Page added on September 3, 2017
North Korea sharply raised the stakes in its stand-off with the rest of the world Sunday, detonating a powerful nuclear device that it claimed was a hydrogen bomb that could be attached to a missile capable of reaching the mainland United States.
Even if Kim Jong Un’s regime is exaggerating its feats, scientific evidence showed that North Korea had crossed an important threshold and had detonated a nuclear device that was vastly more powerful than its last — and almost seven times the size of the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima.
Tensions had already been running high, with Kim repeatedly defying international condemnation and increasingly blunt warnings by President Trump, and continuing to launch ballistic missiles.
But Sunday’s blast — North Korea’s sixth nuclear test but the first since Trump took office — could escalate those tensions to a new level.
Trump sharply condemned North Korea’s nuclear test, saying the country is “very hostile and dangerous to the United States.”
In a pair of tweets issued Sunday morning, Trump wrote: “North Korea has conducted a major Nuclear Test. Their words and actions continue to be very hostile and dangerous to the United States … North Korea is a rogue nation which has become a great threat and embarrassment to China, which is trying to help but with little success.”
Trump also delivered an admonishment of sorts to South Korea, saying that “appeasement with North Korea will not work” and suggesting that more severe steps must be taken to influence Kim’s regime.
China on Sunday said it “resolutely opposes and strongly condemns” the launch, adding to denunciations from South Korea and Japan.
The nuclear device that North Korea tested appeared to be so large that Vipin Narang, an expert on nuclear proliferation and strategy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, called it a “city buster.”
“Now, with even relatively inaccurate intercontinental ballistic missile technology, they can destroy the better part of a city with this yield,” Narang said.
[ Don’t be surprised by North Korea’s missiles. Kim Jong Un is doing what he said he would. ]
North Korea’s latest nuclear test took place at exactly noon local time at its Punggye-ri testing site and was recorded as a magnitude 6.3 earthquake, according to the United States Geological Survey. It was followed eight minutes later by a 4.1 magnitude earthquake that appeared to be a tunnel collapsing at the site.
Japan immediately sent up sniffer planes to try to measure radiation levels.
North Korean state media said that the test was carried to test “the accuracy and credibility” of its “H-bomb to be placed at the payload of the ICBM.” North Korea tested its intercontinental ballistic missile for the first time in July, and its second test later the same month showed the rocket could theoretically reach Denver or Chicago.
Those launches caused Trump to tell reporters that if North Korea continued its provocations, it would feel “fire and fury.” He later tweeted that the American military was “locked and loaded.”
North Korean television on Sunday broadcast footage of Kim signing the order to detonate. Sunday’s test, part of the regime’s plan for building “a strategic nuclear force,” was a “perfect success,” the state-run Korean Central News Agency said.
Earlier Sunday, KCNA had released photos of Kim inspecting what was described as a hydrogen bomb that could be attached to an ICBM — the same device that appeared to be detonated just hours later.
All the components of the “H-bomb” were “homemade” so North Korea could produce “powerful nuclear weapons as many as it wants,” the state-run agency quoted Kim as saying.
Analysts were poring over the photos and the data Sunday, especially questioning North Korea’s claim to have produced a “two-stage thermonuclear weapon.”
David Albright, a nuclear weapons expert and president of the Institute for Science and International Security, was skeptical of North Korea’s claims and said that the photos were likely “propaganda.”
But there was no doubt that North Korea was making progress. South Korean government officials and independent nuclear scientists estimated the yield — the amount of energy released by the weapon — to be 100 kilotons. That would make it almost seven times as strong as the American atomic bomb that destroyed the Japanese city of Hiroshima in 1945.
At that level, North Korea’s nuclear device would be “very significant and destabilizing,” Albright said. “It would show that their design, whatever the specific design, has achieved a yield that is capable of destroying substantial parts of large modern cities.”
South Korea’s meteorological agency said Sunday’s explosion was as much as six times the size of the fifth test, in September last year, and 11 times the size of the January 2016 detonation.
Still, Albright doubted that North Korea had been able to make such a warhead small enough to fit onto a missile.
