This is what MetalSlimeHunt just said:
A: The US did NOT bring allies into Vietnam, Afghanistan, or Iraq.
I didn't say that. I meant that a war with North Korea would see much higher multinational cooperation than any of those three invasions, most of all from South Korea.
B: North Korea does not have a functioning government.
They might have a functioning millitary, but secret police and a token constitution while the nation starves does not a functioning government make.
C: North Korea does not have an extremely patriotic citizenry.
I said that we don't know how much of North Korea's population is extremely patriotic. Anyone who doesn't at least appear to follow the Great Leader like a god is long dead/sent to a death camp along with two generations of their family. How many are genuine and how many are putting up a facade is somthing that we simply do not know.
We also don't know any of those 3 points. The Western media has been extremely biased against NK, just like it was against Iraq. There were plenty of people who believed that Saddam raped children, that he would execute people at will, that he had secret police, that his people hated him, that he rigged elections.
I strongly doubt most of the things people say about NK. I've seen some videos of people in there, and the people are sufficiently brainwashed and skeptical of the outside world. The Western world likes to act like it's a free thinking world, but it's still not free from the influence of media. How do you know they have secret police? How do you know that they're starving? How do you know people hate them? Do you know that they send their people into death camps?
The media tells you all that. How do you know that they checked their facts? It's not like most journalists would know about secret police if they're secret.
With all the propaganda CNN had on the War on Iraq, the Americans thought that they were going to be greeted with flowers. But no, the civilians were more willing to kill themselves than let USA in. Why was that?