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Thursday, March 31, 2011

North Korea and Forex

Currency is a funny thing in that it can be influenced by many, many separate events not just those we typically associate with the cheaper or finance. Wars while destructive in nature can (and often do) sustain the cheaper of the nation that is waging the war in question. Recently North Korea attacked South Korea, a nation with close political ties to the United States who has sent a naval destroyer into the ocean near the Korean peninsula.

Since this event the United States Dollar received a boost on the Forex currency replacement and while it will not last in the long term (unless there turns out to be a war) it is in fact an opening for a trader to take benefit of in the short term. Pairing the Usd with a currency such as the Cad which is relatively carport at the occasion is a good idea for a few pips due to the fact that unless there is a war in Korea and the Us is complicated the Usd will drop in value due to a correction.

News North Korea

At gift many other nations have taken an interest in North Korea such as China and Japan so the likelihood of an all war on the Korean peninsula is unlikely. Getting in now while the situation is good is key in turning over healthy short term profits since a revising in the Forex currency replacement is guaranteed for the dollar if a war does not occur, peace can also be very good for business.

North Korea and Forex

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Jesus, Lord Over All

My western friends may be disappointed to know that I do not believe democracy to be the purest form of government. In its misunderstood form, the "rule of the people" does not exist. All the citizen cannot rule. They merely designate who will rule. If you think you are in charge, try a late cost to the Irs or parking in a spot designated "no parking."

But even representative rule, true democracy as we know it, which we have experienced so beneficially for these 200 plus years in America, is not the favorite way. Not for me. Corruption enters into systems like these, verily because they are run by the people, not in spite of that fact.

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No, give me an iron-fisted ruler.

One will will quickly punish wickedness. But let the definition of wickedness be properly spelled out.

One who will reward righteousness. But let righteousness also have its proper definition.

One who cannot be toppled by some greater power. One who is unquestioned in his right and capacity to rule.

Give me a exquisite monarch, who can determine all disputes with justice. One from whose lips will drop exquisite wisdom, but from whose hands will flow exquisite compassion.

You say, There is no such one. I say, There is. King Jesus , Messiah of Israel and of all believing gentiles too, meets the requirements I have listed. His reign of 1000 years will be the very prelude to eternity. The earth awaits Him. His citizen elect Him, but He was elected by the Father for this very position before the worlds began. He shall rule, even though the "people" of earth effort to attack Him down .

So in speaking so often against the rule of oppressive tyrants on earth, one in particular, we must remember to oppose them on the right grounds. It is not because they are "all powerful" or "unopposed" or a "totalitarian" leader. Jesus Himself will be all of that and more.

We are against them because they take from the hearts of men their right to pick King Jesus as their Lord. They supplant Jesus with their own ways and system and songs. Rather than allowing their citizen to palpate the fact that a nation is blessed whose God is Jehovah, they show the world that a nation without this God of Gods is cursed. In this they have been a considerable revealer of the truth of God but their end shall come, all rulers and nations that despise the Holy One.

All hail, King Jesus! Lord over all the lords of Earth!

Jesus, Lord Over All

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International Blackmailing

We kind of knew this from the 1970s through the 1980s, or at least we talked about it back then, that international blackmailing would become a reality, if we did not put it in check at that moment, and we did not put it in check, and still we have not. It now is a reality, like the Eu is now a reality, in the 70s it was loose talk, the ten-nations now are something like 26, but my point is this. All the third world countries have to do is starve its people, and get a few nuclear devices, and blackmailing is next. Like North Korea does, and Iran does, and Pakistan did, kept their habitancy dumb, keep them as followers, take over the country like Burma's generals have, and Zimbabwe has, and all those other countries that get Care Packages, keep the money and buy nuclear capability, and tell the United Nations "Look at our poor habitancy we can't feed them," and inquire you get what you want, and ordinarily you get it. If you don't mention the big bomb, and you will no ifs ands or buts get it, it's just a matter of a process called international blackmailing. Now they can make a deal with the international community: pay us off, or else! So we send them free food, billions, and free oil, billions, and now the got the best of two worlds, and in essence didn't lift a finger for a thing. They feed their armies now with this free deliver items, and send a few packages down the road to the poor: their priority is to build their arsenals, not feed peasants, like Palestine does, and the terrorists in the hills of Colombia, they could care less about feeding the hungry civilizing folk, so we send more and more food. It is all blackmail, and it works, so why convert things. And this new century has all these human right groups, and the news media to start a fire if we don't.

Point two, it all doesn't stop there, we holler we do not want our tax money to go to these regimes in Africa that are using the money to feed their armies, and nuclear ambitions, as we have done in Asia, but the good guys from the United Nations, and the so called representatives of the world, the Human ownership groups, yell at America in particular, if not directly, through the Un, and say "How undesirable and wicked you are with those folks, they are dying by the hundreds, no thousands!" So how did this come about? That is a side they do not look at. It is simple; they are killing their own habitancy with the food they do not have to buy, which they use for weapons. They take (as in Africa) the white man's farms, give it to the black man, and he sits on it like a king, and does nothing, and after a while, it decapitates, like it has in Cuba, which I was there a few years back, and all those once lovely swimming pools, and mansions, are no better than shanties now. Good job Castro. So the money we give to the poor countries, they buy weapons with to kill their own kind, while the human ownership groups run to the Us, or Eu, or Un, to save the day, so we can send more food or money to sustain the killing soldiers. I am not sure what side these groups are on, but I do know this, Satan is working overtime with planting unintelligent seeds in their heads.

News North Korea

We seem to say little about the blackmail aspect of these called third world countries, the poor boys down the black, and in most cases the reason they are poor is not because they have to be, but their government wants them to be, because they'd get their heads chopped off by the leaders, if they try jump over the poverty line, it is only allowed for a few to do that. If I was a king of one of these countries, I'd love the Human ownership groups to death, love them morning and night, even send them a free hotel pass, at any five star hotel in the country, if no ifs ands or buts they have one, they get their bread buttered by these folks.

I'll put it in a nutshell; we are enabling other countries to embezzle, to take our tax monies and misappropriate those funds, to kill and starve and build up for World War Three. I can't make it any plainer than that.

What is the solution? I'll say it not so sweet, but up front, and you will not want to hear it, so don't read this part then, but this part is the problem, and we are going to get rid of some of the problems right now: no one wants to hear reality, they want to live in a nutshell. Anyhow, let Israel bomb Iran, and that will take care of the nuclear issue one, therefore an additional one ten-years, and they have sufficient oil to feed those starving masses if they want to. If not, well, let their president do what he does best, boast.

Second, North Korea, don't give them a dime, let them take care of their own, if the habitancy of North Korea want a dictatorship, let them have it, it's called, generate a revolution, like we did in America and fought for our freedom. In most cases, in governments, you get what you deserve, what you've supported. If the habitancy are not willing to fight for it, then perhaps it is not worth fighting for, let the bad guys do what they've been doing, as long as it does not melt out into other societies. As far as the nukes go, blow them up. They are not going to hit South Korea, they may be strange, but they are not that stupid, they will lose the 'goat and the rope.'

Zimbabwe, let's not have a stroke over it, half of Africa is like Zimbabwe. If they can afford to bring in ship loads of arms, they can buy their own bread. If they do not want to buy bread for the masses, then we got a choice, and it should not be blackmail. Go in and dethrone the king, or pay the piper for the rest of our lives, or his, or just let him do what he does best; chop heads until man chops his off.

The world is getting full of these so called Humpty Dumpy's who will fall sooner or later off their high towering walls. I for one do not wish to pay taxes to keep Egypt afloat, or Palestine armed, or to pacify the Human Right's folks.

International Blackmailing

Thanks To : todays world news headlines

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Eyewitnesses Of Christian Persecution, Nk

We who speak of Christian persecution within the Dprk are not guessing or exaggerating. Eyewitnesses see it all. Here is today's variety of quotes for you to eye and reconsider for serious prayer. The speakers are all North Korean refugees who have come out in the last few years. They are part of a variety from a free online article .

"My relative brought a Bible from China and gave it to some close friends. But the rumor spread...the police heard about it. His whole house was taken to the prison camps... I don't think they will ever be released."

News North Korea

"There was even a case of a child (16 years old)... They made that kid stand on the platform, in front of gathered parents...There, the kid's whole house was arrested in order to show an example... That kid had learned whole Bible Scriptures by heart and that was the fancy he was arrested..."

"A person was shot to death...I asked why... And they said, 'A person from Musan took a Bible from South Korean [church leaders]."

We used to talk about how there are so many Bibles conferrence dust in American homes. Now it is sad to say that Bibles are similarly unneeded in many churches. In this electronic age it has been discovered that verses standard to the aid can be flashed onto a screen. Gone is the fumbling straight through Bibles trying to catch up with the preacher. Gone is the blurring of various translations giving population fits trying to effect along. Gone also is the bringing of God's Book into God's House.

Don't I sound old today! Well there's no doubt I have seen much younger days. But there's also no doubt that some of this talk about the good old days... Is totally true. A church without a Bible is heading in the wrong direction. Just ask a North Korean.

Eyewitnesses Of Christian Persecution, Nk

My Links : todays world news headlines

development Money With Current Events

In a world of approximately seven billion people, "current events" happen all the time. Sometimes they happen so swiftly it's impossible to try to take benefit of it and monetize it. But if you can stay in the money-making mind-set when you're reading or watching the news, you could in effect grab a new stream of passive income.

For example, Iran is in the news this week because they are testing their missiles. North Korea was in the news last year for doing the same thing. If you happened to run a blog about missiles or North Korea last year, you probably big boost of traffic for a couple weeks. The same should be true today if you have a website about missiles and / or Iran. But that traffic will probably be short-lived (ask the guy who runs the missile / North Korea blog), so it might be best to "capture" a current event.

News North Korea

What do I mean by "capture" an event? For example, the legendary George Carlin died last month. If I was a huge fan of George Carlin's (which I am), I could register GeorgeCarlinMemorial.com (which is available at the time of this writing) and put together a bunch of videos and pictures to remember him. A cynic might say you're trying to make money from his death, but that's just cynical because you wouldn't be exploiting his death. Even though more population will be using the keyword "memorial" when they quest for George Carlin.

