I’m just using common sense, and an understanding of human nature. I cannot imagine that anyone in the Trump admin wants nuclear weapons to remain in the hands of the crazy man in North Korea.
I simply cannot imagine that anyone would want to sabotage these talks to allow Kim to maintain a nuclear arsenal and threaten the region.
Yet many first world nations have a socialist form of healthcare or a welfare state and they are flourishing. The UK has a national health service yet it is also a capitalist society.
But to go back to your original comment - Why do you continue to put socialism and communism together? They are not the same.
the king of all sports leagues in our country (by a long shot) is the NFL. it’s about as socialist as you can get (revenue sharing, the weak teams get to draft first, collective bargaining, unions, etc). it’s THE perfect setup for that industry and why they leapfrogged baseball so easily (and baseball is more capitalistic since the rich teams have major advantages).
so, in football, we get the excitement of never knowing who is gonna be challenging/great from year to year and in baseball the Yankees, Red Sox and Cardinals pretty much stay near or at the top.
What did Obama do to earn his Nobel Prize? and how far was that into his presidency? It was like the Democrats knew what he was going to do, and rewarded him for it ahead of time! lol. I find it fascinating that you chose Keyser soze as a screen name to me.
here is what Wikipedia says about him; Keyser Söze (/ˈkaɪzər ˈsoʊzeɪ/ KY-zər SOH-zay) is a fictional character and the main antagonist in the 1995 film The Usual Suspects, written by Christopher McQuarrie and directed by Bryan Singer. According to petty con artist Roger “Verbal” Kint (Kevin Spacey), Söze is a crime lord whose ruthlessness and influence have acquired a legendary, even mythical, status among police and criminals alike. Further events in the story make these accounts unreliable, and, in a twist ending, a police sketch identifies Kint and Söze as one and the same. The character was inspired by real life murderer John List and the spy thriller No Way Out, which featured a shadowy KGB mole.
So basically he was a very evil man. So I’m very curious what relation you would feel with him to make you make such a screen name? Especially since Kevin Spacey played that role, but also played the role in American Beauty. Which the main party of that movie was about an old man taking advantage of a young naive underaged girl. Is there possibly any relations between your morality and the morality of what your persona portrays to really be?