After firing increasingly long-range missiles, including the two that can theoretically reach the United States mainland, into the sea between the Korean Peninsula and Japan, North Korea last week sent a missile over Japan and into the Pacific Ocean, claiming it was capable of reaching Guam, a U.S. territory.
Analysts said that appeared to be a dummy run for firing an intercontinental ballistic missile on a normal trajectory over Japan and into the Pacific, instead of straight up and straight down as with its first two tests.
Although governments and experts would continue to assess the technical aspects of the latest nuclear test, MIT’s Narang said the danger is significant, regardless of whether this was a lesser boosted fission device or a true hydrogen bomb, or whether North Korea had mastered the technology to deliver this accurately to a target.
“It really doesn’t matter now from a deterrence perspective,” he said. “Mated on the ICBM, you don’t want this thing anywhere near a city near you.”
Sunday’s test caused anger across the region, with South Korean President Moon Jae-in saying he would “never allow North Korea to continue advancing its nuclear and missile technologies,” according to his national security adviser.
South Korean military leaders warned North Korea that they, together with their American allies, were “fully equipped” to punish North Korea.
But President Trump later admonished the Moon government. “South Korea is finding, as I have told them, that their talk of appeasement with North Korea will not work, they only understand one thing!” he wrote in a third Sunday morning tweet.
Separately, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said he “would not tolerate” the nuclear test. Abe had spoken with Trump three hours before the test, and said afterwards that they had agreed to “increase pressure on North Korea and make it change its policies.”
The White House said that two leaders discussed “ongoing efforts to maximize pressure on North Korea.” Trump made the call from Air Force One, as he returned home to Washington from his visit to storm-battered Texas and Louisiana.
“The two leaders reaffirmed the importance of close cooperation between the United States, Japan and South Korea in the face of the growing threat from North Korea,” the White House statement said.
All eyes will nowturn to China to see if it will be angry enough to impose true punishment on North Korea.
China has expressed annoyance at North Korea’s frequent ballistic missile launches, but analysts have said Beijing probably would not take serious action unless there is another nuclear test.
China’s primary concern is stability on its borders, and it has shied away from implementing sanctions that would seriously undermine the regime in Pyongyang, analysts have said. Almost all international sanctions, such as recent bans on coal and seafood exports, rely on Chinese enforcement because about 90 percent of North Korean trade goes through China.
China’s foreign ministry said Sunday that North Korea had conducted the nuclear test “with no regard to the general objections of the international community.”
“The Chinese government resolutely opposes and strongly condemns this,” the ministry said in a statement.
“China will work together with the international community to comprehensively and completely implement the relevant resolutions of the Security Council of the UN, unswervingly push forward the denuclearization of the peninsula, and unswervingly maintain the peace and stability of the peninsula,” it said.
102 Comments on "North Korea detonates its most powerful nuclear device yet"
Boat on Mon, 4th Sep 2017 11:25 pm
Canada’s Arms Exports To Middle East Now 2nd-Largest After U.S., Report Says
If the federal Liberals are loathe to cancel Canada’s controversial arms deal with Saudi Arabia, it may have something do with a trend unearthed this week by Jane’s Defence Weekly.
According to the magazine, Canada has become the world’s second-largest exporter of arms to the Middle East, behind the United States.
The last time Jane’s surveyed arms exports, Canada was in sixth place on Middle East exports, but the country leapfrogged Britain, France, Germany and Russia into second place, with US$2.7 billion in sales in 2015, Jane’s reports.
http://www.janes.com/
GregT on Mon, 4th Sep 2017 11:29 pm
“Are you proud of Russian, China military sales?”
Seeing as you obviously missed my previous post above, shall we try again?
“I do not for one second support the manufacture of weapons of war, and I’m with mak, anybody who supports the industry, or makes a living off of it, deserves nothing less than to have those same said weapons of mass destruction turned on them.”
Do you think the poor from will be better off?
Sorry Boat, I was unable to find anyone who could translate your comment into English for me.
GregT on Mon, 4th Sep 2017 11:44 pm
Boat,
The three largest Candian manufactures of military equipment are; Canadian Aviation Electronics, manufacturers of flight simulators and aviation instrumentation, DY4, manufacturers of printed circuit boards, GM, an American subsidiary, and Bell Helicopter, also an American subsidiary.