That is just one example. Other would be, say, the Iraq war. If you were to land the domain name IraqWar.com right when the news broke, you could probably retire today.

Even though big things happen every day, you can't ordinarily build an whole blog around that event. When you capture an event, it has to be big and you have to do it quick. Otherwise you wont get the key domain name, or that event will soon me forgotten by the world.

development Money With Current Events

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Tuesday, March 29, 2011

For North Korea - Articles Of War

North Korea may not have heard of the name "A.W. Tozer" ? Christian author, pastor. Man of deep insights. Flesh-bashing. Great man of God who left this life in the same year as Jfk and Cs Lewis, 1963. But he serves as an example of the kind of man needed to get the job done over there.

I heard a tape of him this morning on the way to work. You can believe me or not, but he said he was not as excited about the advent of Jesus as some of those around him. He wasn't fearing for his salvation but was well aware of his shortcomings and believed that Christians too must be judged before Christ. There, rewards and punishments alike will be handed out as our life is in characterize before God. He said he had simply wasted too much time in his life and feared to have to give an inventory of it. Yes, A.W. Tozer. Now, I have had those same thoughts, but with me they are infinitely more true. How about you?

News North Korea

As the battle for souls continues on in the world, to what do we give our time? I talked about the war exertion in other article. Now (and this should have come first) the motivation for war, the "articles of war" if I may. Here are some Scriptures that point to Christians fighting. In the context of my ongoing mesages about North Korea, Nk workers are called to fight for their own personal holiness and for the life and salvation of a nation. It is an awesome struggle. Yet I do not believe I have even convinced myself of how awesome it of course is. I still eat too much and pray too little. I still complain too much and praise too little. I still enjoy this world too much and the next too little. And I forget about my suffering brothers all too often.

You must do your own confessing, but here are some "articles of war", admonitions from God's Word, to help get us back on track if we need it.

Article 1. Go, preach. Mark 16:15. Go into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature. The war is going on until that is accomplished.

Article 2. Fight. I Timothy 6:12. Fight the good fight of faith. Until all believe, the fighting must go on.

Article 3. Stay free. Ii Timothy 2:4. No one engaged in warfare entangles himself with the affairs of this life. You simply cannot be a warrior and a couch potato at the same time. Turn the world off! There's a war going on!

Article 4. Stay connected. Ephesians 6:11. Put on the whole armor of God. This isn't your war. He just needs loan of your body for awhile.

The battle is the Lord's, not only to fight but to win. Let's recognize with Him and make it ours, too.

For North Korea - Articles Of War

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Teaching English In South Korea

In an era wherein globalization is more important than technology itself, communication is a goal.

The English language is used today by most European nations, Australia, North America, as well as key parts in Asia. It is the native tongue of formal firm transactions as well as the dialect of global communication. It may be spoken in distinct accents, written in distinct ways, but the essence of being understood remains within the language. Globalization is a mission we all face--the opportunities that await us in gaining greater chances of being understood in most transactions be they firm or leisure, are many, thus the quality to effectively review is crucial. Although most countries use English as the secondary medium of communication, it is just as important for non-English speaking nations to be well-known with most words and their usage; good communication benefits us good relationships after all.

News North Korea

When there is a challenge laid out, there is an opportunity carved as well: the migration of teachers who speak fluent English and dream to teach other non-English speaking countries should not be taken as a "threat" in one's country but a quick help for those who struggle with the language. Teachers have their way of getting the message through and they may even enhance the previous English studying one has had - foreigner or not. Foreign teachers are blessings and they are exactly what South Korea needs today.

If teaching English in South Korea has not occurred in your mind just yet, remember that South Korea is home to the many cultures everybody has ever known. It is only important to teach its students with the important aspects of oral and written English and to guide them accordingly on how to be fluent, but most of all to be understood. South Korea may be the home of great technological findings along with Japan, China, and the Philippines but it has only industrialized a small percentage of its citizen with fluency in English. The country, therefore, is in crusade of extra teachers who can educate South Korean children with satisfactory English to put in order them for the positive demands of globalization.

South Korea has been through varied political conquests and this has led its educational systems to follow spoton methods and standardized teaching. The spoton use of its native Korean language has made South Korea unaware of the extra benefits of the English language especially of the fact of being one with the other countries who speak it. Teaching English in South Korea helps in lessening the communication barriers; there will be now higher chances of being understood in Asian countries as well as those countries which use English as the secondary tongue.

Communication is truly a challenge teachers in Non-English speaking countries are facing today but it is also an opportunity for those who have grown with the English language running in their systems. In countries which rarely use the English language, there is a dream to be understood by those who use English as a medium of studying and career. This is certainly a teacher's opportunity to shine in the Halls of English Learning.

It is a right to be known, to be heard, and to be understood. Be a proponent of change in a country which needs it - teach in South Korea!

Teaching English In South Korea

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Monday, March 28, 2011

Evidence From Daniel - Antiochus is the Anti-Christ

Antiochus Epiphanes is the Anti-Christ, not just a "type"? To the evidence in Daniel:

First the "gap" idea . As in Daniel's visions, as in the 490 years prophecy, lesson 11 is entertaining along smoothly when suddenly we jump thousands of years and wind up nearly in the Millennium. Do you remember when you first read this 11th chapter, knowing nothing of history? Did it not seem to you a smooth article that told the life story of an old king? The translators blocked our mental by production a lesson division at the end of lesson 11. We went on glibly to 12, mental a new story was starting. But it was the same event. The Tribulation, the judgment, the resurrections, tied irrevocably to the story of the old king.

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Troubling. But the scholars assured us that two kings were being described, one that just looked like the other one, but was a dissimilar man. But what if it is the same man?

Historically we know that Antiochus did fill the role of king of the North. The Spirit has brought us to the geographical portions of the understanding, and we must stay with that. He is called a king in verse 27. He is never called in the prior section "king of the North", just a king. So why should he not still be called that in verse 36? Could not the Spirit, the angel, the prophet, have been clear with us that a turn in identity was intended?

Is there a change? Or is there an exaggerated ability of the same old Antiochus, who is troubled with the Jews and their God? Antiochus, the first king in history to assume and announce his own deity on the coarse coinage of his day. Antiochus, a madman who cares about power and asset and money. Is he not the same, yet empowered differently from verse 36? Why must he be a dissimilar man?

Finally in verse 40 "the king of the North" is mentioned. It is potential to read this verse in two dissimilar ways. One could say Egypt attacks "the king", then the (same) king, that is "the king of the North" attacks Egypt. Or one could dream that by this time in history, the "king" (antichrist) has graduated from king of the "North" to world dictator, and both the South and the North charge him, but to no avail, for he is Satan-empowered.

Yes, now, either the title "North" applies or not, he is acting, not as one of the four original horns, but as the "fifth" or "little" horn. It is not until "the latter time of their [the four horns'] kingdom" that the "king" with fierce features arises, the exiguous horn.

He has arisen in our text now. Same man. Re-grown. Re-planted. Dead and resurrected. Infested with Satan himself. Of the fourth but the fifth. In Revelation, the "eighth" but one of the seven. New, yet old. Never been here before, not like this, but lived in a similar body centuries before. King of the North, but maybe graduated to King over all. The old "manifested one" seeking to be "God manifest in the flesh" as the Enemy he hates so passionately, our Lord Jesus Christ.

The enigma has been with us all these centuries. They mystery itself helps to solve the mystery. The fact that it seems so unexplainable but sits there unchanging should tell us to accept it like it is. God Himself, knowing how difficult these things are for us to understand, could have thought about explained the "gap", the repeat of history, the preservation of lives, but He allowed the mystery to remain underground in this text and that, assuring that most will not solve the riddle. Most will not even care.

Evidence From Daniel - Antiochus is the Anti-Christ

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North Korea - Getting Out

Here is a very modern photo of how things in North Korea are changing while staying the same. "The same" is the constant desire of habitancy who examine the truth to get out of North Korea. What's developing into a news story is the organized enterprise that is evolving to get them out.

"Planned escapes" are manufacture not a few brokers financially comfortable, even if the enterprise is a bit risky. Any there's a whole range of prices, from a allocation plan 00.00 to a super deluxe leave that runs about 5 times that much. Now, the low-cost exit involves some difficult river-crossings, pedestrian travel, and even any weeks in a Thai immigration jail. But at least you're out. Free from Kim. The high-end plan will get you a forged Chinese passport, and an airplane ride from Beijing to Seoul. The whole ordeal can be over in three weeks!

News North Korea

Though one hears regularly of crack-downs and tighter security, this description explains that the bigger turn is the conduct of bribe-hungry guards. The word has got 'round that seeing the other way is a great formula of having a exiguous extra spending money, and that's beyond doubt hard to come by, by any legal means in Kim-land.

It was the Christians who led the way out of North Korea, thanks be to God. They did it out of love and serious compassion, risking their lives only because of the workings of the Spirit within them. But others caught the idea and decided it would be a great way to make a living. Now there are more paid than unpaid "rescuers."

The description of the refugees has changed over the years too. A trickle of mostly 30-40 year old males with "important" jobs was the traditional flow. For them it was not such a difficult thing to get out. A total of 41 such habitancy made the journey from North to South Korea in 1995. But the numbers have grown exponentially since then. With agents galore willing to help, the count rose to over 2,000 in 2006 alone. And there are more women and children now than men.

Not everyone uses an agent. There may be 100,000 self-led North Koreans hiding in China waiting for their breakthrough to the South, or somewhere safe.

For those who do buy their way out, there is all the time man willing to take their money. There are scams. But ordinarily the men come straight through on their promises. And no one is claiming this is easy money. Some get caught. A old Nk military officer who defected in '99 says the "policy is for 100 percent operation of those caught helping habitancy to defect. I personally saw any such executions." Of course, citizens trying to leave are accused of treason. 5 years in prison with all the together with horrors, is potential for them .

Even those who reach the South have a serious issue to deal with: guilt over those left behind. In fact, families of escapees are quite often imprisoned. One such lady heard that "her mother, father, and sister were forced from their homes by the authorities and relocated to a farming area in the interior." She then hired brokers to find them, but they too were arrested. She says, "You cannot know how heartbreaking it is to leave your family in this way."

We will not judge them. We plainly cannot comprehend... We will pray that the hypothesize for all this sorrow and grief will soon be taken away. And that North Koreans will continue to be pointed Upward as they are directed outward.

