Quote: (05-15-2019 03:53 PM)911 Wrote:
Quote: (05-15-2019 10:55 AM)ilostabet Wrote:
First you legalize usury, which allows for rapid economic and technological growth, and then you have the stage set for the destruction of traditional morality - including killing babies. With this system, sooner or later cultural rot sets in, regardless of the form it takes (K Pop, as an example) it is the same sewer.
Here's a really good video about the absolute soul-killing machine, for artists and consumers, that is K-Pop.
Anyway, same story everywhere. I said it before about Japan, and I'll say it again: there are no Jews in Korea.
There is however, a lot of Jewish/talmudist influence in S. Korea, which like Japan and Taiwan are still essentially American colonies (though not as much so as say, Germany). From a previous post of mine:
The talmudists did actually infiltrate south Korea and Taiwanese cultures, mostly through (((evangelicals))). Especially in SK, where the zio-brainwashing has been extremely virulent:
Quote:Quote:
Talmud Study Now Mandatory in South Korea
Close to 50 million people live in South Korea, and everyone learns Gemara in school. “We tried to understand why the Jews are geniuses, and we came to the conclusion that it is because they study Talmud,” said the Korean ambassador to Israel. And this is how “Rav Papa” became a well known scholar in Korea like in Israel.
Ynet reports: It is doubtful if the Amoraic scholars Abbaye and Rava imagined their discussions of Jewish law in the Beit Midrash in Babylon would be taught hundreds of years later in East Asia. Yet it turns out that the laws of an “egg born on a holiday” (“ביצה שנולדה ביום טוב”) is actually very interesting to the South Koreans who have required that Talmud study be part of their compulsory school curriculum.
Almost every home in South Korea now contains a Korean-translated Talmud. But unlike in Israel, the Korean mothers teach the Talmud to their children. In a country of close to 49 million people who believe in Buddhism and Christianity, there are more people who read the Talmud – or at least own their own copy at home – more than in the Jewish state. Much more.
http://matzav.com/talmud-study-now-manda...uth-korea/
That kind of explains the hostility between Israel/US neocons and North Korea, and why NK arrested Jewish spy Otto Warmbier, who came into the country posing as a Christian tourist.
Japan has been run by local masons who are affiliated to globalists. Very much like in Italy, where the globalists also used the national mafia (Yakuza) to control the country, that's why the Yakuza is allowed to fester in Japan.
China has had a strong globalist influence as well, Mao was a Skull and Bones tool financed by the Rothschilds, but it seems like the country has been slowly weening itself from that influence. You can see that in the way the country is cracking down on baizuo and western cultural faggotry, while its more westernized neighbors Taiwan and S. Korea become ever more infected with that cultural rot.
The new law by South Korea is just a nothingburger. Laws itself can't change a society. South Korea will remain one of the more xenophobic countries in East Asia. Hong Kong tied with Taipei are #1 in cultural globohomo in East Asia, with nowhere else coming close.
And on China, Shanghai is just as gay, careerist, and low-birth rate as Seoul, and its only becoming gayer. Keep in mind Korean society has remained highly xenophobic, and I would say its easier for a foreigner to date locals in Beijing/Shanghai than Seoul. All the crackdowns on baizuo by the national government has been hot air that nobody really cares about, while local crackdowns are just hamfisted attempts by struggling local governments to attempt to please the national government. Zero crackdowns on baizuo in areas that western culture actually influences the local population.
Yes there has been crackdowns on some bar streets in parts of Shanghai, but this is because the developers has eyed the land that the bars are sitting on. "Kicking out Western influence" is the least of these worries. The only places that have been fierce in "kicking out Western influence" and "removing baizuo" seem to be in Hebei Province, which has no western influence there at all in the first place. There has been crackdowns on Christianity in Wenzhou, but only because Christians are 11% of the population there and the government is trying to put down dissent.
The main countries that are actually free of globalist cultural influence are North Korea and Iran. But I don't know a single sane person whose clamoring to go live in these countries. Even Moscow, supposedly Megan McCain's "city of Satan", somehow has Shake Shack AND Krispy Kreme on top of the usual McDonalds and Starbucks. That's not "resistance to globalism" in my book. The world is not a black-and-white place. Even within the "globalists" there are different elites from different nations and career backgrounds who oftentimes even butt heads with each other.
Keep in mind that globalist culture-free USSR fell precisely because how uncool it was after the inhabitants found out about Western culture.
South Korea remains one of the most desirable places in East Asia for a reason. Kpop is popular all over East Asia for a reason. Nobody wants to listen to stuffy Communist music or visit North Korea for reasons besides sheer curiosity. And if you actually showed North Koreans what South Korea is like, and gave everybody an option to stay, or go to South Korea, I'd wager that roughly 80% of them will choose to head across the DMZ, of whom at least 80% will end up choosing Seoul and its suburbs. Overnight, there will be 5 million people or something like that left in North Korea if everybody there is given a free choice to leave.
And I'm not praising liberalism either: I saw first-hand how Taiwan's liberalism played a big role in its economic stagnation, brain drain of the middle class to Mainland China (albeit living there as expats not immigrants), and recently, a massive influx of Vietnamese and Indonesian foreign labor. But a hamfisted Soviet-style is not an alternative.