Boat on Mon, 4th Sep 2017 11:46 pm
Canada wants those weapons as do many allies. They don’t have the tech or budget to do a full system. If a country contracts to buy enough units they are rewarded with a piece/jobs of the unit. For example there are 9 countries that built components for the F-35. And yes Canada was one of them and will continue to be a buyer
Now greggiet thinks his country is less responsible for building and buying the F–35. lol Tell that to the enemy on the receiving end of the ordinance.
GregT on Mon, 4th Sep 2017 11:51 pm
Sorry, I forgot General Dynamics Land Systems, also a U.S. Subsidiary.
Makati1 on Mon, 4th Sep 2017 11:53 pm
Boat, the F35 is a bad choice of example of American weaponry. It is a trillion dollar boondoggle that will never do half what it is supposed to do. It has yet to prove it can do anything except fly. It is the perfect example of America corruption and lack of engineering skills.
GregT on Mon, 4th Sep 2017 11:55 pm
The F-35 is a scam Boat.
What Went Wrong with the F-35, Lockheed Martin’s Joint Strike Fighter?
“The F-35 was billed as a fighter jet that could do almost everything the U.S. military desired but has turned out to be one of the greatest boondoggles in recent military purchasing history.”
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/what-went-wrong-with-the-f-35-lockheed-martins-joint-strike-fighter/
Boat on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 12:09 am
Lockheed Martin is another you forgot. Why does Canada want any outside weapon systems makers in Canada. For the products and the jobs.
Ya’ll just cant seem to grasp how it works or why it works that way.
Go Speed Racer on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 12:12 am
Blow Up North Korea.
I’ve plugged in the popcorn popper,
got the salt shaker ready,
and I’m melting some butter.
New batteries in the TV remote.
Let’s do it.
GregT on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 12:13 am
Thanks Mak, you beat me to it.
You really have to wonder though, is Boat indicative of the average American’s brainwashing, or is he simply below average?
GregT on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 12:21 am
“Ya’ll just cant seem to grasp how it works or why it works that way.”
Wrong Boat, it is you who can’t grasp how things work. Lockheed Martin Canada, is also an American subsidiary. Big American corporations are in control of Canadian political establishments, just like they are in control of your own. And Boat, y’all isn’t a word, at least not in the English language.
GregT on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 12:32 am
Oops, sorry Boat,
With all due respect, it appears that I misspelled ya’ll incorrectly, even though it isn’t a real word. My bad.
GregT on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 12:37 am
Oops, another mistake.
It appears that I spelled ya’ll incorrectly, even though it isn’t a real word.
Anonymouse1 on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 12:48 am
This just in…
Boatietard detonates another retard bomb.
Speaking of retards, anything good on TV tonight boatietard?
GregT on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 12:52 am
“Blow Up North Korea.”
Geez Go Speed, why the need to be so dramatic. It would probably be much cheaper and less dramatic, to simply surround NK and burn the entire country to the ground. I’ve heard that Napalm has been proven to be quite effective.
GregT on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 1:06 am
“Speaking of retards, anything good on TV tonight boatietard?”
Now, now, Anonymouse. A verbal attack on the modern miracle of flat screened TVs, crosses the line, and is not in anyway acceptable. You should know better.
Cloggie on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 1:14 am
Boat, the F35 is a bad choice of example of American weaponry. It is a trillion dollar boondoggle that will never do half what it is supposed to do. It has yet to prove it can do anything except fly. It is the perfect example of America corruption and lack of engineering skills.
Where is Wernher von Braun when you need him? The New Americans are not going to cut it. First World standards with Third World population, it’s not going to work.
The people of N Korea go from famine to famine while the black hair Cheeto builds nuclear weapons and threatens it’s neighbors. Don’t you think N Korea would be better off being taken over by S Korea? The famines would end.
That would indeed be the best for the Koreans:
1. reunited
2. capitalist
3. democratic
4. nuclear-free
5. block-free
6. without foreign troops/bases.
But it is unlikely that the US would agree with 5 & 6. They want to keep their foothold in continental East-Asia. They want a reunited Korea, entirely in their sphere of influence, a no-no for China, where China would probably accept all the items 1-6, provided the US withdraws from Korea.
