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1 y

Harris CNN Town Hall Wrap: Kamala Doubles Down
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Harris CNN Town Hall Wrap: Kamala Doubles Down

CNN hosted Vice President Kamala Harris on what had been originally proposed as a debate that was rejected by former President Donald Trump. With the floor to herself, would Harris sink or swim? Would host Anderson Cooper try to tip the scale? And would CNN allow some Democrat ringers to slip through the cracks? We watched so you wouldn’t have to. The town hall began with Cooper asking Harris what she would say to Trump voters who aren’t swayed by her messaging. Harris proceeded to double down on it. AC: What do you say to Trump voters who aren't buying the "unfit and unhinged" narrative? VP Harris: I disagree, let me repeat the narrative pic.twitter.com/g27tnq9zMH — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 Harris proceeds to say that Trump is a fascist, and repeats the “suckers and losers” hoax. AC: Do you think Donald Trump is a fascist? HARRIS: Yes, I do. Kamala repeats the "suckers and losers" hoax pic.twitter.com/0Ma9cBZuuD — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 The first question comes via a registered Republican concerned about the direction of the party, and January 6th. This question is met with boilerplate word salad. First question: registered Republican concerned about J6, etc Answer: boilerplate word salad pic.twitter.com/g0MKl9pqya — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 A registered libertarian inquires about high prices: gets to hear about price controls for food and rent. Harris calls herself a “devout public servant.” The registered libertarian asks a question that elicits Harris's price controls proposals for food and rent. Calls herself a "devout public servant". pic.twitter.com/K4Tlh2S8c7 — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 Anderson Cooper’s first followup is on price controls. Harris proceeds to insult the Attorneys General of three states, one of which is the gubernatorial candidate in a state she needs to win.  AC follows up on price controls proposal. Harris suggests that GA, NC, FL have unattended price gouging problem. Throws tariffs into the answer. pic.twitter.com/Zu1Y1l0ebZ — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 The next question comes from an allegedly undecided Democrat political science professor, asking Harris to name her top legislative priority. She meandered before getting to amnesty and abortion. "We've got to get past the era of partisan politics slowing down progress" is Obama-era boilerplate. THAT's the era we need moving on from. Cites abortion and immigration as top priorities. I seriously doubt there is such a thing as an undecided registered Dem polisci professor pic.twitter.com/7mBhMafXzy — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 Cooper drills down, getting Harris to talk about killing the Senate filibuster for abortion on demand. Harris takes AC's bait, volunteers to end the filibuster to "codify Roe". Harris shows viewers the skull of the conquered Liz Cheney. NOTHING animates Harris as much as the "freedom" to rip a child from the womb in the 40th week. pic.twitter.com/YX40BdyLua — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 Harris throws Biden overboard on the economy. With love and reverence.  Harris is asked to differentiate herself from Biden on the economy, and very gingerly throws Biden overboard. Offers Medicare expansion in addition to price controls. AC asks, why wasn't that done in the last 4 years? pic.twitter.com/gsSTvgMbbl — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 Harris is asked about the migrant crisis and immediately doiubles down on amnesty for 30M illegal aliens. Harris may have reasonably determined, given both this question and its framing, that GOP lacrosse kid is a ringer and not at all undecided. Despite blowing the question off and reverting to her immigration word salad, she doubles down on amnesty for 30M illegal aliens. pic.twitter.com/ipJhoCr0QD — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 To his credit, Cooper asks what took Biden so long on the border actions. Harris is nonresponsive. AC asks why the Biden admin waited until just before the June debate to do border executive actions. Harris is nonresponsive, takes credit for reduced crossings. *** The demand for more asylum judges is a tell for wanting a fast track to citizenship for illegal migrants. pic.twitter.com/AuLFFfXdC4 — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 Cooper drills down on the Senate border bill and her apparent flip-flop on the wall AC drills down on the failed Senate bill which funded the wall, calls Harris out for calling it "stupid". Harris deflects to Trump, triples down on both Senate bill AND "comprehensive" bill. Why is there an ideological