Facts from above description gleaned from a modern Msnbc story.

North Korea - Getting Out

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Tefl Jobs in Asia

With voyage becoming cheaper and the world getting smaller, it might be tempting to think that there are no new experiences to be had. Well, we have news for you: this absolutely isn't the case in Asia! It's one part of the world that has managed to keep the flame of its antique traditions burning brightly, despite its gleaming, modern side. Its history, diversity and great respect for tradition are surrounded by the things that Asia is supreme for. There's also an plenty of sights worth seeing: the Great Wall of China, the Taj Mahal, Sunkakuwan Bay, the Tubbataha Reef, Mt.Kinabalu and the industrial hubbub of Tokyo are just the tip of the iceberg!

Though it is a veritable feast for the eyes, Asia is much more than a traveler destination. With so many provocative things to see and perceive it's no wonder that population flock to Asia, but you can still find areas untouched by the traveler boom.

News North Korea

Working in Asia will give you a wholly dissimilar perspective, as you're not just going to lie on the beach (although you'll be forgiven for relaxing by the sea on your days off!). Rural areas are often less-visited and are also where English teachers are scarcest, so you'll see a way of life entirely removed from your own as well as some striking scenery. In the major cities, living surrounded by the population you're teaching will give you a chance to try your hand at the local language as well as seeing all from the best street food, to the best place to buy a Kimono and the best place to hear traditional Sitar playing!

Culture

Not only does Asia have the largest store for English teachers, it's well huge (breathe in...): Afghanistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Brunei, Burma, Cambodia, China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Japan, Jordan, Kazakhstan, North Korea, South Korea, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan, Laos, Lebanon, Malaysia, Maldives, Mongolia, Myanmar, Nepal, Oman, Pakistan, Philippines, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Syria, Taiwan, Tajikistan, Thailand, Turkey, Turkmenistan, United Arab Emirates, Uzbekistan, Vietnam, Yemen... Phew!

With so many countries, it's no wonder that cultural diversity is one of the things Asia is so well known for! From riding an elephant in Sri Lanka, to fishing with the locals in Mongolia, sipping green tea in China and surfing the waves in Taiwan, in any place is open to exploration!

Educational standard

Asia countries are famed for their advances in mathematics and medicine, hundreds of years before the West began to develop, and many countries in Asia are still very forward-thinking. Japan and China have experienced massive economic growth and instruction is thought about a vitally important part of maintaining prosperity, with English language as an important part of both lower and higher levels of education. Countries such as South Korea are enhancing instruction and emphasising the point of the English language and the use of modern technology. In fact, they were the first country to furnish high speed internet way to primary, secondary and high schools!

Unforunately, some poorer areas haven't benefitted from the industrial success of the cities and when an instruction is costly it is all too often forgone. Kerala is the only Indian state to have achieved in any place near full literacy in traditional education, while Bihar struggles with less than half. Studying English is hugely useful in these poorer areas, but many have to rely on volunteer work.

Teaching opportunities

The most popular areas for English teaching are Taiwan, Thailand, Japan, China, South Korea and Vietnam. Increasing populations and Increasing economies have created a high query for the English language and the growing middle classes view instruction as significant for both children and adults alike, so you'll have a wide range of pupils! There's also a great range of places to teach in, along with traditional schools, secondary schools, language schools and inexpressive schools.

With their Increasing request for retrial to English teachers some countries, have tightened up entry requirements. Japan, Taiwan and Thailand are surrounded by those where it is now a visa requirement to have a degree if you want to teach English. If you're volunteering, it may not necessarily be an issue but one thing's for sure: any paid work requires a work or working holiday visa, so doing your research is worthwhile.

The Indian subcontinent offers less pay but lots of enthusiasm and appreciation for your hard work. Though paid opportunities can be little to the more affluent areas, poorer countries have no less to offer culturally and the perceive is rewarding enough in itself!

Facilities

Accommodation in Asia can be as various as the climate, which ranges from glorious sunshine to chilly snow capped peaks. Wealthy countries have higher standards of room which also reflects the cost of living. Japan is famously high-priced but the placements are normally well paid: Us00 per month on average. Homestays and shared room are kinder to your budget and are more likely to be find when working in the South, where pay is less but so is the cost of living. When a meals costs as as little as 50p, there's not much room for complaint!

Tefl Jobs in Asia

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In North Korea - A Man And A Woman

"Refugees International" went into Northeast China a few years back with the definite intent of seeing and interviewing refugees arrival out of North Korea. Their stories lack the earmarks of what we would call "great" storytelling. Deliberately. It was their purpose just to take the facts down and pass them on to the West. Following, in my own words, is the true story I gleaned from one of these interviews. Following the "lackluster" style of reporting used by Refugees International, I simply call these 2 persons "a man and a woman", knowing that the facts themselves will stir hearts.

The story I tell, by the way, is shared for the sole purpose of motivating praying population to do what they do best.

News North Korea

The "man" was in the North Korean army, and was discharged in 1997. When he went home he found there were no jobs. He moved to Musan, in northeast North Korea, heard of the flow of refugees into China, and joined it. In 3 months he was caught and sent back. Ten days in a Chongjin prison. Escape. Back to China. 'Tis a well-known tale, though not as often thought about to be a part of the "protected" military's existence.

1998. Chinese crackdown on North Korean refugees troops him to move to isolation in the mountains.

"The woman," also North Korean, comes to China in 2001 with an uncle who promises to find her a husband. The man and the woman are introduced one day. Married the next. She joins him in his mountain hideaways.

August, 2002. Husband is in a nearby settlement obtaining food when he is arrested by Chinese police and once more sent back to North Korea, without his wife. The wife is afraid and asks permission to live in the house of the boss of the shelter where they have been staying. Permission granted, but person reports her, she is arrested and likewise deported. It is October.

In prison she gives birth. Her hometown population hear of her ordeal and bribe officers to issue her.

One definite note. There are so many prisoners this second time nearby for the man, that he reports things have lightened up. There simply are not sufficient enforcers to make life miserable for everyone. The "light" version is a cell 5 quadrate meters. Containing 40 people. They kneel and cannot move. They must sleep in that position.

His wife even gave birth in that position.

We cannot imagine what the more difficult version was like.

The man wants to go to South Korea, he tells the interviewer. But he knows it will be very hard. He says that population who try to go to South Korea are sent somewhere else and they are killed. He says that the first examine they ask you when you are deported to North Korea is, "Have you been to church?" Those that say "Yes" will be killed right away or sent to a prison camp for life.

What is his plan now? He says, "Surviving day by day."

These things are difficult for us to hear. All we can do is keep listening to what the Spirit is saying to the Church. For God has a plan too. It seems He is unconcerned, un-moved. But in all things He will be glorified somehow. We know for sure that we must pray. Others will want to find ways to share materially or even go. But let us do something!

In North Korea - A Man And A Woman

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Will Israel assault Iran's Nuclear Sites?

In 1981 Israelis bombed a French-built nuclear plant near Iraq's capital, Baghdad. Prime minister Menachem Begin ordered the strike because Israel believed it was designed to make nuclear weapons to destroy Israel. U.S. Made F-15 bombers and F-16 fighters destroyed the Osirak reactor 18 miles south of Baghdad.

You can read more details of the Israeli strike on Iraq at: http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/june/7/newsid_3014000/3014623.stm. Here is part of the valid statement of the Israeli Government: "The atomic bombs which that reactor was capable of producing whether from enriched uranium or from plutonium, would be of the Hiroshima size. Thus a mortal danger to the habitancy of Israel progressively arose."

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We read of hidden plans made by the Israelis to strike Iran at http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2089-1522978,00.html. I didn't know they had plans until I started to write this article. I was just guessing. But evidently Israel has plans and the United States has no plans to stop them.

The contingency is that International efforts must fail before any such strike takes place. From past history, I doubt that Israel will listen to any such rhetoric. I think they will strike while the Americans in Iraq form a buffer in the middle of Israel and Iran. That is my principles and I'm sticking to it.

In light of Iran's president's, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, remarks that Israel should be wiped off the map and the major maintain that he received by his followers on the last Friday of the fasting month of Ramadan when he said his remarks were "just" and that the annotation by world leaders did not "have any validity," microscopic doubt is left in my mind that Iran will continue its nuclear weapons programs and that Israel will not allow that to happen. See http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/4384264.stm.

If Israel does attack, what will happen? Well,I don't think that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad will sit on his thumbs. He might invade Iraq, risking his army just to cause as much misery to Americans as he perhaps can. He might think like Dick Cheney that the Iraqis will welcome his soldiery and a great Jihad battle will raise his stakes in the Moslem world.

Cheney was dead wrong but Mahmoud Ahmadinejad could be lucky. A past war in the middle of Moslems may not be view to be as negative as a past war in the middle of our crusading armies and Moslems.

Some experts should chime in here. What do I know for sure?

But I did know that Dick Cheney was whistling Dixie when he though the Americans would be greeted by loving arms. Did he well think that Bush War I was a great success to the Iraqis? We bombed the hell out of their cities, destroyed their infrastructure, left them without food and medicine, and left a buddle of widows, orphans, invalids, and angry family members of the dead. It's reported that many died in the aftermath of the war due to the lack of the necessities of life.

Let's hope the Iraqis will not welcome Mahmoud Ahmadinejad either.

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad may not start a major offensive in Iraq but he would well growth his maintain to the insurgents there.

Alternatively, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad could strike Afghanistan using increased infiltrating guerrilla tactics which would disrupt our operations.

If and when the Israelis strike Iran, a whole new scenario will establish worldwide. 9/11 might seem like a nice fall day.

It's keen to me that Bush War Ii is about attacking a country that does not and did not have nuclear weapons rather than attacking North Korea which does and did have nuclear weapons.

I fought in the Korean War. We learned that North Korea has a big brother and he knows how to fight. Are we not attacking North Korea's nuclear sites because of China's nuclear weapons?

I think so.

But again, what do I know?

Will Israel assault Iran's Nuclear Sites?

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Sunday, March 27, 2011

Top 12 World News Stories In 2006 - Recap Of What Happened colse to The World

From town criers to pigeon messengers; from tablets and scrolls to newspapers; from radio and Tv coverage to news online the way news spreads throughout the world has changed with times. News updates habitancy on whats happening and where it's happening, news shapes opinions and influences the lives of people. It is news that mobilizes help in times of natural disasters or terrorist attacks.

