Sorry she didn't say that. https://www.snopes.com/maxine-waters-north-korea/ But she said lots of other crazy shiat.
Actually I know that, Silly Goose. It is what is called "satire." Just as when there were reports that saying that she said Putin had invaded "Korea." instead of Crimea. Wait, nevermind, she did actually say that.
Russian intellegence officer: “Our evesdropping devices have picked up a conversation that the U.S. is getting ready to launch”. Putin: “Tell me exactly what was said and who said it”. Intelligence officer: “Donald Trump said he is going to launch in 5 minutes.” Putin: “This can mean only one thing”. “We must take the first strike advantage from them”. “Launch a full nuclear strike on the United States and their allies”. Donald Trump: “Melania, I’m starving!”. “You look fine, are we going to lunch or not?” And so the humans go back to the stone age.
Years of time spent, risking war,bankrupting the country,starving their people etc to get nukes and they are just going to give them to Donald Trump? Ok
Without doubt Trump has given Rocket Man some messages backchannel that he has not necessarily shared with you.
There is nothing Trump can give Rocket Man that will make him give up his nukes because nothing is more important to him than his regimes survival.Nothing protects The Kim regime better than nuclear weapons. Kim is simply seeing if he can play Dotard for some free shit.
He has many ways of becoming and remaining a problem. He may stand down a little on the nuke development to get the free stuff. Nothing new there. But he is also becoming a puppet state of Iran and Russia. That is one of the downsides to sanctions from both the west and a little bit from China, he is getting more and more stuff from Iran and Russia. He could easily agree to slow walk some nuke stuff and get the American goodies but also knowing that he is upping his military posture by continuing to bring Russian and Iranian weaponry in. That is also an area where the Chinese need to be careful about outsmarting themselves and getting too slippery and cute. Their goal has been and continues to be to keep North Korea as a buffer and a pain in the arse to the Americans but not to the point where he is taken out and they end out with pro-western forces right on their border. The last thing they want is a militarization and an arms race on their borders. Now they are running the risk of an American escalation against North Korea, or an increasing presence of Iranian and Russian forces in the region, and the risk of Japan continuing to assert their right to militarize more to protect themselves against Kim if the Americans wont do it. He doesn't go from bad guy to good guy if we threaten him. But that doesn't mean that he might not be backed down a bit to regroup out of fear that he might get the Saddam treatment. He is a chronic disease. Ideally the CIA could just take him out but he is so far behind enemy lines in his shit-hole country and he never leaves it is difficult. And yes I know that it is illegal for the CIA to do that. But Bebe owes us a few favors. Maybe they can entice Rocket Man somewhere under the pretense of being invited to watch I Love Lucy reruns. Obviously none of that is possible. But most likely our intelligence gathering there sucks and could be beefed up and then see what comes from that.
Trump's sanctions and hardline rhetoric brought North Korea to negotiating table, experts say http://www.foxnews.com/world/2018/0...h-korea-to-negotiating-table-experts-say.html President Trump may have just forced North Korean strongman Kim Jong Un to come the negotiating table…with maybe just a little help from Twitter. Experts say that Trump’s strategy dealing with the rogue regime – a combination of tweeted warnings and mockery, tough sanctions and pressure on China and others to tow the line – is bearing fruit. Evidence came this week, when Kim told a delegation from South Korea his regime is willing to discuss nuclear disarmament with the United States. “While I wouldn’t say that Trump has the Kim regime crying 'uncle,' I would say, to use a sports analogy, that North Korea is now like a running back looking for space to move in the backfield," Nicholas Eberstadt, a political economist at the American Enterprise Institute, told Fox News. (More at above url)