perspective, asks the ideologue pic.twitter.com/UxavSS0FhM — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 Harris gets a question on Gaza, which is met with non-responsiveness. Harris gets someone who is undecided contingent on Israel-Gaza: Delicately tiptoes around the question by calling for a ceasefire, two-state solution. pic.twitter.com/MgBI42y2hf — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 Harris blows a chance to address “uncommitted over Gaza Offered a chance to address the Uncommitted over Gaza, Harris says how about abortion, price controls and Democracy? pic.twitter.com/3Ub9NXhEdV — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 Here Harris spread the lie, unchecked by Cooper that law enforcement officers were killed  Harris has falsely said, on multiple occasions, that some law enforcement officers were killed on January 6th. pic.twitter.com/uN9BR8pDML — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 In addition to calling herself a “dedicated public servant, Harris compares herself to a modern day Esther. If Kamala Harris really sees herself as a modern-day Esther, she ought to reexamine her continued enabling of Iran and its proxies during such a time as this. pic.twitter.com/SYHVQa23YZ — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 Here, Harris got misdirected. She was lining up for a question on abortion and January 6th but instead ended being asked about her weakness. A reasonable person can infer that Harris believes indecisiveness is her biggest weakness. Harris was lining up for an abortion/J6 Liz Cheney combo but gets sucker punched with a self-examination question. Cites as a weakness...building a good team. Based on this answer, the real answer is indecisiveness. pic.twitter.com/IEsLhH9hd8 — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 Cooper’s follow up was met with more word salad. AC follow to the indecisiveness question: is there any mistake that Harris regrets as VP? Harris offers a preparation non-answer that, again, points to indecisiveness. pic.twitter.com/MU8tQQA4qA — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 To a very detailed question on taxation, Harris offers: a tax hike. Harris offers some word salad to a very specific taxation question, but proffers a tax hike. pic.twitter.com/X58vFBAPCi — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 A voter’s question about antisemitism veers into attacks against Trump. Harris offered a policy-driven response to the Dem realtor's concerns over violent campus antisemitism, before going full Leeeeeeeeroy Jenkins and citing the Atlantic piece. Dodges AC's contrast question, throws out Covid tests for Putin and J6. pic.twitter.com/dbRFd4NmrZ — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 Brutal question on flip-fops and authenticity. Harris tried to spin away from her Trump response. Harris offered a policy-driven response to the Dem realtor's concerns over violent campus antisemitism, before going full Leeeeeeeeroy Jenkins and citing the Atlantic piece. Dodges AC's contrast question, throws out Covid tests for Putin and J6. pic.twitter.com/dbRFd4NmrZ — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 Harris got a court packing question. With time winding down, Harris trots out her latest talking point: Harris gets asked a court-packing question. Does not specifically take the good bait but expresses openness. Chastises SCOTUS for upending Roe after 52 years (Plessy stood for 58). With the clock running out, works in her "enemy within" talking point. pic.twitter.com/1T1sivbOlA — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 Harris closes out with joy dreams aspirations Harris gets asked a court-packing question. Does not specifically take the good bait but expresses openness. Chastises SCOTUS for upending Roe after 52 years (Plessy stood for 58). With the clock running out, works in her "enemy within" talking point. pic.twitter.com/1T1sivbOlA — Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) October 24, 2024 Harris doubled down on specific policies when pressed. As is often the case, Harris is most passionate about abortion, This town hall was not the exception. Cooper's followups were notable for the non-responses or spin they would elicit from Harris. But, for most part, Harris was allowed to speak freely. There were occasions where Harris merited a fact-check from the crowd. For example, Harris claimed that law enforcement officers died on January 6th, but that is simply not the case. Harris was also given wide berth to repeat hoaxes such as "suckers and losers", among others. Early analyses on CNN indicate that the Regime Media are dissatisfied with Harris's performance. There are 12 days left to Election Day, and diminishing opportunities for the Regime Media to prop Harris up. 
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History Traveler
History Traveler
1 y

