 Aleck79
join:2003-07-23 College Station, TX | Again?
wtf, this just happened about a month ago! |
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  tschmidt Premium,MVM join:2000-11-12 Milford, NH | I thought the issue was not stealing rather the Vietnamese government encouraged fisherman to salvage under water copper cable. Unfortunately fisherman don't seem to be able to tell the difference between copper and fiber.
/tom |
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  helloo
@qwest.net | reply to Aleck79 Arrests for Vietnamese Fiber Thefts, Is it really worth your life?
well, is making a living really worth your life? |
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 james1
join:2001-02-26 antarctica | if it gets you killed, it isnt much of a living is it? |
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 Aleck79
join:2003-07-23 College Station, TX
·Grande Communicati..
| said by james1 :if it gets you killed, it isnt much of a living is it? rofl, talk about irony.  |
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 Time4aNAP Premium join:2007-04-09 Des Plaines, IL
·Speakeasy
·Comcast
| reply to helloo said by helloo :
Arrests for Vietnamese Fiber Thefts, Is it really worth your life? Maybe it was before your time, but long before the US started the current two wars that it's fighting to not win, the US was fighting other no-win wars. The first was in Korea around 1950, and the second was in and around Vietnam.
The Korean war has never ended, although it's been a long time since a shot has been fired in anger over there. Both parties seem content to stand at the frontier and give each-other the skunk eye for the last 50 years. It's probably the longest Mexican standoff in history.
Vietnam is a different story. The US lost that war. We cut bait and ran, allowing the Communists to overtake the entire region. So Vietnam is a Communist totalitarian state. And in totalitarian states, the value of human life tends to be quite low.
Note that even in the relatively free nations along the Pacific Rim, harsh punishments for minor offenses, like littering, are the norm. Singapore is a good example of this. This may seem barbaric to Americans today, who don't care to answer to any higher authority. But back when cops handed out citations for jaywalking, we didn't have armed warfare going on every day on our city's streets, or out of control SUVs hurtling into people's suburban homes on a regular basis. |
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 bulldoggie
join:2005-09-14 Fresno, CA | reply to helloo The Deadliest Catch. |
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  KrK Heavy Artillery For The Little Guy Premium join:2000-01-17 Tulsa, OK | said by bulldoggie :The Deadliest Catch. LOL |
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 netdogg3
join:2003-02-27 Staten Island, NY | reply to tschmidt On the outside doesn't both Fiber and Cable look the same? Maybe they couldn't tell the difference until they cut it. |
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  commodog Premium join:2000-02-03 Oxnard, CA | reply to Time4aNAP The only thing I have to disagree on is the Korean war part, shots are fired daily over there in the JSA, you just don't hear about it.
Currahee |
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 RayW Premium join:2001-09-01 Layton, UT clubs:
·XMission
| reply to Time4aNAP said by Time4aNAP :The Korean war has never ended, although it's been a long time since a shot has been fired in anger over there. Both parties seem content to stand at the frontier and give each-other the skunk eye for the last 50 years. It's probably the longest Mexican standoff in history. America cut bait and ran in Korea also. If you ever get a chance, go to the Korean War Memorial in Seoul (it is within walking distance of the Yongsan South Post facility aka 'Dragon Hill' if you are in half way decent shape and is a KOREAN monument and not a US propaganda monument, so do not go if you can not take criticism of the US), it has a totally different view of what America did at the 'end' of the Korean war than what we are taught over in the US, and displays the letters that were sent from Washington DC to prove it. That shows US public opinion forced the 'end' of the Korean war before it was completed leaving a country divided and shooting at each other (and each thinking the other is evil).
No, the US has not been able to stay the course since WWII, we get involved, then cut and run when things get tough or take longer than expected and leave a mess behind. Interesting how the media portrays one view over here, and the people over there see something totally different. -- I am not lost, I find myself every time. |
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 Time4aNAP Premium join:2007-04-09 Des Plaines, IL
·Speakeasy
·Comcast
| reply to commodog said by commodog :The only thing I have to disagree on is the Korean war part, shots are fired daily over there in the JSA, you just don't hear about it. The term "in anger" has a very specific military meaning. The fact of the matter is that there has been no warfare taking place during that time. |
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 Time4aNAP Premium join:2007-04-09 Des Plaines, IL
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| reply to RayW said by RayW :America cut bait and ran in Korea also. Nope. There are still US troops at Panmunjeom, as well as many other parts of South Korea.
»en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Un···th_Korea
If you ever get a chance, go to the Korean War Memorial in Seoul... Thanks, but I'm already familiar with the history.
One place that I would like to visit one day (if it still exists) is an orphanage that was founded by my mother's first husband, who was a Marine pilot. He was killed in action when his F9F ran out of fuel and crashed into the side of a mountain in 1953. Although the orphanage is located in what is now North Korea, my mother was granted special permission by the Communists to cross into North Korea to search for it. She was pleased to find that it was still in operation some 30 years later, and still bore his name. I'd sure like to see it around after another 30 years, and let its residents know that they're not forgotten.
No, the US has not been able to stay the course since WWII, we get involved, then cut and run when things get tough or take longer than expected and leave a mess behind. Interesting how the media portrays one view over here, and the people over there see something totally different. All three Cold War superpowers have a fair share of the blame for the proxy wars and puppet governments that they initiated, and to the innocents who were the primary casualties. The tragedy of the Korean War was that none of the Allies had any real plans for what to do with Korea after the Japanese were vanquished during WWII. The country was divvied up between the Americans and the Soviets, using a map from a magazine! I can't say whether Korea as a whole is better or worse off than if US forces simply withdrew and let the Soviets become the custodians for all of Korea. But IMO we owed them more than what we gave them.
Vietnam was a tragedy because the US had been ignoring Ho Chi Minh ever since the end of WWI. Ho spent half of his adult life trying to earn the Americans' support for Vietnamese nationhood, most notably helping the Flying Tigers and other American forces, prior to and during WWII. But when it came time for America to make good on its agreement with France that French colonies abroad should be liberated after the Allies liberated France, the newly-bellicose American people saw Vietnam as an opportunity to make up for the unsatisfying Korean cease-fire. And as a country, we have failed to learn anything from that grave mistake.
I have a personal policy that if I happen to over-commit myself, I always honor the first promise that I made, and do what it takes to make it up for the latter broken promise(s). I do this as a rule, and spend no time calculating which scenario might mitigate my losses. If I screw up, I'm in no moral position to be thinking of myself first. If America had followed this simple rule, a lot of needless suffering would have been avoided. |
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