So North Korea is acting up again?
Well, what else is new? asks Grumpy Editor.
Few in media seem to be aware that the Korean War, which started 67 years ago, remains open-ended.
Also labeled the “forgotten war,” the Korean War erupted when 135,000 communist North Korean troops crossed the 38th parallel into South Korea in pre-dawn hours of June 25, 1950.
Battles ended with a cease fire on July 27, 1953.
North and South Korea technically remain at war with no peace treaty.
For the U.S., it resulted in 36,940 military deaths, 103,000 wounded, 8,142 missing in action and 3,746 prisoners of war.
North Korea now likes to shake up the U.S., South Korea and Japan, among others, by conducting a series of nuclear and missile tests.
Over the weekend North Korea showed off its military arsenal during a Saturday parade that was widely covered. Then later, the latest --- and much touted --- North Korean missile blew up almost immediately after its test launch.
Meanwhile, with rising tensions on the Korean peninsula, less covered is a U.S. aircraft that arrived on Okinawa. The WC-135, also known as the "nuclear sniffer," specializes in detecting radioactive debris after a nuclear device detonation.
President Donald Trump last week tweeted, “North Korea is looking for trouble. If China decides to help, that would be great. If not, we will solve the problem without them! U.S.A.”
As far as “help” is concerned, what seems to be forgotten is that China indeed helped during the Korean War --- by providing support in both material and especially in soldiers (battling U.S. troops on the ground) to aid North Korea.
What many seem to overlook is that nuclear disarmament talks have been going on for years. The routine has been for North Korea to talk, followed by pauses, then more talks, followed by no final action.
IN CASE YOUR FAVORITE NEWS OUTLETS MISSED THESE…
With all the highly negative publicity triggered by United Airlines actions over the past week that sparked outrage following the dragging of a ticketed and seated doctor passenger off a plane to make room for a United employee, and issuance of a string of apologies from United CEO Oscar Munoz, major media missed these:
Munoz last year won PRWeek's Communicator of the Year award and Fortune magazine's Business Person of the Year list (No. 20).
Talking Biz News reports Marijuana Business Daily now is an Associated Press member, giving the cannabis-focused publication access to marijuana-related stories from around the world…Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla, which nudged past GM in market value last week, reveals the electric car company will unveil its first semi truck in September, followed by a pickup truck in about two years…Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway says it has withdrawn its application to the Federal Reserve to boost its ownership of Wells Fargo beyond 10 percent. Berkshire is the largest shareholder in the San Francisco-based bank that has been smacked by a scandal involving creation of unauthorized customer accounts…In a compilation obviously before an anticipated high snow melt in coming weeks, American Rivers, a national conservation organization, labels the lower Colorado River as the most endangered river in the nation. The river supplies water to Southern Nevada, Arizona, California --- and seldom-mentioned Mexico.
Another Mexican reporter killed.
A police beat reporter for Colectivo Pericu is shot and killed in La Paz on the Baja California peninsula.
It marks the sixth attack in one-and-a-half months against journalists in Mexico and the fourth that resulted in death.
Comments