View Single Post
Old 03-01-2007, 11:32 AM   #13
PurpleXVI
Emerald Dragon
 

Join Date: April 6, 2005
Location: Denmark
Age: 39
Posts: 903
Larry: Don't trust the Chinese figures, they send people to be "cured of addiction" at special centers because they spread dissident messages or figure out how to break the government's censorship on their internet access.

Mostly this "treatment" seems to consist of things that are essentially the same as torture.

Johnny: I really doubt they have to worry. South Korea and Japan are probably the two of the safest countries in the world, militarily. If either was to be invaded, it would have to be a sea invasion(Assuming that North Korea isn't going to invade South Korea, which I think we safely can, jealousy is extremely impossible to happen there since the citizens know nothing of the outside world and the leadership is convinced of it's own superiority.), and a sea invasion of a modern nation would be the same as a massacre of the invading forces. The only way to really take them down would be some sort of artillery barrage, but both of them are tight with the US who can probably rain down a more high-tech barrage than anyone else. Whoever launched an all-out assault, attempting either invasion or termination, would have to be ready for MAD.

Ilander: NASA does not have a monopoly on space access. The ESA has a launch facility in French Guyana, Russia has a launch facility in Kazakhstan, Japan also has the Tanegashima Space Center(On Tanegashima Island), India has three launch facilities(Thumba, Shriharikota and Balasore.) and for the moment I cannot recall where China has it's launch facility. I have not dug up the exact details on all launches, but I do know that the most advanced European communications satellite currently in orbit was an ESA launch.

[ 03-01-2007, 02:06 PM: Message edited by: PurpleXVI ]
PurpleXVI is offline   Reply With Quote