The year 2006 had assorted hues some consuming others grey. There was death, war, scandals, sports, and a few delights. What the top 10 stories of 2006 were would vary and depend on personel perspectives. It is after all a matter of choice.

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1. The month of Jan saw Russia cutting off gas to the Ukraine; Iran stated that it would continue nuclear research; Iraq saw strife and death; Sharon suffered a stroke; Us received threats from Osama and stepped up its fight against terrorism and targeted an al-Qaeda leader; results of Iraqi elections were declared. New rehabilitation for cancer increased life expectancy; the Dow hit a milestone; and a spacecraft headed to Pluto.

2. February saw the Atomic energy Board narrative Iran to the Un; world wide protests occurred over cartoons of Muhammad that appeared in European newspapers; Harvard President resigned; mudslide buried a town in the Philippines; the Olympic Games began in Italy.

3. The month of March was when India and the Us agreed on a nuclear pact; Iraq witnessed escalating violence; Milosevic died in prison; Saddam Hussein testified for the first time; the Un beloved a New Human proprietary Council; the Us launched an offensive on Iraq; France was crippled by a nation wide labor strike; the security council issued a statement on Iran; and the Palestinian cabinet was sworn in. Scientists discovered water on Saturn's moon; general Motors and its union agreed on a buy-out and early retirement box to 113,000 unionized employees, and major league baseball decided to research seriously use of steroids.

4. April saw Chirac the French President sign a controversial labor legislation; Saddam Hussein is charged with Genocide; a general assault in Nepal against King Gyanendra; Prodi wins Italian Elections; Iran announces progress in nuclear program; a suicide bomber attacks a Tel Aviv Restaurant; Germany allows access to holocaust archives; the Chinese President visits the Us; Serial bombing kills habitancy in Egypt; European Investigation reveals hidden Cia Flights over Europe; and Peace bargain ends violence in Dafur. Scientists discovered a375 million year old fish fossil with early limb development signs establishing a link in the middle of aquatic and land forms; the Fda rejected healing use of Marijuana.

5. May was when Bolivia Nationalized the Natural gas Industry; Moussaoui a September 11 terrorist was sentenced to life; Israeli Parliament beloved Governing Coalition; leaders in Sudan signed peace pact; Iranian President gives Bush a grievance letter ;Us endorsed Palestinian Aid; Un recommended closer of Guantanamo Prison; Bush and Blair admitted Mistakes on Iraq; Us agreed to join Europe in talks with Iran. New England was flooded by narrative rain fall; Soda companies agreed to take off sweetened sodas from schools; Enron executives were convicted; and Indonesian earth quake killed thousands and rendered thousands homeless.

6. June saw the Un urge greater action on Aids; Canada arrested seventeen citizens on Terrorism charges; Iran was offered incentives to give up Nuclear program; an al-Qaeda leader was killed in Iraq; Hamas ended cease fire with Israel; Bush visited Iraq; Hussein defense lawyer was killed; Pentagon released a study on Interrogations. The Fda beloved a vaccine for cervical cancer; Bill Gates decided to step aside; Art sales skyrocketed with a painting selling for Usd 135 million; Warren Buffett donated 85% of his fortune to philanthropic organizations; and the mid-Atlantic regions endured the worst flooding in decades.

7. July saw death with many killed in Iraqi markets; North Korea test fired six missiles; violence intensified in Gaza; Nobel Peace Laureate became the Prime priest of East Timor; India tested a long-range missile; Russia and China agree with the West on a security Council Resolution against Iran; Hussein Trial ended; Congo held historic elections; Nato took command of Afghanistan. The previous Enron chief died; Italy won its fourth world cup; hundreds died in a tsunami caused by an undersea earthquake in Indinesia.

8. August was a month of contrasts, Israel intensified ground offensive in Lebanon; the Ukrainian Parliament beloved a new Prime Minister; Us general submitted a grim narrative on Iraq; Britain thwarted a huge terrorist plot; Iran ignored deadline to cease nuclear activities; narrative amount of Iraqi civilians died. Fda beloved the morning after pill; many died in Kentucky plane crash; Judge limits cigarette marketing ploys; Pluto is demoted and classified as a dwarf planet, and California adopted stringent emission laws.

9. September saw a steep rise in Iraqi casualties; Senior al-Qaeda leader Hamid al- Saeedi was captured in Iraq; Blair announced plans of stepping down ; Israel lifted air blockade of Lebanon; Us Embassy in Syria was attacked; riots rocked Hungary; estimation revealed that the Iraq war resulted in escalated Islamic radicalism; and Japan got a new Prime Minister. Shuttle makes lift off and 12 day mission; Pope's speech in Germany incited Muslim anger; and the Cdc recommends broad Hiv testing.

10. The month of October saw run off elections in Brazil; intensification of Palestinian violence; North Korea tested a nuclear device; the Un appointed a new Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon; security council imposes sanctions on North Korea; Militas battle to gain operate of Amarra; Iran believed to be enriching uranium; Pakistan military targets Islamic school near Afghan border; and Bush in a news argument discussed Iraq war openly. Google purchased YouTube a favorite video website; Hawaii experiences severe earthquake; Dow accomplished higher than 12,000; Nasa beloved mend of Hubble.

11. November saw the Taiwanese President Accused of corruption; Saddam convicted as guilty and sentenced to death; Israel ended Gaza incursion; South Africa legalizes same sex marriage; Lebanese priest was assassinated; Nepal plans elections; and civilian deaths escalate in Iraq, reach narrative high. Storms ravage the Southeast states of the Us and hundreds died in Philippines Typhoon.

12. December saw Hugo Chavez win in a landslide in Venezuela; crises in Iraq thinkable, to escalate, violence peaks ; suicide bomb kills many in Baghdad; Un leader sworn in; Palestinian leader calls for early elections; fighting breaks out in Somalia; Israelis decided to build new west bank settlement; Saddam Hussein is executed ; and Gerald Ford died at age 93. Nasa announced setting up of a base on the moon and the National establish of health revealed that circumcision could sacrifice risk of getting Aids straight through heterosexual sex.

Top 12 World News Stories In 2006 - Recap Of What Happened colse to The World

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Testimony of North Korean Lee Soon Ok

The following facts seem harsh and difficult, even defamatory. But to defame a situation or someone is to take away. I take away nothing. I article facts that have been documented over and over. This singular article is based on a world-famous book by the someone who suffered and saw. Please give her your ear.

In North Korea: Lee Soon Ok was a member of the privileged class falsely charged with theft and bribery. She was imprisoned and tortured until ultimately after 8 years she signed a "confession" to be released. She was not a Christian believer in prison, but saw the Christians being punished even more unjustly than herself. Their examine turned her to Christ after her leave to South Korea.

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She details 80's and 90's Nk prison life for us, and I am telling her story lest there be some carried away with the idea that things haven't literally been "that bad" in North Korea. May I simply list some of the details?

High wall with electrified-wire fence. Prison citizen included Koreans who voluntarily left Japan to retain their homeland. Prison citizen included housewives who stole food so their families would not starve. The 25-ounce-per-day food allocation for prisoners was practically totally eaten by guards. Prisoners were forced to fight one an additional one for scraps of food. Prisoners were used to make garments and shoes for domestic and export use. Prisoners formed into work groups which had to do everything together. Even toilet breaks not allowed until group's scheduled time. An whole group was punished for the imperfection of one of its members. Punishment: even less food. Prisoners learned to work through pain so as to meet quotas, as rations became less and less. continued lack of enlarge or rule infraction meant solitary confinement in a cell too small for standing or lying down, leading to loss of circulation and severe pain. Dormitories: cells 16 x 20 feet. 80-90 prisoners in each. Those whose bodies ultimately gave out were dumped in the mountains like dead animals. Men who broke under pressure and cursed a guard were executed publicly. Prisoners watching the operation were required to file by the corpse. Those who screamed or acted out in any way were sent to solitary.

Think of those, not who died, but who finally were released. Ruined lives. Tormenting memories. Who shall help these dear high-priced souls, many of whom survive to this day? What therapy could maybe heal these wounds? We lift up Christ Jesus to the citizen of North Korea and we pray God to send His Gospel now. What other hope is there for this beaten down population?

Testimony of North Korean Lee Soon Ok

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For North Korea, The Lamb That Was Slain

Whether in North Korea or North Chicago, "May The Lamb That Was Slain Receive The reward Of His Suffering!"

It was shouted over the waves as the ship passed out farther and farther from the world these Moravian missionaries had known. They had just sold themselves into a life of slavery for the sole purpose of bringing the Gospel to an island of slaves where the Gospel was forbidden. Motivated not by glory or money or power but only by the Worthiness of Him Who died on the accursed tree, these men made eternal history on that day as their haunting cry reaches deep into the caverns of our own selfish hearts still.

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Why do we love North Korea and the victimized citizen there? Why should we daily pray for them, send money on their behalf, go to visit them via Bibles or tracts or our own person? Is it because they are worthy? Is it because we need "something to do for Jesus" ? Is it because they are in pain and we have seen their needs? Because we want to make them happy in this life? Why, any pagan with any kind of a heart at all can feel sorry for a North Korean. How is the Christian motivation different?

The talk that comes resoundingly back from Heaven was voiced so exquisitely many years back by Paris Reidhead, missionary, preacher, and much more. Brother Reidhead tells in the first-rate sermon Ten Shekels and a Shirt of his own sense of human compassion on the "poor Africans" and his desire to "improve on the justice of God" by giving the heathen a chance to go to Heaven. Well, these are not motives to be spurned. We all understand the call of missions, and videos of lepers and dying children that grip our hearts. But it is not enough.

The preacher was spoken to in the depths of his soul one night, as he was complaining about the fact that these "monsters of iniquity" had no interest in the things of which he spoke, and asking how could God have sent him there in compassion when they cared not one whit for the light of the Gospel?

God simply said, "I didn't send you here for their sakes. I sent you here for My sake."

Try that on in association to the branch at hand, Christians working for the North Koreans. God sends us to these costly souls, as lost as the Africans, many of whom have no desire for any more light than that which Kim allows, I say, He sends us not for their sakes, but for His own. He died for them. He deserves a hearing. He deserves their obedience, their devotion, their forever love.

