (……)
McClure, 27, has raised more than $360,000 for Bobbitt after he helped her buy gas when her car broke down on the I-95 exit ramp near Philadelphia.
Bobbitt, 34, said he’s been “overwhelmed” by people’s generosity.
“I just got her gas to help her get back on her way. I didn’t think anything about it. I wasn’t expecting anything in return,” he told “Good Morning America.” “That’s how I got the money to start with — from other people. [I had to] return the favor. I can’t constantly take and not give back.”
According to the article he says he was an ammunition technician in the Marine Corps. I have seen nothing to verify his military service backstory yet. With all the fakes we have seen over the years I am always skeptical of stories like this without verification.
blueberry muffin mix
6 years ago
He is probably more truthful than certain members of Congress whose biographies need to be updated to show they really were not in Vietnam…
MTB Rider said: “shovels and buckets and hatred of America.”
It’s a balanced part of every North Korean breakfast! 😛
Smokes at Work
6 years ago
“What do you think of BRAC?”
I think it highlights how government itself has become an entitlement. Even if the bases close many of them have huge swathes of land that would likely end up under BLM control who is just as wasteful and would sit on it for another eternity.
Tbonetylr_lives
6 years ago
When I tried to open Setnaffa’s link using Edge, I got this:
“You’ve stumbled upon some vintage web tech
This website runs on older technology and will only work in Internet Explorer.”
LOL
blueberry muffin mix
6 years ago
Using Edge is as bad as using IE. LOL
Why not go to Ninite.com and download Firefox or Chrome without the adware?
Having read various articles and comments on the recent North Korean defector’s parasite infection, I just have to weigh in. . .
Right from the onset of the Park Chung Hee coup d’ etat’s Revolutionary Council, a number of nationwide health programs were established to combat the most basic needs Koreans. One of these addressed the rampant parasites” From treatment of human waste before agricultural use to daily pills for school children dispensed at the local schools to entertainment at the five day markets where adults got the medication as well as a show. This lasted throughout the 1960s. When I was stationed there from 1972-78, the problem was lice: you could see them jumping around on Koreans’ heads, and eventually anyone who stayed in the ville would have to go to the dispensary for the “blue goo” to get rid of them!
Maybe the media needs to start attending the Army’s SHARP classes.
blueberry muffin mix
6 years ago
I’m pretty certain no one ever got fired for SH while wearing a reflective belt…
Andy
6 years ago
Seen two GIs involved in a collision at a residential intersection outside the Hump. (Thankfully, no injuries). The one GI said that he had the right of way since he had no stop sign. The other said, “There aren’t any stop signs in this entire neighborhood”, lol.
There have been six accidents at this corner- that I know of. Seems the police should at least put up mirrors. Less than a block away, an intersection has mirrors and CCTV cameras mounted on a pole to record accidents. The pole also has a button on it to push to call police. I think buying a bunch of stop signs to place throughout the neighborhood would of been more cost effective.
J6Junkie
6 years ago
I bet Pyeongtaek is too cheap to install a traffic light there. Happens everywhere with those stupid amber flashers that do nothing to stop people from turning, speed, etc.
J6Junkie
6 years ago
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/nation/2017/12/356_240225.html
The NIS recently unveiled its tentative new name in Korean. And it has instantly drawn jeers and ridicule, particularly among English-savvy people, because of its English abbreviation: ISIS.
Here, the ISIS refers to International Security Intelligence Service (ISIS). And there is no doubt the abbreviation reminds many of the infamous terrorist group Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, which is widely called ISIS.
Good job Korean government. *claps
ChickenHead
6 years ago
“Here, the ISIS refers to International Security Intelligence Service (ISIS).”
What about Security Intelligence Service International (SISI)?
Wait. In English, that is sissy.
Well… back to the drawingboard, Mr. Kim.
How about South Korean Agency of National Counterintelligence (SKANC)?
Peninsula Unified Security Service Institute (PUSSI)?
Agency of National Intelligence Service (ANIS)?
Foreign Unified Korean Assisted Security Service (FUKASS)?
Department of Global South Korean Anti-Terror (DOGSKAT)?
This case has been followed closely here at ROK Drop, and a verdict and sentence has been handed down:
TOKYO (AP) — A Japanese court on Friday convicted a U.S. military contractor of murder and rape charges in the death of an Okinawa woman and sentenced him to life in prison.
The Naha District Court also found Kenneth Shinzato, a former Marine, guilty of abandoning the victim’s body, court officials said. The 20-year-old woman was found in the forest in May, three weeks after she disappeared while taking a walk.
Black Friday is crazy enough as it is, but throwing in Black Lives Matter protesters only further makes it a volatile situation:
http://abcnews.go.com/US/arrested-black-friday-mall-protest-missouri-report/story?id=51367602
Some people were criticizing the police for arresting people from a supposed peaceful protest. The minute they enter private property it is no longer a peaceful protest. Wouldn’t people want the police to remove protesters if they showed up inside their house, it is the same with a shopping mall.
Saw a link off the Drudge Report about how nork orphans try to survive. It brought up the autopsies of the dead sub crew and commandos all had worms, too. I either missed that or it was not in the reports I read.