Late Bronze Age glass furnace, beads found in Italy
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Late Bronze Age glass furnace, beads found in Italy

A Late Bronze Age glassmaking furnace and thousands of vibrant, multi-colored beads have been unearthed at the site of Frattesina in northern Italy. The remains of a clay furnace, glassworking tools and glass objects date to 3,000 years ago, making this the earliest known glassmaking site in Europe. The earliest known glass dates to around the 24th century B.C. and is believed to have originated in Syria. The first large-scale production of glass was in Amarna, Egypt, during the reign of 18th Dynasty Pharaoh Akhenaten (1352-1336 B.C.). The composition of this ancient glass was soda- lime-silica glass made with an alkali that was likely plant ash. The plant ash resulted in high levels of potassium and magnesium oxides in the composition of the ancient glass. Chemical analysis of 2nd millennium B.C. glass from Mesopotamia and Mycenaean Greece has the same composition. The Frattesina glass is different. It is low in soda, calcium oxide and magnesium oxides, high in potassium oxide. They must have used a different alkali source. The Frattesina settlement was founded on the southern bank of the river Po about 25 miles from the Adriatic coast in the 12th century B.C. This location made it a major commercial hub of land, river and sea trade routes connecting transalpine Europe with the Mediterranean. A profusion of archaeological materials — imported goods (Alpine copper, Cornish tin, Baltic amber, north African elephant ivory, ostrich eggshells), evidence of large-scale craft production (bronze casting, antler/bone objects, ceramics, glass, products made from the imported raw materials), remains of cultivated plants and domesticated animals — attest to the rich diversity of its economy. From its founding until the early Iron Age (9th century B.C.), Frattesina received raw materials in trade, manufactured them into finished products and exported them over long-distance trade routes to central Europe, the Aegean and the eastern Mediterranean. This is unusual for the period, when workshops operated on a smaller scale and were dedicated to producing goods for local consumption. Interestingly, the business of Frattesina appears to have been business. There were houses where people lived, spun thread/yarn, made clothes, cooked, processed and preserved food. There are two cemeteries were in use for centuries, and the town itself was clearly planned, but there are no defensive walls typical of urban centers of its Greek, Etruscan and Italic contemporaries and the population was modest. Other settlements in the area were much larger in population and area even though none of them had so many workshops manufacturing such a variety of products. The remains of Frattesina were discovered in 1967, and the site has been excavated and investigated ever since. Evidence of glass working was first published in 1983 and later excavations discovered more glass. In 2022, an archaeological mission of Rome’s La Sapienza university undertook a new excavation in an area of Frattesina where evidence of glass production had previously been found. [The excavation uncovered] thousands of multicoloured glass beads have been brought to light, together with other glass objects, testifying to an extraordinary production activity destined for the national and international market. Compositional analyses documented that the production technique was different from that used in the eastern Mediterranean, thus demonstrating the ability of the artisans of Frattesina to rework complex technologies in an original way. The excavation has also uncovered a furnace that was most probably used for glass production and therefore, together with other finds (crucibles, glass ingots), testify to the great importance of this craft production. The furnace for glass production is to date the oldest known in Europe. In addition to the excavations, geophysical surveys (a technique that allows information to be obtained on the environment and on objects placed at a distance through a sensor) conducted by Wieke de Neef of the University of Bamberg and remote sensing surveys have clearly defined the extension, shape and internal organisation of the large village: the settlement of Frattesina extended over more than 25 hectares and occupied the right bank of a branch of the Po no longer existing (Po di Adria) with an organisation by blocks originally delimited by orthogonal canals. Within these blocks, hundreds of dwellings and production facilities were arranged in a very regular manner and with an equally regular orientation.
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YubNub News
1 y

The Geoeconomic Drivers Of SCO-BRICS Synergy
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The Geoeconomic Drivers Of SCO-BRICS Synergy

Indivisibility of security as envisaged by Russia-China amounts to the de facto application of the UN Charter. The result would be peace on a global level – and by implication the death knell to NATO.…
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YubNub News
1 y

Haunted by the Red Wave
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Haunted by the Red Wave

The year was 2022. The Democrats’ draconian Covid measures had never been worse, and the mood among Republicans was unmistakably bullish. This was the moment they had been waiting for: the big turn…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
1 y

It Is Time to Talk to North Korea
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It Is Time to Talk to North Korea

