World News Thread & Breaking News!!

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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
The poverty in the east was already there Delft, The Union of Soviet Socialist republics made sure of that. Same as the poverty in North Korea.
One Country, Two systems would never work It's basically ignoring the problems. the government would be to focused on one view for one half well the other would deteriorate. So you either end up so focused on continuing the industrial growth of the south at the expense of the north, Or you focus so heavy on maintaining the North that the south falters. the North is so poverty stricken that if the "One Country" were established it would instantly drain the population of the the North As people Rush south to try and get Jobs, Housing, Modern health Care and food. basicly the two systems would brake down, and the German model would kick in.
 

Jeff Head

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CNN World News said:
Taiwan and China held their highest level talks for more than six decades Tuesday, marking the first government-to-government contact since the pair's acrimonious split in 1949.

Wang Yu-chi of Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council (MAC), which oversees the island's China policy, met with his mainland Chinese counterpart Zhang Zhijun, of China's Taiwan Affairs Office.

After the meeting, China's state news agency Xinhua said the two sides had agreed to open a regular communication channel.

"We should both be resolute to not let cross-strait relations suffer any more twists and turns, and never let it (the relationship) go backward," Zhang was quoted by Xinhua as saying.

Previous contact between the two sides has been conducted through semi-official foundations or through political parties, not by government ministers acting in their official capacities.

"Being able to sit down and talk today was quite unimaginable in the past," Xinhua quoted Wang as saying.

In a statement, Taiwan's MAC said that Wang had invited Zhang to visit Taiwan to better understand society and popular sentiment.

Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou said the visit had " extraordinary significance," according to the island's Central News Agency.

On his departure from Taipei, Wang said the visit would not be "easy" and the two sides would not sign any specific agreement.

The meeting took place in Nanjing, which was the seat of government under the Kuomintang or Nationalist party before a civil war with the Chinese Communists forced Nationalist forces to flee to Taiwan in 1949.

Ever since, the island and mainland China have been governed separately.

The exclusion of two Taiwan reporters from covering the meeting has soured the start of Wang's historic visit, which is expected to last until Friday.

Two journalists from Taiwan's Apple Daily and Radio Free Asia were excluded from a delegation of more than 80 reporters accompanying Wang, according to Freedom House, a press freedom watchdog.

"The Chinese government's refusal to grant access to these journalists reflects two important trends -- the Communist Party's expansion of its tactics for influencing media from Hong Kong to Taiwan, and the government's use of visa denials as a way to punish overseas news outlets for critical coverage," said Sarah Cook, senior research analyst at Freedom House.

Taiwan's Central News Agency said Wang would address protecting the freedom of the press at the meeting.

Relations between the two sides have improved since Ma, of the Kuomintang party, came to power in Taiwan's 2008 elections.
 

delft

Brigadier
Companies were taken over by the Treuhand organisation and often sold for a low price to similar West-German companies which often closed them and so excluded competition, or closed because they were really inefficient or because the companies they depended on were closed. The result was large scale unemployment so people had very little to spend in the local shops which also largely closed. Only now is the situation getting better but it is still not good.
What is possible in North Korea is to provide work building railway lines, roads and pipelines between South Korea and China and Russia to replace work that is to disappear, including a significant reduction in the armed forces. The situation in the South also isn't straight forwards of course because of the strong political position of the chaebols that was developed under the dictatorship of General Park, father of the current president.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
they System of the North is not so straight forward either. Although it wears the cloak of Communism the entire government is based around "Juche" a Unique set of Ardent Nationalism, Militarism and Demagoguery. The systems is designed to be highly Aggressive and xenophobic to any Ideas, Groups, Ideologies, Individuals or organizations not in line with the Kim Clan and it's Claims.
I am sorry It would never ever work.
 

Equation

Lieutenant General
I believe Terran is right, the DPRK is just too poor and the elite ruling class are too entrenched in their power to ever unite with South Korea. That doesn't mean that the two Koreans can co-exist in peace. Just don't try to make each other glow at night (nukes) for the world to see, we're not interested.
 

solarz

Brigadier
I believe Terran is right, the DPRK is just too poor and the elite ruling class are too entrenched in their power to ever unite with South Korea. That doesn't mean that the two Koreans can co-exist in peace. Just don't try to make each other glow at night (nukes) for the world to see, we're not interested.

Agreed, as long as the Kim dynasty is in place, NK is not ever going to want to change, nevermind reuniting with SK.

That said, I wonder what would happen if Kim Jong-un was to be "removed" before he can produce an heir. Succession is ever the weak link in dynastic regimes.
 

Equation

Lieutenant General
Agreed, as long as the Kim dynasty is in place, NK is not ever going to want to change, nevermind reuniting with SK.

That said, I wonder what would happen if Kim Jong-un was to be "removed" before he can produce an heir. Succession is ever the weak link in dynastic regimes.

Oh there will be an heir alright, one way or another, they'll go as far as artificial insemination if they have to.
 

Equation

Lieutenant General
Here's an article about Argentina on the front page the Economist that I shared with Miragedriver.

