Editorial: North Korea
May 14, 2019
Trump’s Visit Inflates North Korea’s Ego
The North Korean’s leader, whose name escapes me at this time, absolutely loved Trump’s Vietnamese Summit conference visit. Trump, who wanted a Nobel Peace Prize for the meeting, is not trusted by the United States military. He lacks the knowledge of some important information. The United States can see into the future, not for a few hours, but for weeks, in an extremely accurate manner.
North Korea’s leader is getting bolder, with a lot of missile tests, launching them further and further and threatening the United States, saying he’ll be able to have a nuclear strike on U.S. territory if he decides to do so.
The United States military is not impressed or intimidated. We would know weeks ahead of time when a missile would strike U.S. territory and do something catastrophic to stop it. The missile would be targeted by our own missile, striking it before it left the silo. Depending on how large the North Korean payload was, it could be the end of much of North Korea.
There are nine countries now with a nuclear capability if you include North Korea. The North Korean citizens are in a stranglehold from world sanctions against them. Their leader desperately wants to be regarded as a big man in the world. President Trump feeds this desire by saying they are friends.
I personally have no use for nuclear annihilation, and I curse the little man from North Korea.
Respectfully submitted,
David F. Jasper
PO Box 1016
Hollis, NH 03049
603-759-8848
Trump’s Visit Inflates North Korea’s Ego
The North Korean’s leader, whose name escapes me at this time, absolutely loved Trump’s Vietnamese Summit conference visit. Trump, who wanted a Nobel Peace Prize for the meeting, is not trusted by the United States military. He lacks the knowledge of some important information. The United States can see into the future, not for a few hours, but for weeks, in an extremely accurate manner.
North Korea’s leader is getting bolder, with a lot of missile tests, launching them further and further and threatening the United States, saying he’ll be able to have a nuclear strike on U.S. territory if he decides to do so.
The United States military is not impressed or intimidated. We would know weeks ahead of time when a missile would strike U.S. territory and do something catastrophic to stop it. The missile would be targeted by our own missile, striking it before it left the silo. Depending on how large the North Korean payload was, it could be the end of much of North Korea.
There are nine countries now with a nuclear capability if you include North Korea. The North Korean citizens are in a stranglehold from world sanctions against them. Their leader desperately wants to be regarded as a big man in the world. President Trump feeds this desire by saying they are friends.
I personally have no use for nuclear annihilation, and I curse the little man from North Korea.
Respectfully submitted,
David F. Jasper
PO Box 1016
Hollis, NH 03049
603-759-8848