That would be a reasonable solution, based on “balance of power”, but America still thinks it can have it all and is en passant mobilizing the entire world against it and thereby setting itself up for its demise.
GregT on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 1:33 am
Hmmm Cloggie,
Other than your beloved oligarchs, how do you figure that #2 is in anyone else’s best interests?
Makati1 on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 1:47 am
GregT, I believe that Boat is not too far from the average dumbed down, social fluff, American snowflake these days. Maybe just a bit below standard. I have observed too many like Boat in my visits to the nut house called America these last few years. If you live in the asylum, you probably don’t notice the change, but if you are only am occasional visitor, it is obvious. Since most Americans never leave the US except for a few weeks vacation in the other nut house we call Europe, or some third world country where they never leave the Americanized tourist path, they will never see how America is changing. And TPTB want it that way.
“What this means, Bezmenov explains, is to change Americans’ perception of reality to such an degree that no American is able to draw a sensible conclusion in the interest of defending themselves, their families, communities and their country, regardless of the abundance of information available to them. It is a massive brainwashing process achieved at a very slow pace.”
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-09-04/red-october-washington-2017
“Mission Accomplished!” To quote a recent ignorant president shrub. ^_^
Makati1 on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 1:55 am
Cloggie:
1. reunited – This one may be ok IF it is not a US ally.
2. capitalist – Why be in a failing club? It’s days are ending. Beside, it only favors the rich.
3. democratic – There are no pure democratic countries anywhere in the world and never will be.
4. nuclear-free – Again, there if you do not have a big club you will be the clubbed.
5. block-free – ?????
6. without foreign troops/bases – Hmm ask Germany, Japan, South Korea, etc. about those bases. lol
The Koreas can only be united IF they are not threatened by the US, and that will not happen until the empire falls. I hope to live to see that event, when the US lives only on its ~4% of the world’s resources and cannot afford to try to rule the world. Tomorrow would be ok with me.
Hello on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 2:31 am
>>>> America corruption and lack of engineering skills.
Do you suggest that Manila-Plane-Works should have done the job? Do philippinos even know what a plane is?
Cloggie on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 3:05 am
Other than your beloved oligarchs, how do you figure that #2 is in anyone else’s best interests?
Where did you get the idea that I “love oligarchs”? What do you think I am, an American? I’m perfectly happy with my Western European “Rhineland capitalism”…
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_market_economy
…in the US also often mockingly described as “socialist”, but a model very good for the middle class, folks like me. No tent cities here and everybody a social minimum.
About Korea:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Korea
GDP/capita $1000 (nominal) / $1800 (PPP)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Korea
GDP/capita $29,000 (nominal) / $39,000 (PPP)
Have a look at those numbers to arrive at the conclusion that old school communism sucks and that capitalism would be a blessing for North-Korea, for the biosphere admittedly less so.
Both Greg and makati suffer from a high level of hypocrisy by denouncing capitalism, while in their own private lives they have nothing but profited enormously from it. Greg as a former finance guy (how capitalist do you want to have it?) in particular would not live with the standard he enjoys today and early professional exit without capitalism.
capitalist – Why be in a failing club?
Capitalism isn’t failing, it is the insane immigration policies that will eventually cause the downfall of the West, unless we bring the West down and being about a conservative social revolution a la happened in Putin-Russia. Capitalism is too successful for the biosphere, it needs to be tamed, not abolished.
#ParisAccords
democratic – There are no pure democratic countries anywhere in the world and never will be.
It is still better than a dictatorship, provided all sorts of deep states can be destroyed. Most effective tool: binding referendum, multi-party democracy.
nuclear-free – Again, there if you do not have a big club you will be the clubbed.
Washington and its (((deep state))) needs to go.
block-free – ?????
Before 1991 you have this:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-Aligned_Movement
If the US withdraws militarily from Korea, the latter will no doubt become part of the Chinese sphere of influence. But it can still have a large degree of independence, like Japan will have, after the US will be downsized.
without foreign troops/bases – Hmm ask Germany, Japan, South Korea, etc. about those bases. lol
See above.
Makati1 on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 3:38 am
Cloggie, I can sum up my reply in four sentences.