When I see the ungrateful, hectoring, intersectional pawns of socialism attacking the United States as being some sort of terrible place, I want to dropthem off in Mali, Bangladesh, or North Korea. Let them survive for six months before they can come back.
In fact, 99.44 percent of the people who complain about the US have never even been to Mexico. They do not consider why people flee other places to come to America.
This holiday season, let us find people who need our help, not just the noisy ones.
Hear, hear, Blueberry!!!
And make sure this never happens again!
http://abcnews.go.com/International/north-korea-digs-trenches-defector-crossed-dmz-border/story?id=51361113
Images taken Wednesday appear to show North Korean soldiers refortifying and digging trenches where a defector escaped last week across the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) border to South Korea.
The NorKs dug trenches, and planted at least two trees to keep anyone else from getting the idea of running across the Z.
I noticed that for this clearly important mission, they didn’t is a backhoe or anything like that, just shovels and buckets and hatred of America.
I think Fatty’s bluff has been called. Let’s see what happens next.
Countries that are such a Worker’s Paradise that they kill you if you try to leave… 🙄
Here is an interesting article published that shows how Native Americans are not taking a knee during the national anthem:
I keep seeing this story published all over the web and I wonder what this homeless guy’s military service back story is?:
According to the article he says he was an ammunition technician in the Marine Corps. I have seen nothing to verify his military service backstory yet. With all the fakes we have seen over the years I am always skeptical of stories like this without verification.
He is probably more truthful than certain members of Congress whose biographies need to be updated to show they really were not in Vietnam…
What do you think of BRAC?
http://www.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20171126000258
MTB Rider said: “shovels and buckets and hatred of America.”
It’s a balanced part of every North Korean breakfast! 😛
“What do you think of BRAC?”
I think it highlights how government itself has become an entitlement. Even if the bases close many of them have huge swathes of land that would likely end up under BLM control who is just as wasteful and would sit on it for another eternity.
When I tried to open Setnaffa’s link using Edge, I got this:
“You’ve stumbled upon some vintage web tech
This website runs on older technology and will only work in Internet Explorer.”
LOL
Using Edge is as bad as using IE. LOL
Why not go to Ninite.com and download Firefox or Chrome without the adware?
Having read various articles and comments on the recent North Korean defector’s parasite infection, I just have to weigh in. . .
Right from the onset of the Park Chung Hee coup d’ etat’s Revolutionary Council, a number of nationwide health programs were established to combat the most basic needs Koreans. One of these addressed the rampant parasites” From treatment of human waste before agricultural use to daily pills for school children dispensed at the local schools to entertainment at the five day markets where adults got the medication as well as a show. This lasted throughout the 1960s. When I was stationed there from 1972-78, the problem was lice: you could see them jumping around on Koreans’ heads, and eventually anyone who stayed in the ville would have to go to the dispensary for the “blue goo” to get rid of them!
I wonder who the next media big name will be that gets fired ❓
https://www.yahoo.com/news/nbc-fires-matt-lauer-inappropriate-sexual-behavior-122224535.html
Maybe the media needs to start attending the Army’s SHARP classes.
I’m pretty certain no one ever got fired for SH while wearing a reflective belt…
Seen two GIs involved in a collision at a residential intersection outside the Hump. (Thankfully, no injuries). The one GI said that he had the right of way since he had no stop sign. The other said, “There aren’t any stop signs in this entire neighborhood”, lol.
There have been six accidents at this corner- that I know of. Seems the police should at least put up mirrors. Less than a block away, an intersection has mirrors and CCTV cameras mounted on a pole to record accidents. The pole also has a button on it to push to call police. I think buying a bunch of stop signs to place throughout the neighborhood would of been more cost effective.
I bet Pyeongtaek is too cheap to install a traffic light there. Happens everywhere with those stupid amber flashers that do nothing to stop people from turning, speed, etc.
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/nation/2017/12/356_240225.html
The NIS recently unveiled its tentative new name in Korean. And it has instantly drawn jeers and ridicule, particularly among English-savvy people, because of its English abbreviation: ISIS.
Here, the ISIS refers to International Security Intelligence Service (ISIS). And there is no doubt the abbreviation reminds many of the infamous terrorist group Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, which is widely called ISIS.
Good job Korean government. *claps
“Here, the ISIS refers to International Security Intelligence Service (ISIS).”
What about Security Intelligence Service International (SISI)?
Wait. In English, that is sissy.
Well… back to the drawingboard, Mr. Kim.
How about South Korean Agency of National Counterintelligence (SKANC)?
Peninsula Unified Security Service Institute (PUSSI)?
Agency of National Intelligence Service (ANIS)?
Foreign Unified Korean Assisted Security Service (FUKASS)?
Department of Global South Korean Anti-Terror (DOGSKAT)?
Life!
https://www.yahoo.com/news/ex-us-marine-gets-life-murder-rape-okinawa-074716233.html
This case has been followed closely here at ROK Drop, and a verdict and sentence has been handed down:
TOKYO (AP) — A Japanese court on Friday convicted a U.S. military contractor of murder and rape charges in the death of an Okinawa woman and sentenced him to life in prison.
The Naha District Court also found Kenneth Shinzato, a former Marine, guilty of abandoning the victim’s body, court officials said. The 20-year-old woman was found in the forest in May, three weeks after she disappeared while taking a walk.
More at the link.
~Scoops McGee