A CENTURY ago, when Harrods decided to set up its first overseas emporium, it chose Buenos Aires. In 1914 Argentina stood out as the country of the future. Its economy had grown faster than America’s over the previous four decades. Its GDP per head was higher than Germany’s, France’s or Italy’s. It boasted wonderfully fertile agricultural land, a sunny climate, a new democracy (universal male suffrage was introduced in 1912), an educated population and the world’s most erotic dance. Immigrants tangoed in from everywhere. For the young and ambitious, the choice between Argentina and California was a hard one.

There are still many things to love about Argentina, from the glorious wilds of Patagonia to the world’s best footballer, Lionel Messi. The Argentines remain perhaps the best-looking people on the planet. But their country is a wreck. Harrods closed in 1998. Argentina is once again at the centre of an emerging-market crisis. This one can be blamed on the incompetence of the president, Cristina Fernández, but she is merely the latest in a succession of economically illiterate populists, stretching back to Juan and Eva (Evita) Perón, and before. Forget about competing with the Germans. The Chileans and Uruguayans, the locals Argentines used to look down on, are now richer. Children from both those countries—and Brazil and Mexico too—do better in international education tests.


Why dwell on a single national tragedy? When people consider the worst that could happen to their country, they think of totalitarianism. Given communism’s failure, that fate no longer seems likely. If Indonesia were to boil over, its citizens would hardly turn to North Korea as a model; the governments in Madrid or Athens are not citing Lenin as the answer to their euro travails. The real danger is inadvertently becoming the Argentina of the 21st century. Slipping casually into steady decline would not be hard. Extremism is not a necessary ingredient, at least not much of it: weak institutions, nativist politicians, lazy dependence on a few assets and a persistent refusal to confront reality will do the trick.

All through my wild days, my mad existence
As in any other country, Argentina’s story is unique. It has had bad luck. Its export-fuelled economy was battered by the protectionism of the interwar years. It relied too heavily on Britain as a trading partner. The Peróns were unusually seductive populists. Like most of Latin America, Argentina embraced the Washington consensus in favour of open markets and privatisation in the 1990s and it pegged the peso to the dollar. But the crunch, when it came in 2001, was particularly savage—and left the Argentines permanently suspicious of liberal reform.

Ill fortune is not the only culprit, though (see briefing). In its economy, its politics, and its reluctance to reform, Argentina’s decline has been largely self-inflicted.

Commodities, Argentina’s great strength in 1914, became a curse. A century ago the country was an early adopter of new technology—refrigeration of meat exports was the killer app of its day—but it never tried to add value to its food (even today, its cooking is based on taking the world’s best meat and burning it). The Peróns built a closed economy that protected its inefficient industries; Chile’s generals opened up in the 1970s and pulled ahead. Argentina’s protectionism has undermined Mercosur, the local trade pact. Ms Fernández’s government does not just impose tariffs on imports; it taxes farm exports.

Argentina did not build the institutions needed to protect its young democracy from its army, so the country became prone to coups. Unlike Australia, another commodity-rich country, Argentina did not develop strong political parties determined to build and share wealth: its politics was captured by the Peróns and focused on personalities and influence. Its Supreme Court has been repeatedly tampered with. Political interference has destroyed the credibility of its statistical office. Graft is endemic: the country ranks a shoddy 106th in Transparency International’s corruption index. Building institutions is a dull, slow business. Argentine leaders prefer the quick fix—of charismatic leaders, miracle tariffs and currency pegs, rather than, say, a thorough reform of the country’s schools.

They are not the solutions they promised to be
Argentina’s decline has been seductively gradual. Despite dreadful periods, such as the 1970s, it has suffered nothing as monumental as Mao or Stalin. Throughout its decline, the cafés of Buenos Aires have continued to serve espressos and medialunas. That makes its disease especially dangerous.

The rich world is not immune. California is in one of its stable phases, but it is not clear that it has quit its addiction to quick fixes through referendums, and its government still hobbles its private sector. On Europe’s southern fringe, both government and business have avoided reality with Argentine disdain. Italy’s petulant demand that rating agencies should take into account its “cultural wealth”, instead of looking too closely at its dodgy government finances, sounded like Ms Fernández. The European Union protects Spain or Greece from spiralling off into autarky. But what if the euro zone broke up?

The bigger danger, however, lies in the emerging world, where uninterrupted progress to prosperity is beginning to be seen as unstoppable. Too many countries have surged forward on commodity exports, but neglected their institutions. With China less hungry for raw materials, their weaknesses could be exposed just as Argentina’s was. Populism stalks many emerging countries: constitutions are being stretched. Overreliant on oil and gas, ruled by kleptocrats and equipped with a dangerously high self-regard, Russia ticks many boxes. But even Brazil has flirted with economic nationalism, while, in Turkey, the autocratic Recep Tayyip Erdogan is blending Evita with Islam. In too many parts of emerging Asia, including China and India, crony capitalism remains the order of the day. Inequality is feeding the same anger that produced the Peróns.

The lesson from the parable of Argentina is that good government matters. Perhaps it has been learned. But the chances are that in 100 years’ time the world will look back at another Argentina—a country of the future that got stuck in the past.

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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
He already at least according to Rodman has a Daughter Ju-ae. there are also still Un's Brothers Kim Jong-Nam, Kim Jong-chul and Kim Han-sol The 18 year old Son of Kim Jong-Nam
 
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Best. News. Ever.
 
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