By any measure, Northeast Asia is becoming more dangerous. North Korea is expanding its nuclear arsenal and improving its missile force. The People’s Republic of China is doing little to enforce sanctions…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
1 y

Long- and Short-Term Economic Trends Spell Trouble for Harris
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Long- and Short-Term Economic Trends Spell Trouble for Harris

With about two weeks to go until Election Day, the prevailing feeling among Democratic strategists seems to be one of growing concern—and for good reason. The Democratic nominee, who has raised an unprecedented…
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

The Single Biggest Vulnerability in Your Cyber Security Is You
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The Single Biggest Vulnerability in Your Cyber Security Is You

You are the weakest link.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

Light Shaped Human Evolution, And It's Still Changing Us Today
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Light Shaped Human Evolution, And It's Still Changing Us Today

We're creatures of the Sun.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

Haunted by the Red Wave
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Haunted by the Red Wave

Politics Haunted by the Red Wave Republicans were feeling good this time two years ago, too. Credit: image via Getty Images The year was 2022. The Democrats’ draconian Covid measures had never been worse, and the mood among Republicans was unmistakably bullish. This was the moment they had been waiting for: the big turn toward freedom and their chance to deliver a resounding mandate against two years of psychotic fear-mongering from hypochondriac Blues all across America.  Kari Lake was destined to be the next governor of Arizona and Herschel Walker was going to become the new senator from Georgia. Tudor Dixon was going to stage an unlikely defeat of Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, Blake Masters was going to beat Mark Kelly to inherit John McCain’s Arizona senate seat, and Doug Mastriano was somehow going to sneak into the Pennsylvania governor’s mansion. Except none of it happened. The only MAGA Republican who carried that miserable night was the curious George Santos. The big GOP winners two years ago this November were the Trump critics Brian Kemp, Chris Sununu, and Ron DeSantis. Lake, who made it her mission to “drive a stake through the heart of the McCain machine,” lost Arizona by razor-thin margins after she openly taunted the key McCain voting bloc with repeated attacks on the late senator. Eying a 2024 senate seat, she would later attempt to walk back her ferocious attacks, but the damage had been done. In the words of McCain’s daughter Meghan: “NO PEACE, BITCH.” Masters championed many of the key tenets of Trumpism and paid for it dearly at the ballot box, where he lost by nearly 5 points to Kelly. The Washington Post labeled him the “worst candidate” of 2022. In Georgia, Walker’s candidacy was arguably more humiliating for Republicans. Not just because the fiercely pro-Trump candidate was convincingly beaten at the ballot box, but because it was revealed that the outspoken pro-life candidate allegedly pressured at least two women to get abortions in the past. It was the sort of hypocritical tale that has become all-too-common in the age of Trump. This year, Mark Robinson, a socially conservative firebrand and Republican candidate for governor of North Carolina, is embroiled in his own embarrassing porn site scandal that quieted the MAGA faithful. The whole charade could possibly drag down the Republican ticket and tilt North Carolina for Harris. Dixon never had a chance to win Michigan, but you wouldn’t have known it from the onslaught of “They can’t stop what’s coming!” posts scrawled on ? (then Twitter) daily in the lead-up to Election Day. She was torched by 11.  The MAGA favorite Doug Mastriano, who made no effort to find common ground with independent voters, single-handedly sunk the Republican ticket in Pennsylvania, losing by 14 points and making things inescapably difficult for the Republican senatorial candidate, television’s Dr. Oz, who was dogged by criticism that he just wasn’t MAGA enough. Oz lost to John Fetterman, a more extreme candidate who had suffered brain damage from a stroke on the campaign trail, by less than 5 points.  The Red Wave had become a nightmare. It’s worth remembering as we head into the final stretch of the 2024 presidential election cycle. The polls have never looked better for Trump. Republicans, for the first time since their walloping in 2022, are bullish again. Could the American electorate really rally behind Harris, a person who was hand-selected to lead the Democratic ticket by the same midwits running our government into the ground from behind the curtains on K and L street in Washington D.C.? If we take Trump at his word, maybe they can.  Speaking at the Detroit Economic Club on October 12, Trump gave perhaps the most honest assessment of the American electorate this century: “The real threat to democracy is stupid people.” Stupid politicians, stupid voters, stupid pollsters, and stupid pundits—it’s a big whirlpool of stupidity, and we’re all adrift in it.  Which isn’t to say we should abandon democracy, but it’s worth at least noting that until the votes are cast and counted, nothing is for certain. All the “it’s coming” tweets (and I’ve seen far too many given the ghosts of two Novembers ago) won’t carry Trump across the finish line. The voters will have to do that for him. The post Haunted by the Red Wave appeared first on The American Conservative.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