1 The end of everything we consider ‘normal’ is coming soon.
2 There is no safe place in the world that the collapse will not touch with different degrees of pain.
3 The West is going to feel the most pain because it has lived ‘the good life’ for far too long.
4. The lower classes will feel the least because they already live it everyday.
Makati1 on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 3:51 am
Hello, you are not funny. Maybe stupid, but not funny.
Apparently Filipinos are intelligent enough to NOT be in debt. To have a GDP that is growing at 6+% per year. That turns out a lot of the doctors and nurses that YOU go to in the US. The has over 4 million scientists and engineers. It has a large number of architects also. My business partner here is one of them.
https://www.census.gov/population/international/files/sp/SP94.pdf
https://www.philiphone.com/Engineers_-_Consulting/
https://ph.linkedin.com/title/civil-engineer/philippines
“PICE now has more than 71,900 registered civil engineer-members in 97 chapters and some 25,390 civil engineering student-members in 174 student chapters throughout the country.”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippine_Institute_of_Civil_Engineers
More professionals:
http://en.wikipilipinas.org/index.php/List_of_Professional_Organizations_in_the_Philippines
Need more? LOL
Anonymouse1 on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 4:40 am
I guess so Greg, if not for the miracle of flat-screen TV’s, the boatietard’s of amerika might have to start attending church in person again to be preached to non-stop about all the dubious miracles in the bible. Lower carbon emissions when boatietard catches the 700 club (HD).
God bless all those Asian corporations with their buddhist\Confucianist engineers and workforces, for making at least one amerikan retards life a little better.
Davy on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 5:03 am
“Wrong Boat, it is you who can’t grasp how things work. Lockheed Martin Canada, is also an American subsidiary. Big American corporations are in control of Canadian political establishments, just like they are in control of your own.”
Brainwashed Canadians want to blame American corporations for their anti-Americanism. Their anti-Americanism is also from their feelings of irrelevance and hypocrisy of self-righteousness. Canadians are working in theses above mentioned corporations. Many are in high level positions. Canadians are making profits because we know there are also small and medium size Canadian companies involved with these efforts. Canadians are invested in the US as shareholders including these companies. The Canadian establishment has their control element with American Corporations. But hey, feels good for a hypocritical Canadian to point their fingers. Their fingers are good at that. They rarely point at each other. They point in the other way because it feels good to have a clear scapegoat for their complicity. Canadians are affluent because of this complicity. Pretty elementary but some of our so called friends up north are deep into this blame and complain so sometimes the basics must be laid out:
“Scapegoat Theory”
http://tinyurl.com/ya2xfe2k
“Scapegoat theory refers to the tendency to blame someone else for one’s own problems, a process that often results in feelings of prejudice toward the person or group that one is blaming. Scapegoating serves as an opportunity to explain failure or misdeeds, while maintaining one’s positive self-image. If a person who is poor or doesn’t get a job that he or she applies for can blame an unfair system or the people who did get the job that he or she wanted, the person may be using the others as a scapegoat and may end up hating them as a result. However, if the system really is unfair and keeps the person from succeeding financially, or the other people got the job because of nepotism or illegitimate preferential treatment, then blaming those factors would not be scapegoating. Essentially, scapegoating generally employs a stand-in for one’s own failures so that one doesn’t have to face one’s own weaknesses.”
Davy on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 5:15 am
“Do you suggest that Manila-Plane-Works should have done the job? Do philippinos even know what a plane is?”
Thanks Hello for a good snappy one-liner. makat’s oversized in importance Island is in his mind. This not very significant country is a little less than twice the size of my not very significant state in area with 16 times the population and roughly similar GDP. The P’s biggest export is overpopulation. Makat, want us to believe the P’s are a superpower. Pretty soon they will have a space program. If it wasn’t so pathetic it would actually be entertaining. The problem is this delusional personal and emotional agenda has been going on for years now. We get our daily update on how wonderful the P’s are along with the daily makat self-praise.
Davy on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 5:21 am
“3 The West is going to feel the most pain because it has lived ‘the good life’ for far too long.
4. The lower classes will feel the least because they already live it everyday.”
The equivalent “western” areas of Asia which in some cases are far more complex and populated will feel the pain more because of this over complexity and overpopulation. The lower classes in Asia in the most overpopulated areas, like makat’s Manila mega urban sprawl, will not all feel pain because many are going to be dead from famine.