It was God who hung on the cross. Never can man understand or repay this wonder. Never can man suffer more than did the God of Heaven murdered by His own creation. Our pity must be turned to the creator and what He did, and not focused on the hurts of the created. And that includes our own hurts.

I can feel this message as deeply as I have ever felt anyone in my life. I cannot say that it has permeated my being and changed all my personal desires. But oh! how I want it to. Let the plaintive call go forth in our hearts every day...

"May the Lamb that was slain receive the reward of His suffering!"

For North Korea, The Lamb That Was Slain

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In North Korea - Pyongyang Teaches Us A part

North Korea, land of many surprises.

Shaped like a rocket, nose like a needle, largest buildings in all of the land. It's the Ryugyong Hotel. Meant to be the largest hotel in the world, it met a few obstacles in its construction. The concrete was of poor quality. The elevators could not control in its crooked shafts. Power failures nation-wide plus the famine of the 90's ultimately shut it down. The only real sign of ongoing "life" is a construction crane perched forever at the summit of the building. I say "real" because postcards show the construction all lit up and wonderful. This is an unfortunate manipulation of facts, using trick photography. One feels sorry for the builders of the colossus, the Baekdu Mountain Architects and Engineers. For those who have a glimmer of recognition about that name, from Mt. Baekdu has come the Korean gods, the present leader. And now, well, the world's tallest pile of useless concrete.

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As for the hotel's handle,Ryugyong, that's the old name for Pyongyang, "capital of [weeping] willows" . It is aptly named. It was to have 3000 rooms, seven revolving restaurants, and a worldwide reputation, all by 1989. Well, it got the latter, not as expected, and costing the country 2% of its gross domestic goods that year! It is a deserted place of sorrow and shame now.

This aborted dream is not only typical of the whole North Korean scheme under Communism, but very reminiscent of some of our own personal plans. Christians, we've been warned, and comrade Leader has now given a modern day illustration for us, to sink forever into our awareness: finish what you start when Jesus leads you into His work. Above all, finish carrying the cross until it becomes the crown. I close with the words of the master manufacturer Himself in Luke 14:27-30:

"Whoever does not bear his cross and come after Me cannot be my disciple. For, which of you, intending to build a tower, does not sit down first and count the cost, either he has adequate to finish it, lest, after he has laid the foundation, and is not able to finish, all who see it begin to mock him, saying, "This man began to build and was not able to finish."

In North Korea - Pyongyang Teaches Us A part

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Saturday, March 26, 2011

North Korea - Holiday in a underground State

First of all, and the inquire that many population ask me when I tell them about a trip I made back in '05: Why the hell did you go to North Korea?! The sass is simple: I like to do things a exiguous differently. Most population think a great holiday is sitting on a beach in Thailand for a week, burning themselves and getting hammered every night, waking up nearby midday etc. I would much prefer to see places and do things so that when I come back from my holiday I've got a feeling of accomplishment. I wasn't beyond doubt looking at holiday destinations when I was browsing the Bbc news website and a story about Dprk's nuclear ambitions when I saw a link entitled, Holidays in North Korea. In that record I read about a firm called Koryo Tours and from then my interest rose hugely. This company, run out of a Beijing office by 2 British guys, arranged visas and did regular tours to Dprk throughout the year, during which you had the chance of visiting and looking things most of the world will never see. This was right up my street, and I exchanged a bunch of emails with one of the guys, getting more facts on the trips and what was possible (unfortunately no diving was allowed, by I did ask and they did enquire!). In the end, I settled for a 6-day May Day Stadium tour of the country, flying into Pyongyang and coming back by train to Beijing. Not only would this tour comprise looking some spectacular and rare sights, but there was also the hope of going to see the World Cup Qualifying match in the middle of Dprk and Japan, to be played at the country's May Day Stadium. This is the biggest stadium in the world, seating over 150,000 people. To put it into perspective a little, it is over twice the size of the Olympic Stadium in Seoul, South Korea.

I did a exiguous explore about the country, and although facts is fairly limited, I managed to pick up an excellent Travel Tours Thailand) because of crowd issue in a previous game. Some population were unhappy with this, but there beyond doubt was nothing we could do. We could complain and be grumpy Straight through the whole trip, or we could make the most of what we would see. Even though the Kumsusan Memorial Palace of Kim Il Sung could not be visited due to renovations, I still knew this would be an unforgettable journey. With that in mind, 2 days later we boarded the twice-weekly Beijing-Pyongyang flight, courtesy of Air Koryo.

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Now, when you travel somewhere, there are distinct signs that your trip is going to be an eventful one. Being on an flight to one of the most secretive countries in the world, sat in in the middle of a guy from the World Food Programme an an Ethiopian arms dealer is one such sign! But this was the situation in which I found myself, sat in this plane right out of the 70s. But to their credit, both guys were very friendly, although the Ethiopian did bend the truth slightly, saying he was visiting Dprk on holiday. It was only later I found out he travels there approximately every month, and always says to population he's going on holiday. I wonder how big the North Korean tourism firm is in Ethiopia. The mind boggles. There was also a Spanish guy on the flight in a communist-style suit with a big medal, who told us he was connected to the Dprk government. We were told by one of the tour firm guys to steer clear though, so I kept my distance.

The first thing you see when you get off the plane in Pyongyang is a huge picture of Kim Il Sung on the roof of the airport. As I looked back at the plane, I noticed the air crews pouring water on the smoking plane tyres! Think man might have landed a exiguous too quickly! Other than that, the flight was great. Everybody was slightly confused as to why the landing gear was lowered at about 20,000ft, but who are we to tell the pilot what to do! In the airport, bags were collected and items such as Mp3 players and movable phones were handed in to customs officials as they are not allowed in the country. Contrary to beloved idea though, camera and video cameras were fine to bring in.

The guides introduced themselves to us, and our main guide was a woman with excellent English, called Mrs Lee. She was an awesome guide... Very friendly and knowledgeable about everything. She was one of the government-appointed guides, but talked about all things with the minimum of bias and the top amount of information. She'd obviously met quite a few tour groups, and was full of questions about our families and what we did in our home countries. A few population brought photos of our photos and lives from home, and it was a nice feeling to introduce them to her. There were beyond doubt 2 guides appointed to our tour group of 20 people. There were 2 reasons for this I think, neither of which was that they could spy on us better! Firstly, the group was quite big and they wanted to carry on Everybody in the best way. The second surmise could be (and I compel to add that I don't know this for sure) that the 2 guides could censor each other. If there was only one, then it is possible that they could say something negative about the country or its politics; with 2 population there is always man else listening. We also had a cameraman walking nearby with our group, who would make a Vcd of our trip that we could purchase at the end of our trip. That was a nifty exiguous idea, and I said I would assuredly like a copy of that.

One of the first things that hit me as we entered Pyongyang on our tour bus was how clean it was. There were lots of people, both adults & children, who were pulling up weeds along the streets and paths by hand. Technologically-advanced, this city is not, but it looked friendly adequate so far. None of the soldiery parades of huge missiles evident so far, that you commonly see in the western media. Our first stop on the tour was Fountain Park. This was a wide open space (Pyongyang has a lot of these) with many very large water fountains, along with some beautiful statues of women dancing. There were a few kids walking nearby and we managed to get some friendly acknowledgements from them by smiling and waving. The power of a smile, even in the so-called Axis of Evil, is immense. A small group of girls were walking across the park and they came over. One of the girls proceeded to give us a 2-minute jamming session on her guitar-like thing (can you tell I don't play music?!) while her friends looked on. As advised, we asked for permission to take some photos of the girls and the surroundings, and then started snapping away. To be honest, there were not the restrictions on taking photos that you might expect. Of course, nobody tried to take photos of soldiery installations or personnel, but whenever we asked to take shots, the sass was always "Yes".

From the park, we headed to our next stop (and the most important stop on the tour): the bronze sculpture of Kim Il Sung at Mansudae. For those of you unfamiliar with Dprk's history & politics, Kim Il Sung was the leader of the country from 1948 (when the country was founded) until his death in 1994. Following his death, there were 3 years of lawful mourning. This period of Kim Il Sung sculpture at Mansudaetime with Kim Il Sung's mourning, coupled with bad harvests and declining living conditions, became known as the laberious March. The sculpture was said by our guide to weigh as much as all the hearts of the Korean people. Note that the word "Korean" was used to signify both Koreas. In Dprk they still say that Korea is one country, and that they will reunify in time. nearby the sculpture are 2 other monuments, both depicting population fighting in the Korean War (called in Dprk The prosperous Fatherland Liberation War) from 1950 to 1953. As the statue, a few of us bought flowers and laid them at the front of the statue, before walking back and paying our respects by bowing. This was the first chance I realised that some population might not be distinguished to a trip to Dprk. You have to go Straight through the bowing to Kim Il Sung, and just accept it, even if you don't approve of the leadership of the country. It is all about showing respect and politeness for a foreign country in which you are a rare guest. It's a similar deal with the stories that you are told. Sometimes they seem far fetched, the guides know they sound far fetched, you know they do, and the guides know that you know. But the key is just to play along with it, take it in with interest and use your head a little. A incorporate on our tour tried to ask questions that were pushy or embarrassing, and all that did was make the guide flustered and upset at us. Nobody benefited and, most likely, Everybody lost out. So if you do reconsider a trip to this tantalizing country, bear that in mind.

The hotel we stayed at was the Yanggakdo Hotel in central Pyongyang.  If you go to Dprk, you will most likely whether stay here or in the Koryo Hotel.  This hotel is excellent and is on its own island!  It has a 9-hole golf course, cinema, football stadium, casino, rotating cafeteria at the top of the hotel (this is a recurring theme), and pretty much all things else you could want in the hotel grounds (so tourists wouldn't be tempted to cross the bridge into the capital itself?).

The hotel also has 47 floors and nearby 1,000 rooms.  But the thing is, there were only nearby 25 population staying at the hotel, and in our tour group population were sharing rooms so at the most, 20 rooms would have been occupied.  All our group were settled on the 25th floor, and population were making frequent comments about what could perhaps be on the other floors.  As far as I know, nobody was brave/foolish adequate to try and find out.  Although the hotel was much akin to a ghost town, the rooms were nice and clean, and offered a great view of the city, along with the Juche Tower.