It Is Time to Talk to North Korea
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It Is Time to Talk to North Korea

Foreign Affairs It Is Time to Talk to North Korea The Biden-Harris diplomatic freeze is ineffective and dangerous. (Salma Bashir Motiwala/Shutterstock) By any measure, Northeast Asia is becoming more dangerous. North Korea is expanding its nuclear arsenal and improving its missile force. The People’s Republic of China is doing little to enforce sanctions against the North and might encourage war on the Korean peninsula if Beijing and Washington come to blows over Taiwan.  Russia has revived its relationship with the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, making the latter all but impervious to sanctions. Moscow also might surreptitiously aid the latter’s nuclear and missile programs in return for artillery shells and more for the war in Ukraine. Finally, no one is talking on the peninsula. In theory that’s Pyongyang’s fault, since it has refused to engage. On other hand, the U.S., as well as the conservative Yoon government in Seoul, won’t discuss what the North desires to discuss. Hence deadlock. The Obama administration was noted for its policy of “strategic patience,” which essentially meant kicking the can down the road while hoping that nothing too bad happened. North Korean provocations risked war in 2010, but Seoul eschewed military retaliation. President Donald Trump threatened “fire and fury” in response to the North’s missile tests, before turning toward summitry. After his second meeting with Kim Jong Un collapsed in Hanoi in February 2019, Pyongyang steadily reduced its contact with Washington and Seoul, most dramatically destroying the inter-Korean liaison office built by the South in Kaesong. President Joe Biden, who views himself as an old hand at diplomacy, entered office apparently determined to do nothing. To be sure, he offered to talk but gave no indication that there was much to negotiate other than denuclearization, which Kim ostentatiously rejected. The latter surely surprised no one. Few Korea analysts believe that the DPRK would yield weapons that cost so much to develop and provide the one sure deterrent to U.S. military action against Pyongyang. Alas, North Korea’s response to the Republic of Korea has been even tougher, returning only obloquy to President Yoon Suk Yeol’s overtures. With Seoul playing a secondary role to Washington, Kim evidently sees little gain from engaging Yoon. It is one thing to be skeptical of Trump’s diplomatic style. It is quite another to reject his search for a new path forward. At the end of the Obama administration U.S.–DPRK relations were at a dead end. Trump’s first year looked extraordinarily dangerous, with Secretary of Defense James Mattis later relating that he slept in his clothes to be ready for late-night North Korean action. In this world Trump agreed to a summit with Kim. By and large Washington’s Korean policy community was horrified. Even though virtually no policymaker believed that Kim would negotiate away his nuclear program, most opposed seeking arms control agreements short of denuclearization. Despite their consistent past failure they insisted that the U.S. government continue to follow their strategy. Trump’s decision to meet the North Korean leader caused a neuralgic reaction among many analysts.  This was evidently the view for the incoming Biden administration. For instance, at the November 20, 2019 Democratic presidential debate candidate Biden responded to a question on North Korea: “Well, first of all, I’d go back in making sure we had the alliances we had before since he became president. He has absolutely ostracized us from South Korea. He has given North Korea everything they wanted, creating the legitimacy by having a meeting with Kim Jong Un, who’s a thug—although he points out that I’m a rabid dog who needs to be beaten with a stick, very recently was his comment.” This comment was inaccurate on all counts. Biden reiterated his policy which amounted to allies first, irrespective of American interests. He wrongly suggested that the U.S. and ROK were alienated: South Koreans generally didn’t like Trump, but the relationship continued. Kim was a thug, but Trump rejected his demands, which caused the rupture. Moreover, Biden quickly warmed up to a similarly brutal tyrant, Mohammed bin Salman. And viewing even a meeting as a concession betrayed the hubris that continues to undermine US foreign policy. In fact, it is more important to talk to one’s adversaries than one’s friends. Candidate Kamala Harris has done no better. She declared, There are no concessions to be made. They—[Trump] has