The North Koreans complain of our hostile attitude:
North Korea's No. 2 leader Kim Yong Nam threatened in an interview with a Japanese news agency that there also would be more nuclear tests if Washington continued what he called its "hostile attitude."
So let's explore the concept of projection as the North Koreans demand our "respect" for their nation in the wake of their attempted nuclear test.
They threaten us:
"If the U.S. keeps pestering us and increases pressure, we will regard it as a declaration of war and will take a series of physical corresponding measures," the statement, said without specifying what those measures could be.
And the beatings will continue until respect improves:
"The issue of future nuclear tests is linked to U.S. policy toward our country," Kim Yong Nam was quoted as saying when asked whether Pyongyang will conduct more
tests.
And their troops perhaps haven't heard of the likely failure of their first-ever test:
Along the razor-wired no-man's-land separating the divided Koreas, communist troops were more boldly trying to provoke their southern counterparts: spitting across the demarcation line, making throat-slashing hand gestures, flashing their middle finger and trying to talk to the troops, said U.S. Army Maj. Jose DeVarona of Fayetteville, N.C.
Nor does the Pillsbury Nuke Boy take kindly to people unhappy with his nuclear ambitions:
"The enemy schemes to destroy us through economic lockout ... but that is merely a foolish illusion," said an editorial published by the state-run Rodong Sinmun, according to Radio Press.
I'd say the North Koreans are the ones with the hostile attitude. If we were really hostile, South Korea would be an island and the Yalu would be China's southern shoreline.
I am sick of the North Koreans all over again. Thoroughly. I guess I don't mind if we talk to them. As long as we let them die. But let them talk to us with all six representatives around. No one-on-one. Don't reward them for their hostility and provocations.
And yes, I personally have a hostile attitude toward that gulag with a UN seat.