While we were going to evening meal on the first night, we were told that there wouldn't be few, if any shows or festivals on at the moment, due to Everybody working in the fields.  At that time, the university had accomplished and a amount of government offices had been accomplished as population were mobilised to plant rice due to fears over food shortages.  Having seen similar stories about China, this seems to be the communist way of dealing with problems like that; throw Everybody you can at it.  It might not be so sufficient and is beyond doubt not sufficient or economical, but it is what they do.  It also shows the Juche, or self-reliance, ideology coming to the fore.   Our venue for evening meal was the National Restaurant, and we were the only guests there.  This was also a base theme - we were the only population dining out.  Although this isn't hugely surprising, and I doubt if we were not visiting the cafeteria would even be open.  The food was pretty good actually, and it was distinct they were trying to showcase Dprk's fine dining.  It made me think and reflect a exiguous though.  They were serving up some of the best food they could offer in the country to us, and yet so many population in other parts of the city are coping on tiny rations of rice and vegetables each month.  Again, it's one of the things you just have to accept while you're here.  along evening meal was live music, by a group of women in traditional Korean dress.  The songs were revolutionary songs, and the music had a specific Russian feel to it.  I looked nearby for copies of "The Best Songs Dedicated To The Great Leader and The general Album... Ever!!!", but alas it was nowhere to be found.  We did stop that the drummer constantly looked like she wanted to just start thrashing the drums, rather than stick to the regular tapping of the cymbal.  Not sure what the state of heavy metal music is in Dprk, but she'd fit right in.

Going back to the hotel, I had a incorporate of beers before heading back to my room.  Once there though, I was able to turn the lights out, open the window and gaze out into the night skyline.  If you do that in most cities, and especially capital cities, you can hear road works, traffic going past, loud music etc.  In Pyongyang it was approximately silent.  You could hear a incorporate of voices drifting over the water to the hotel, but other than that it was quiet.  There were relatively few lights coming from the large amount of buildings that were a kilometre or two away.  For some surmise I woke up at about 4am in the night, and once again went to the window which we'd left open.  looking out, you could see nothing - there wasn't a particular light visible and the only sound was a dog barking somewhere in the city.  Very eerie, but a tantalizing experience.

Woke up early and switched on the Tv in our room to get a fuzzy Bbc World transmission (Dprk don't pay for any Tv rights, so they have to unscramble the signals as best they can themselves I believe).  There was an declaration that it was International Environment Day, which was appropriate as I was probably in the cleanest capital city in the world.  Pyongyang makes Tokyo look like a trashy dump, and I didn't see a particular piece of litter on the street throughout my whole trip.  someone else thing Pyongyang has is vast open spaces.  It is reported that agreeing to Un environmental statistics, Pyongyang has the largest amount of green and parkland per man of any capital city in the world. The skies were blue, but it was pretty hazy and you could only just see over the Taedong River and into Pyongyang.  But after breakfast, that was our destination and first up was the Juche Tower.

An offspring of communism, Juche is summed up quite well by Wikipedia: "The core principle of the Juche ideology since the 1970s has been that "man is the master of all things and decides everything"".  The most tantalizing features of this buildings are all to do with numbers.  The tower was created in celebration of Kim Il Sung's 70th birthday, and the construction has 25,550 blocks (one for each day of Kis's life).  The tower is beyond doubt made up of tiers: on the north and south side there are 18 tiers and on the east and west side, 17 tiers.  Add those up and you get the magical 70.  Also, at the base of the tower there are flowers carved (the Kimilsungia) into the stone.  35 flowers on the east and west sides gives you... You guessed it, 70.

The views from the lowest were pretty good, but the panoramic views from the platform at the top of the tower were breathtaking.  You could see the whole city, although there you could see virtually no cars on the roads.  There were a incorporate of bicycles, but approximately no motorised transport.  Following the Juche Tower, our next stop was the closeby Korean Workers Party Monument.  This was erected to celebrate 50 years of the Korean Workers Party, and again the numbers play an important role.  The top of the hammer, sickle and brush (denoting the 3 classes of population in society) are 50m high, and the diameter of the monument is also 50m.  The history of the Party is written in bronze letters on the wall of the monument, and the size of the things has to be seen first-hand to be appreciated.  The population built this in one year, which goes to show how sufficient they can be when given the resources to play with.

After looking a exiguous our of the city, we headed out of town, past Kim Il Sung University, and went to Mt Taesong and the Revolutionary Martyrs Cemetery.  Here, nearby 200 martyrs of revolutionary fighting against Japanese Imperialists are buried and remembered.  Each martyr has a sculpture made from copper and all the busts face Pyongyang, positioned so that each one has a clear view of the capital.  Pride of place at the top of the cemetery goes to Kim Il Sung's wife.  In the cemetery, sombre revolutionary music player (I'm sure, solely because we were there), which gave a strange feeling to the whole event.

Lunch was taken in the (rotating) cafeteria at the 230m tall Television Tower.  A rickety old lift got us up to the top but it must have been the slowest lift I've ever been in!  It took about 3 agonising minutes to get to the top, with the constant fear that the string that was pulling us up could snap and sent us plummeting to our distinct doom at any time!  But we made it to the top and the views were spectacular.  The food was, once again, the best that Dprk had to offer, and our after lunch entertainment was karaoke courtesy of the 2 waitresses who'd been serving us.  A smile towards one of them ended up in her keeping my hand while she sang her song (I'm sure talking about the greatness and wonderfullness of Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il)!  I was slightly distressed that I might have unknowingly just joined the Workers Party of Korea, and wouldn't be allowed to leave!

First stop after lunch was the Arch of Triumph in the middle of Pyongyang.  Sound familiar?  Well, you might think of the Arc de Triomphe in Paris, and when you look at this arch you'd be forgiven for mistaking it for the Parisian landmark.  This arch was modelled on the one in France, but built bigger so that the claim can be made that this is the largest stone arch in the world.

You'll notice that Dprk likes its world records.  The arch was pretty impressive, as was standing in the middle of a 3-lane road for minutes while taking pictures of it, without the slightest fear of a car coming.  Try doing that in London!  On the photo to the right you can see the Arch of Triumph in the foreground, but I expect many of you are wondering what the triangular-shaped construction is in the background.  Well that is a private for now, and all will be revealed in part 3 of this travelogue.  Rest assured, it is definately worth waiting for!  Near the Arch of Triumph is someone else stadium in Pyongyang, and outside the stadium were some population preparing their gymnastic habit for the Mass Games.

We headed back out into the sticks after looking the arch, and towards a Buddhist temple.  On the way, we saw loads of population working in the fields, even on a Sunday (their supposed day off during the week).  This was real subsistence agriculture though; you saw oxen pulling makeshift ploughs Straight through the soil and in some places it just looked so dry and barren that whatever would struggle to grow there.  The temple itself was quite interesting, although not as much as the sights I'd seen previously in the day.  Apparently, Buddhism was the main religion in Dprk before the Juche idea was put forward.  I have read conflicting evidence about this though, & there are many reports that religion is banned in Dprk, despite what we were told by the guides.  I can't record whether way though - I'm just stating what I saw and keeping unbiased about everything.  After the temple trip we headed back into Pyongyang and it got a exiguous surreal.  We were taken to a clothing export exhibition, which showed examples of the garments that they had exported to other countries (mainly sportswear).  They gave us examples of the countries they exported to (e.g. Uk, Hong Kong, China), and we were then taken to a shop where we could buy some Dprk authentic clothing!  Other were sceptical but I just jumped right in and guy myself a T-shirt!  The whole trip here was as if they were saying, "Look at us!  We yield things that other countries want and need!".

A 30 exiguous bus journey led us back into the country and over to King Tongmyong's tomb.  The guide at this site wasn't an English-speaker, but our resident guide translated all things for us.  We were shown nearby the tomb on King Tongmyong, who lived nearby 5,000 years ago.  It was apparently he who set up the nation of Korea, and who founded the first capital city in the country.  In the grounds of the temple, there were 3 artists painting the scenery (by chance, or told to be there?).  I wanted to think it was the former, and the pictures were pretty good so I bought one.  Hopefully not all of that money would go right to the government.  I got the artist's name on the picture and had it dated, and I gave a present to the guide for showing us around.  The result: I had someone else Dprk girl keeping and stroking my arm as we walked back to the bus!  So much for being told we would have very exiguous taste with the locals.

In the south of Pyongyang is the Mangyongdae Shrine, which is where Kim Il Sung was born and where he spent his early years.  The house he was born in was fairly humble and it sounded like his family was quite poor.  The house's setting was now in a park and was beyond doubt nice to walk nearby in; the walk to the viewing area was interrupted only by a incorporate of squirrels and chipmunks crossing our path.  We were told that Koreans didn't visit the house after Kis's death because they wanted to keep it in a pristine state.  Not sure if that is strictly true, but I just nodded and smiled and took it all in.

I'm out of words just about for this article, but once it is live here I will submit the next part.  Thanks for taking the time to read it.

North Korea - Holiday in a underground State

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The News You Will Never Hear

We live in a world which is more interconnected than ever and we have the unprecedented quality to find out almost abruptly about what is going on both in terms of large events and on an individual level in any place in the world. That being said, if you watch our median nightly news broadcast, you could be forgiven for thinking that very puny exists beyond our northern shore and depending on which state you are from and watching the broadcast in, nothing needful goes on beyond your local state border. Our television stations are taking advantage of the new technology like web news services, blogs, You Tube, etc. To a distinct extent but only seemingly when it applies to the most local of issues. Due to the coming of satellite and live video streaming technology we can know what is happening in the most remote or perilous places and be able to form truly informed opinions on the major issues colse to the world. Any way we seemingly don't care.