traded a photo-op for nothing. He has abandoned the—by shutting down the operations with South Korea for the last year-and-a-half, so those operations, which should be— and those exercises, which should be active, because they are in our best national security, the relationship that we have with Japan, he has in every way compromised our ability to have any influence on slowing down or at least having a check and balance on North Korea’s nuclear program. Her comment was, if anything, even less well-grounded than Biden’s. In return for the halt in military exercises, Kim suspended nuclear and long-range missile tests. He abandoned that pledge only in December 2019, after the failure of the Hanoi summit and breakdown in the bilateral relationship. That was more than the Obama administration gained in eight years. Under Trump both Washington’s relations with Tokyo and his relations with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe were quite robust. Finally, U.S. policy prior to Trump’s election had failed to noticeably slow the North’s nuclear and missile programs, which accelerated after Kim succeeded his father in December 2011. Five years later, Mark Fitzpatrick of the International Institute for Strategic Studies wrote, “North Korea is the biggest blemish on President Barack Obama’s nonproliferation record. Pyongyang’s four nuclear tests and more than 50 missile and rocket launches during the past eight years have given it a capacity to rain nuclear warheads on its regional adversaries and a good start to be able soon to reach the U.S. homeland.” Alas, the Democratic Party has learned nothing. The 2024 party platform spouted innocuous boilerplate about Biden and demagogic tales about Trump:  Biden’s leadership, the United States hosted a historic trilateral Camp David Summit with Japan and South Korea, enshrined the Washington Declaration with South Korea, and extended trilateral deterrence discussions with Japan. … President Biden has also worked alongside our allies to counter the threat posed by North Korea’s destabilizing development of nuclear and missile programs, in violation of multiple UN Security Council resolutions. By bolstering our trilateral cooperation with South Korea and Japan, we are maintaining peace and stability in the Korean Peninsula and beyond. Trump took a different approach in the region, embarrassing the United States on the world stage including by flattering and legitimizing Kim Jong Un, exchanging ‘love letters’ with the North Korean dictator. Trump directly threatened our valued ally South Korea with the withdrawal of U.S. troops stationed there over a trade dispute. President Biden has and will stand by our allies, especially South Korea, against North Korea’s provocations, including its illegal build-up of missile capabilities. The Washington Declaration was a desperate attempt to convince South Koreans that future U.S. presidents would defend Seoul from North Korean attack despite the risk of nuclear incineration of American cities. Unsurprisingly, many South Koreans are not convinced that is so, and the debate is growing over the possibility of creating a South Korean nuclear deterrent. Trump promoted the U.S.-ROK-Japan relationship. Although he failed to win an agreement with Kim on nuclear arms, the latter offered to close Yongbyon. Biden achieved nothing involving the DPRK. Trump suggested withdrawing U.S. troops because he believed the South was unnecessarily dependent on Washington for its defense, a sensible observation given the ROK’s vast economic, technological, and diplomatic edge over the North. Unfortunately, to “stand by our allies” just means to prepare for war, which Trump did as well as Biden. In short, the Democratic Party appears beholden to a failed status quo. It can argue that Trump performed no better. But at least he recognized the necessity of negotiating, and therefore tried a new approach. For that he deserves praise. Indeed, the imperative for negotiation and a serious attempt to freeze or at least slow the North Korean nuclear program grows ever more urgent. An agreement might remain out of reach, but a few more “love letters” and an occasional summit would be a small price to pay for lowering tensions on the Korean peninsula even a little. On this score, at least, Biden and Harris deserve an “F.” Although the North pointedly rejected Trump’s claim that Kim missed him, the former president could hardly do worse than his successor. And his record suggests that he might do better. The post It Is Time to Talk to North Korea appeared first on The American Conservative.
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