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Fighting the Illuminati in S Korea (II)

March 15, 2012



skorea.jpeg(Left, S. Korean university students)

"It would take many decades of oppression to fully corrupt these people. These people are not to be corrupted. They are earthy, intense, and full of hope."






by James Farganne
(henrymakow.com)


I have lived in South Korea a long time.

I used to sell jewellery on the streets, and learned about the structure of this society. I made friends with both gangsters and police.

Now I am fighting a new wave of satanic and sexual imagery battering the children of this country. The bastards are trying to condition them into the same sorry state that you find yourselves in in North America.

I am here to tell you: They won't win.

I teach at a university. Most of my students are freshmen, fresh out of high school. They emerge from a punitive educational system. No questions are allowed to be asked. They are required to memorize and regurgitate.

Strangely enough, they come out of it very shrewd. They challenge me on the first day of class. They want to know what I will offer. If I don't give good answers, they leapfrog to another class. Their determination is admirable.

Here's how I do it: I make the first class a real whopper. I show them Jim Stone's Fukushima report. I tell them that this is the kind of stuff that they're going to deal with if they take my class. Some of them wander elsewhere. Most of them stay.

Here's another thing I did, on the second day of this new semester: I showed them my Kpop presentation on YouTube.

You could have heard a pin drop.

When the presentation was over, they applauded. They wanted to know how they could spread the information. Most of them were repulsed by this new culture.

That tells me that the entrenched elite in this country have seriously miscalculated. The one thing they can't understand, and therefore can't gauge, simply because they don't have it, is the Human Spirit.

These people have the Human Spirit in spades.

The children here are remarkable. They can see through it, and they despise it. The elites have been pushing Kpop on the rest of the world's youth with remarkable success. But guess what? By and large, the Korean kids ain't buying it.

That is for a number of reasons too extensive to delve into in this article. But trust me, those reasons are valid. They exist.

GARLIC

When I teach Koreans about Codex Alimentarius, they laugh. That's because they can't get their heads around a world in which they could not purchase garlic.

You have to understand, garlic is a major way of life here. Bulgogi, the signature national dish, is not complete without raw slices of garlic wedged between grilled meat and lettuce leaves.

Not only that, but garlic is an essential ingredient of kimchi. Kimchi cannot be made without it. These people will burn at the stake before they are robbed of their kimchi. You can trust me on this.

The same goes for oriental medicine, also another proposed victim of Codex. I have an oriental medicine doctor student who is fully cognizant of the dangers we face. She laughs when I propose that oriental medicine will be taken away.

Here's just one more detail before I close. Tonight my wife had a large intestine issue. It happens periodically. I called an ambulance. Two hours later, after a saline IV, an X-ray, and a blood test, we were sent home at a grand cost of 70 bucks. That is right, 70 US dollars, more or less. Koreans are used to this kind of health care, and if it were suddenly disrupted, there would be absolute hell to pay.

Not least from my poor wife.

They are ramping up their efforts. But they have really miscalculated. It would take many decades of oppression to fully corrupt these people. These people are not to be corrupted. They are earthy, intense, and full of hope.

So let me tell you this, you bastards: You have really overestimated yourselves. All it takes is for one developed (by you) country to rise up and kick you in the nuts.

What will you do, neutron bomb 50 million people on live TV?

You can't win. Give up.

That's my take on the fight. Thanks for reading.

--
Fighting the Illuminati in S Korea (Part I)





Scruples - the game of moral dillemas

Comments for "Fighting the Illuminati in S Korea (II)"

Robert said (March 16, 2012):

I wish James best of luck in his endeavor of educating Korean youth. It is the youth who are the future of the country. But this wouldn't be possible if it were a Jesuit run institution which are scattered over Asia.

Mis-education is their main avenue for initial and sustained political control through the socially, historically, and scientifically flawed education of millions of youngsters and adults. In addition, being able to observe and direct the professional path of the brightest students can help to further their own neurotic agenda, or at least not obstruct it. The restrictions on home-community schooling are also part of the educational domination agenda

http://wikischool.org/research/Miseducation.html


Henry Makow received his Ph.D. in English Literature from the University of Toronto in 1982. He welcomes your comments at