Watching a up-to-date nightly news broadcast on one of our 3 major networks, the first 15 minutes of coverage included bushfires, crowd violence at the tennis, traffic light outages, power shortages as well a join of basic human interest pieces. On this same day, 2 of Sadaam Hussein's top advisors were executed, thousands were killed in Sudan, the Eu was facing a major crisis, China was launching a major environmental initiative, Australia was flagging the possibility of selling Uranium to India and the list goes on and on. As unsavoury as the mini scuffle at the tennis was, it doesn't compare to genocide in Africa. And that single issue about the crowd brawl at the tennis brings up other point in that how swiftly we (& our media) are quick to criticise and condemn events which involve population or things that are not "Australian". At one of the up-to-date one day international cricket games enchanting Australia and England, 190 population were arrested and ejected from the game, yet that did not originate in any place near the television, news or talk back radio coverage that this comparatively minor incident at the Australian Open or absolutely the humble 3 population who were arrested at the unprecedented sell-out domestic soccer match between Melbourne and Sydney in December. It seems that when things involve a more local game like cricket we are more eager to turn a blind eye.

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However it is our apathy, despite the numerous advantages we have over all our ancestors, even ones as up-to-date as 10 years ago, that is most concerning. While if you browse the videos of You Tube, you can view first accounts of not just horrors but some of the major achievements and milestones all over the world, you are extremely unlikely to see any of this on any of our market networks unless it has some association to Australia, we have a spare join of minutes to fill in or if it such a huge story that it demands airtime or newspaper space. The one news assistance we have that devotes itself to the most needful stories regardless of country of origin, the Sbs World News doesn't rate well as we are more concerned about what our private camera technology show population doing in change rooms on the current affair shows or the most recent romance and break up on Neighbours. At least now that we have so many media sources to choose from because of the Internet, population who truly do care about real issues both home and abroad are able to access this information absolutely via You Tube or Web News Services & Blogs and not be just be a slave to the inane and largely insignificant coverage of our market networks. Hopefully it may not be long before You Tube outrates Channel 9 news and Google News Services has a greater readership than the Herald Sun.

The News You Will Never Hear

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Giving Japan its Due

As part of a deal with North Korea in the six party nuclear disarmament talks; President Bush has decided to take North Korea off the U.S. List of state sponsors of terror.

This decision was made over the strong protests of Japan primarily because of North Korea's stonewalling on providing Japan with any information on a score of its citizens kidnapped by North Korea during the 1970s and 1980s. Some of the abductees were schoolchildren on their way home from school. Sure sounds like terror to me. Meanwhile, North Korea has more than a hundred nuclear missiles aimed at the heartland of Japan.

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If Japan tells us this issue is of the utmost political sensitivity, we need to listen and not run roughshod over the wishes of a significant ally especially when the deal at hand with North Korea is by most accounts deeply flawed.

Rather, our top priority in the Asia-Pacific region should be to invigorate and dramatically broaden the scope and the intensity of the Japanese-American partnership. With the global war on terror and the rise of India and China, the relative estimate of media and Congressional attention paid to relations between Japan and America has dwindled. This is unfortunate since the alliance remains as old U.S. Ambassador to Japan Michael Mansfield aptly put it: "the most foremost bilateral relationship - bar none".

This statement is even more on the mark today given the wide range of issues that the robust partnership can tackle more effectively together. From regional trade issues, to fighting poverty, to manufacture multilateral institutions more effective, to seeking more transparency and cooperation about regional security issues; the vital interests of both countries and the region as a whole largely coincide.

Here are just a few of the issues that need attention, publicity and action.

1) Japan deserves our unequivocal and full backing to be a permanent member of the United Nations security Council. The window of chance for getting this done is windup fast.

2) The need to rapidly progress the current joint endeavor to fund and upgrade technologies about missile defense.

3) With the U.S. Defense funds under acute pressure and Japan's navy now more than three times the size of the Uk's, it makes sense for both countries to escalate cooperation to utter a strong deterrence in the region. The bickering and acrimony over our bases in Okinawa also need to be resolved quickly.

4) fabricate a free trade zone between the two countries. China is now Japan's largest trading partner but the complementary nature of America's and Japan's economies is an foremost consideration. In addition, China is rapidly moving up the technology ladder and over time will fabricate domestically rather than import from Japan.

5) Encourage closer cooperation over yen/U.S. Dollar change rates could avoid sudden and disruptive movements and allow a steady and orderly growth of the undervalued yen.

6) Jointly fund and administrate economic development, conservation projects and humanitarian efforts in the region. Both countries are kind donors to the region and have the infrastructure to act swiftly on a large scale.

The issue of North Korean abductees is just as foremost to Japan as the issue of the Mia-Pow issue was to our relations with Vietnam. We need to stand firm with Japan on this one, no matter what the short-term costs. The population of Japan are watching either our words match our actions. relaxation is not a bargaining chip, it is at the very heart of our nation's foreign policy.

The mission of the center for American Diplomacy is to change priorities with more focus on the Asia-Pacific region and emerging shop countries.

Giving Japan its Due

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Friday, March 25, 2011

In North Korea - Communism, Kimilsungism, Christ - A Comparison

Is North Korean Communism the "real deal" ? Dr. C. Kenneth Quinones says, "Juche [Kim's self-reliance philosophy] is a faint echo of Marxism."

While rejecting parts of Communism, Kim did buy into the whole "class struggle" idea. Citizen fight. Groups of Citizen fight other groups of people. While Marx singled out the clash between "capitalists", Citizen who have money, and "urban workers", who don't, Kim saw things, like neighbor Mao, in terms of landlords vs. Peasants. But rather than lift these peasants into the revolutionary class, Kim believed that role should be assigned to soldiers and teachers (mostly soldiers, it turns out!).

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Juche is human-centered and nationalistic, as opposed to Communism's universal emphasis. And while Marx and Engels saw mechanical military governing the world, Kim focused on human conduct.

The goals of the two systems are likewise different. Communism seeks to overthrow the entire world order, replacing all vestiges of capitalism with socialism. The state must "wither away", and all classes with it. A truly equal society. (The dream has never been even intimately realized in Communist nations, as there are all the time some who are "more equal" than others.)

Kim's view was state-centered. It is hierarchical, with clear divisions based on favor. Though he also believed in "collectivism" it was of a separate flavor. In the former pattern, collectivism refers to equal sharing of goods. In North Korea, it is a shared effort to unite behind one leader. In essence, Korean collectivism becomes nothing more than the old dynasty mentality, a true monarchy. Titles have changed, but no one questions that Kim was and is king.

Christianity has a separate theme altogether: The Kingship of Jesus Christ. I keep hearing it said that "Jesus is in control of North Korea, so don't worry." I think we all understand that finally the strings are pulled by a living God. He raises up whom he wills, and whom he wills to abase, he abases. God is in control only in that sense for now.

But when Jesus is truly the Lord of North Korea, every knee will bow to Him. Every tongue will confess that Christ is Lord on that day. When Jesus comes and sets up His Kingdom there will be no more concentration camps, though the Lord will govern with a accurate justice. All will be free to worship the King Who will reign in Jerusalem. Godliness will flourish. There will be no more hunger, no need to leave the beauteous mountains for China or any other place.

Those who have already made Jesus Lord of their lives caress how phenomenal it is to be ruled by a excellent King. Our ongoing prayer is that soon the status quo will be set aside so that the Gospel of the Kingdom can be preached throughout the land, and many will come to know what a Heavenly King is like.

In North Korea - Communism, Kimilsungism, Christ - A Comparison

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North Korea - Return to Animal Farm

1945. George Orwell. The days of Stalin. Orwell was not a believer in Christ and in fact thought that Marx and Engels authentically had something going. His issue was not with Communism but with the way this new Communist law was being acted out by Lenin, Stalin, and the rest. It was obviously not working agreeing to the former script.

Some would argue that the former script came from Christ Himself. Equality. Peace. Brotherhood. You share with me, I share with you. But not at the point of a gun. That was added later.

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Anyway, Orwell was an honest man who wanted to say something about the Stalinist regime of his day. He said it most effectively in his satirical novel, Animal Farm. There is a film version (1999) which I happened onto last evening. My wife and I sat in amazement as scene after scene reminded us, not of Stalin, but of the former and gift dynastic regimes of North Korea... And authentically the cycle portrayed has been repeated in many places on the planet. Consider:

- the former corruption of community needing to be addressed - the desire to end that corruption and bring justice in its place - the bringing down of the corrupt community - the hero worship, shifting empasis from the genuine needs of the population to the increasingly neurotic needs of the leader - the slow replacement of the old corruption with a new and worse corruption

Yes, It's all there, to this day.

And Christians, myself for one, pray, "Lord, stop all this! Bring it all down!" But praying believer, does your mind ever travel beyond the fall of such governments (and they all ultimately do fall) to what shall be on the other side of a regime change?

We know for one thing, that, one day, Jesus shall be King over all the earth! "Jesus shall reign where'er the sun Doth his successive journeys run, His kingdom stretch from shore to shore, Till moons shall wax and wane no more!" What a glorious day is coming! All those who rejected His rule will themselves be rejected eternally. The world will be put right side up!

But what if Jesus' advent is not the next thing on God's calendar? What if the replacement is another merely human leader? I believe we should pray earnestly for that man to be a righteous man, a man whose relationship to God is real and strong. Then when the nation turns around, God Himself will receive all the glory!

North Korea - Return to Animal Farm

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Daniel And The Animals That Told The future

Let me lead you straight through the absorbing dream of the prophet Daniel, to show you a dinky of our future.

Daniel 8, verses 1-4, and 20. The last emperor of Babylon is reigning. Soon Medo-Persia will be replacing Belshazzar and company, as recorded in the celebrated "handwriting on the wall" story of episode five. But before Belshazzar's demise, the God of history intervenes via a foresight to His prophet. Daniel sees a two-horned ram, with uneven horns. It is pushing north, south, and west. No one is able to stop him. Since he is not pushing east, we assume the ram is an eastern power. But no need to speculate any further, for Gabriel, Daniel's guide in most of his visions, tell us that the ram with two horns is the uneven amalgamation known in history as Medo-Persia. The "two-ness" of the ram's horns matches with the uneven sides of the bear of episode seven and the two arms of the statue. Three visions, but one message.

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Verses 5-7, 21. Next comes a goat. From the west. It is flying. Goats don't fly, and neither do leopards. But a flying leopard represents this same nation in episode seven. Medo-Persia, eastern, pushed west, in the great march of Xerxes. But this nation is western, pushing east, and exterior the whole known earth! What a exquisite description of the rise of Greece and its first major push by Alexander the Great, represented here by one horn. But all of this too is not guesswork, for Gabriel tells us that the goat is Greece and that the horn is the "first" or customary king of that emerging empire, whom we know to be Alexander, the one who some say wept because he had conquered the earth so quickly that there were no more challenges.

