Good post, Sir. Your comments remind me of a wise observation a very wise man once wrote:
"That which has been is that which will be, and that which has been done is that which will be done. So, there is nothing new under the sun." ~King Solomon, Ecclesiastes 1:9
Time will tell if the President of South Korea possesses a bit of Solomon's wisdom.
UPDATE: The National Election Commission was raided under Marshall Law. As soon as it was completed, Marshall Law was terminated. My previous post was right. "The Democratic Party of Korea won the April 2020 and April 2024 General Elections in major landslides unheard of in Korean history, effectively gaining control of the National Assembly and its lawmaking capacity.
Former Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-Ahn said, “The reason why opposition lawmakers are able to do whatever they want at the National Assembly despite being substandard is because they were elected through fraudulent elections,” and added that “The record of election fraud remains intact at the NEC.”
It took Martial Law to conduct search and seizure of the NEC and for the major media outlets to finally utter “election fraud.”
I sincerely hope South Korea's current dustup isn't about a president using his power to oppress his opposition. South Korea has always been a dream tourist destination for me due to its fearless push to create a Republic somewhat mimicking our own, while still incorporating their conservative Asian values of ancestry, family and reserved personal behavior. I'm fascinated by South Korean culture bc, while they seemed to avoid some of the pitfalls of a Republican-style of government, they created others linked to their own heritage and belief in traditional Korean culture. Little of it is a turn off to me. I love that family, hard work and deep belief in personal responsibility drives them, but I also look at their education model and while there's much to emulate, the societal pressure on young people to excel in their education drives a shockingly high suicide rate in South Korean teens. I fear if President Yoon or the SK Parliament is behaving badly, it will reflect poorly on a the nation and South Koreans, in my opinion, simply deserve better from their elected officials. Thank you, Mr. Gaub, for your hesitation to report on a subject we don't have all the facts on yet. I'd rather wait to get a full picture than judge a good nation on incomplete reporting.
There were 297 comments on the Epoch, article which was really a copy paste of Reuters and the AP. Yoon appears under much pressure to keep the status quo, although he may have gotten office calling for change.
It appears to me that the National-Assembly borrowed the Dem's election playbook of 2020 and installed all the WEF controlled candidates. Just like our Congress when one party controls, it can, if it wills, stop a president from just about anything.
Thank you, sir, for your keen and knowledgeable perspective.
Good post, Sir. Your comments remind me of a wise observation a very wise man once wrote:
"That which has been is that which will be, and that which has been done is that which will be done. So, there is nothing new under the sun." ~King Solomon, Ecclesiastes 1:9
Time will tell if the President of South Korea possesses a bit of Solomon's wisdom.
UPDATE: The National Election Commission was raided under Marshall Law. As soon as it was completed, Marshall Law was terminated. My previous post was right. "The Democratic Party of Korea won the April 2020 and April 2024 General Elections in major landslides unheard of in Korean history, effectively gaining control of the National Assembly and its lawmaking capacity.
Former Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-Ahn said, “The reason why opposition lawmakers are able to do whatever they want at the National Assembly despite being substandard is because they were elected through fraudulent elections,” and added that “The record of election fraud remains intact at the NEC.”
It took Martial Law to conduct search and seizure of the NEC and for the major media outlets to finally utter “election fraud.”
Much more here: https://www.worldtribune.com/minutes-after-south-koreas-yoon-imposed-martial-law-troops-raided-national-election-commission/
Yup, we posted about this on the other outlets I write for. CDM Press, Armed Forces Press, Montana Sentinel. Just added American Revival Press.
Fantastic! I'm just taking it for granted that the MSM hasn't touched this, not sure because I never read their stuff.
It will be very interesting how this plays out and how it figures into the game….
I sincerely hope South Korea's current dustup isn't about a president using his power to oppress his opposition. South Korea has always been a dream tourist destination for me due to its fearless push to create a Republic somewhat mimicking our own, while still incorporating their conservative Asian values of ancestry, family and reserved personal behavior. I'm fascinated by South Korean culture bc, while they seemed to avoid some of the pitfalls of a Republican-style of government, they created others linked to their own heritage and belief in traditional Korean culture. Little of it is a turn off to me. I love that family, hard work and deep belief in personal responsibility drives them, but I also look at their education model and while there's much to emulate, the societal pressure on young people to excel in their education drives a shockingly high suicide rate in South Korean teens. I fear if President Yoon or the SK Parliament is behaving badly, it will reflect poorly on a the nation and South Koreans, in my opinion, simply deserve better from their elected officials. Thank you, Mr. Gaub, for your hesitation to report on a subject we don't have all the facts on yet. I'd rather wait to get a full picture than judge a good nation on incomplete reporting.
There were 297 comments on the Epoch, article which was really a copy paste of Reuters and the AP. Yoon appears under much pressure to keep the status quo, although he may have gotten office calling for change.
It appears to me that the National-Assembly borrowed the Dem's election playbook of 2020 and installed all the WEF controlled candidates. Just like our Congress when one party controls, it can, if it wills, stop a president from just about anything.