Davy on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 5:41 am
“Statista”
“How does it compare with the warheads inside current U.S. and Russian intercontinental ballistic missiles?”
http://tinyurl.com/y7h72eck
GregT on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 8:41 am
“Brainwashed Canadians want to blame American corporations for their anti-Americanism.”
At least two brainwashed Americans on this board don’t appear to have the foggiest notion as to how the capitalist model works, but apparently close to half of their fellow Americans do. Make America Great Again.
GregT on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 8:55 am
Unfortunately for the half that do understand how corrupt the capitalist model has become, Trump has no hope in hell of taking America back from the hands of those same said American corporations. Not that a multi-billionaire ever had any real intentions of doing so in the first place.
GregT on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 9:02 am
And how Davy believes that would be Anti-Americanism is beyond comprehension. Capitalism is as Pro-American as apple pie, football, and NASCAR.
Davy on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 9:16 am
Boy you are slippery. Always shifting blame when it is your hypocrisy that needs examining. Who is likely one of the wealthiest on this board? Who lives in one of the wealthiest regions in the world? Who whines the most about others? You got it the great grehg himself. The maestro of blame and complain.
If you were true to your words you would leave your wealthy life and live in that cabin you talk so fondly of. Instead you live a great life (your words) up in Salmon Arm, BC. Money in the bank and gold in the safe. Retired fat happy and pissed off at Americans. Wow what a piece of work.
GregT on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 9:29 am
More delusions on your part Davy.
I did leave my career of 32 years for a cabin in the woods. (Great life BTW) I’m lean, I’m not pissed of at Americans, and I live nowhere near Salmon Arm BC, which by the way, I had to look up on google maps because I couldn’t even remember where it was.
GregT on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 9:34 am
And also Davy, money in the bank is a great way to have that money inflated and taxed away, and I don’t own a safe.
More delusions on your part.
Cloggie on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 10:31 am
This Greg-Davy bickering will probably not stop before the first North-Korean nuclear bomb explodes in the atmosphere.
GregT on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 10:42 am
I have yet to see Davy counter any of my points with a considerate, reasonable, mature, response. Only the usual name calling, childish rhetoric, and fact free imaginary delusions.
Davy on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 11:34 am
What kind of response is that, of course you are going to whine how bad Davy and how squeaky clean grehg is. What a piece of work!
Davy on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 11:35 am
Got to make you happy clog, get two birds with one stone!
GregT on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 11:43 am
” of course you are going to whine how bad Davy and how squeaky clean grehg is.”
More childish rhetoric, name calling, and delusional accusations.
Davy on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 11:58 am
more whining
Go Speed Racer on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 3:14 pm
LETS ARM GREG AND DAVY
WITH
NUCLEAR WEAPONS.
It won’t take long for something to happen.
Go Speed Racer on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 3:15 pm
And Clogster gets a couple of
nuke bombs too.
Davy on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 4:09 pm
GSR, I would Taliban his ass. A NUK is too quick.
Go Speed Racer on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 7:52 pm
Go for it, the TV cameras are rollling.
The Greg Davy an Clogster nuclear war.
MASTERMIND on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 10:21 pm
Do philippinos even know what a plane is?
lol
Makati1 on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 10:43 pm
Greg, Davy lives on his own little planet. He constantly makes up bullshit about others and avoids ever rebutting anything posted with intelligent sentences and refs. Always reverting to the usual childish gibberish.
Maybe it is too much of that moonshine he makes or is it meth? lol
GregT on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 11:30 pm
” I would Taliban his ass.”
Don’t take it too personally Davy, but I don’t do anal. You’ll have to find some other guy’s ass to Taliban.
GregT on Tue, 5th Sep 2017 11:38 pm
And Davy, try not to forget to wear a condom. You have enough problems that you aren’t capable of facing already.
GregT on Wed, 6th Sep 2017 12:32 am
“Davy lives on his own little planet.”
Davy deserves a little bit of credit Mak, He does appear to understand that Afghanistan is where empires go to die. He’s just a little bit mixed up on their tactics.