There is a confrontation between ram and goat and the eventual victory of Greece, which now rules the world some hundred years before Jesus' visit. But you say, why is world history suddenly so important? Is it not true that Bible scholars depend on history sometimes when defending their interpretations of Scripture, and come to the wrong conclusions? Yes, but this is very different! Here, the Holy Spirit Himself, via an angel and a prophet, are the historians. They are giving the interpretations and deliberately pointing us to historical settings. We are compelled by Heaven to look closely at Greece and the politics that follow. When you look long adequate you will see the write back to the demand of the disciples in Matthew 24, about the end of all things, and the sign of that end.

Verse 8, 22. The goat in the foresight grows. Greece expands. But the goat's horn is broken. Alexander dies. Greece does not die, only the horn, the leader. In place of the one horn grow four horns. In place of the one leader there are four leaders with four detach territories. Gabriel points us to more history. He says that four kingdoms will arise from the Greek Empire. Did it happen? Most definitely! The generals of Alexander fought for many years over his inheritance and who would rule what. The conflicts that ensued have been dubbed the "successor wars."

When the dust located there were unquestionably four regions vying for power. One was Greece itself, tied to Macedonia. We might call this area practically "the Balkans" today. Someone else was Egypt. Then there was Asia Minor, or Turkey. By far the largest and therefore the most difficult to operate was the eastern portion of the empire. Today that portion is called Iraq, Iran, Syria, Palestine, and even more territory to the east .

Are you following? Look where the Book of Daniel has gone in just a short time. All the kingdoms of the world from Daniel's day to the end of time. Then just Medo-Persia and Greece. Then just Greece. But we must narrow added to find the one we seek. And Daniel's foresight does just that.

Verses 9-12, 23-25. The heart of Daniel's message here and in other chapters is the defining of Someone else horn on the goat, the territory of the Grecian Empire after Alexander, represented by four horns now, thus four parts. Now Daniel sees a fifth horn. It is small at first. Thus the term "little horn" has been applied to the man represented. He was small at the beginning. "Vile", says the angel in episode 11. Despised. Rejected from royalty. But he does not stay small. Over time, over the ages, he grows to come to be a fantastically essential world power. In this tiny fragment of a verse incommunicable away in your "old" Testament is a incommunicable that is larger than you can imagine. It is the incommunicable of the antichrist.

Daniel And The Animals That Told The future

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Thursday, March 24, 2011

North Korea Stretching Its Muscles


Though North Korea's nuclear explosion had a low yield, its reverberations are clearly heard in the Middle-East. The failure of the United States' policy in the Asian Crisis, was highlighted in this last experiment. A status report

In a rare and unusual remark from a gentle point of view, an Israeli official has anonymously spoken of the nuclear experiment performed in the other half of the globe. The senior political source, as the media identified him, called upon the International society to answer forcibly to the secret nuclear experiment conducted by North Korea (on 9 October, 2006). Exceptionally, the Israeli speaker also demanded that a naval quarantine be imposed on the stubborn country and that soldiery operation against it should be considered unless it shed its nuclear capabilities. These belligerent statements contribute evidence of Jerusalem's deep anxiety with regards to the alarming development in the Far East.

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The Danger - a Nuclear "Axis of Evil"

Indeed, despite the relatively weak nuclear blast (With a yield of 5,000 to 15,000 tons of Tnt, similar to the bombs the Us dropped on Japan at the end of Wwii), the reverberations of the blast in the Far East are acutely discerned in the Middle-East, and are reaching Teheran. The Iranians, who until the ascension of Ahmadinejad "walked a tightrope" in their mixture of endearing and enthralling behavior toward the International Community, have learnt how to pay dinky heed to the world with practically complete impunity. The large-scale cooperation in the middle of the two countries could now face a disturbing upgrade - in the nuclear field.
This is the bad dream scenario for Jerusalem and Washington: A fine "Axis of Evil", where North Korea provides Iran with nuclear empowered safety in return for heavy economic retain and contribute of oil (which North Korea desperately needs for energy), which changes overnight the geo-strategic situation in the region and the entire world. This could also significantly ease Iran's way to attaining a nuclear bomb, due to North Korean technological aid and with Iran's nuclear facilities secured from Western strike under a mutual defense pact with the "partner in crime" to the East.


American Failure

"Five years of gentle efforts have gone down the drain", said Madeleine Albright, previous American Secretary of State, following the nuclear experiment by North Korea. Indeed, it is a failure of the policy led by the Us in the Asian crisis, which shattered in this last experiment. Why failure? After all, it could be claimed that the defiance on the part of North Korea against the International society was globally condemned, starting with Washington, continuing with the capitals of Europe and Asia and ending with the prominent superpower closest politically and geographically to North Korea - China. Even the sister nation, South Korea, has responded with fury to the experiment and has announced that it would cancel the food aid it was planning to send to North Korea, alongside menacing statements and raising the readiness of its army. However, it could be assessed that in the frozen capital of North Korea, Pyongyang, the "Dear Leader" Kim Jong-Il sits on his throne, smiling insolently, knowing that his objective has been attained.

And what were the objectives of the experiment? The first objective was to focus, in one swell swoop, the concentration of the world on this far and forgotten country, which is suffering from famine and straining under the burden of heavy economic sanctions and recurring natural disasters (Floods and drought). Absurdly, stopping external aid to the country only worsens the internal distress within it, and "arms" its leaders with the claim that such public punitive actions are immoral and are a "humanitarian crime" against the populace.

But addition the suffering of the habitancy of North Korea was only a secondary objective of the experiment, which is a milestone in the core struggle for the survival of the regime. Thus, while in the White House corridors they "play for time" dreaming that ostracism, siege and internal troubles, will rid North Korea of its eccentric ruler, Kim Jong-Il displays his muscles and drive in an experiment with the avowed goal of developing a nuclear weapon, but which also sends a clear message regarding the stability of his rule. And this is the American failure - for years, ever since George W. Bush became President, the Us leads a "refusal" policy, which stubbornly refuses to yield to Kim Jong-Il's demands that his regime be recognized and granted a non-aggression pact, after which he would be willing to restore nuclear administration to his country. Washington, which has been burnt in the past by North Korea's violation of agreements, demands the order be reversed - first North Korea must disarm its nuclear capabilities, its only strategic asset, and only then can negotiations for a non-aggression pact begin.

In this last nuclear experiment, and those improbable to follow, the North Korean scientists have once again demonstrated their technological prowess- after having been flourishing in developing ballistic missiles from existing platforms and marketing them to "friendly" countries such as Iran and Syria. Any way they have also shown that North Korea is both audacious and willing sufficient to challenge the current international structure of soldiery born towards the end of the Cold War. This is a time of trial that will test the resoluteness of the fine countries and major superpowers in preserving the system of agreements and alliances that founded the United Nations and the weapon inspection organization, based on the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (Npt). This system divided the world in the middle of the legitimate nuclear club, which has the five superpowers (The Us, Russia - as heir of the Ussr, China, France and Britain) and the rest of the nations, which are allowed to possess nuclear vigor for peaceful needs only. This global system survived an prominent test, when three nations developed nasty nuclear capabilities and placed themselves in the middle ranks of nuclear nations which are not superpowers, i.e. Pakistan, India and Israel, who according to foreign reports has some 200 nuclear bombs.

So far, the world can give itself an F for failure in addressing the threat from the East. North Korea's ambition to attain a nuclear weapon was clear all along - since it removed the inspectors of the International Atomic vigor branch from the reactor in Yongbyon at the end of 2002. However, the infirmity of the International society was likewise clear - Russia and China would not agree to an American soldiery strike against North Korea, a country in their back yard sphere of influence; the sanctions imposed on North Korea by the Un safety Council in July of this year, following an experiment that included the firing of a estimate of missile towards Japan, sanctions that complex the mega-economies of South Korea, Japan and China, have proven hollow and ineffective and the sanctioning countries are now improbable to suffer from them. In all of this tumult, North Korea is marching unhindered towards its goal.


Conclusions and Concerns in Israel

Without immediate, resolute and fine operation by the entire International Community, it would be difficult to forestall the danger from North Korea. In the case of a weak response, in the style we are so customary with, Israel would have to quit from the ramifications regarding Iran that International Diplomacy can not be counted on to stop those countries seeking to attain nuclear weapons. Therefore, by that same logic, Israel must strike Teheran now knowing that it would pay a price, possibly a heavy one in economic, political, and soldiery terms. The chapter of the new war in Lebanon, which was a result, amongst other things, of a six year unhindered buildup of Iran's soldiery appendage in Lebanon, Hezbollah, is that policy makers on all echelons should devise today an operative multi-channeled plan to openly and effectively stop the Iranian nuclear plan. This plan would be lead by Israel, possibly executed solely by it. If such a plan is not possible, and its price is too onerous to sustain, we must ready ourselves for a new Middle-East: Not the one envisaged by Shimon Peres, but one where Ahmadinejad has a nuclear bomb.


A Light at the End of the Tunnel?

However, possibly in this dire hour, there is light at the end of the tunnel. Without being overly optimistic, it is possible that a psychological threshold has now been crossed, which would prompt the world to real action, such as the soldiery intervention in Kosovo. The Australian Prime Minister, John Howard, aptly defined the point at which we are situated, declaring that in the absence of a fine response by the safety Council to North Korea's behavior, the Un 's status will continue to decline. possibly the choosing of Ban Ki-Moon, the South Korea Foreign Minister, as Secretary general of the United Nations - South Korea being a country directly threatened by the accident - instead of Kofi Annan, the anemic and compromising character, might augur a convert in this international body. In a seminar regarding the experiment (9 October), a consensus was starting to coalesce regarding the imposition of sever economic sanctions, together with a complete ban on exports to North Korea that might serve for soldiery needs and initiating close inspection of every shipment to the country. This would take place under the aegis of chapter 7 to the Un charter, which allows use of force against a country threatening world peace - which might hint at soldiery operation should the need arise. This confident development, should it persevere, would contribute Israel and the Us with a strong claim for similarly severe operation against Iran.

North Korea Stretching Its Muscles

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