To: burzum
Could this simply be a case of the Commies blaming everything bad that happens on counter-revolutionary elements? Maybe the towers were of shoddy construction and just fell down on their own. Maybe the towers did not fall down and all and the reason there is no electricity is because nobody is generating electricity.
4 posted on
09/14/2007 2:38:38 AM PDT by
gridlock
(I Represent Climate Change!)
To: gridlock
They needed more prison labor
5 posted on
09/14/2007 2:40:03 AM PDT by
AppyPappy
(If you aren't part of the solution, there is good money to be made prolonging the problem.)
To: gridlock
Given that North Korea is on the point of starving the people because of internal problems, I would agree.
Maybe a foreign operative might go ashore, and cause failures that the government might not be able to hide from the people, and help topple this corrupt regime...
6 posted on
09/14/2007 2:56:51 AM PDT by
topher
(Let us return to old-fashioned morality - morality that has stood the test of time...)
To: gridlock
Either that or poor maintenance practices combined with the effects of heavy weather. We just had a major highway bridge collapse in Minnesota due to this. Heavily corroded fasteners could easily sheer off if subjected to moderate to high monsoon winds
The DPRK security service is probably searching for subversive elements in all the wrong places. Well, as long as they are out chasing imagined saboteurs, they are not tormenting the oppressed people of North Korea, the poor wretches.
9 posted on
09/14/2007 3:34:08 AM PDT by
Captain Rhino
( Peace based on respected strength is truly peace; peace based on weakness is ignoble slavery)
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