In Korea, President Moon Jae-In is from the "liberal" party, but more importantly he is a Korea-First Nationalist. And he saw a similar spirit in GEOTUS Trump. In Korea, it was the previous "conservative" President Lee and Park that were the Globalist sellouts.
Look at UK's Boris Johnson, looks like a Globalist to me. Mexico's "leftist" Obrador? Nationalist.
Trump at one of his UN speeches told the world, he will put America first, but that other countries need to put themselves first. How is this even controversial?
Moon is more than a little too pro-China for my tastes. Great that he's getting along with Kim Jong Un, not so great he's getting along with China. Not to mention the Dominion-style voting irregularities that put him into office last (March? April?).
I'm not convinced he's what he appears. Need more info.
In the previous election btwn PGH and Moon, the news reported her win to the exact percentage before the polls closed. Considering the KCIA had backed PGH and LMB previously, it is hard to say the Deep State preferred Moon. And for sure Samsung isn't a fan of Moon (but Moon isn't stupid enough to strangle the Chaebols, just keep them in check).
Regarding his stance on China, historically Korea and China have gotten along, with the latter having largely kept hands-off the Korean peninsula (see withdrawal of PRC troops from NK).
SK conservatives have largely depended on the NK bogeyman to stay in power. So oddly enough the SK liberals have been more ethnic nationalists, with an eye on unification. To achieve that, the great powers of America, China and Russia must give the okay. Trump was the first American president to come along to support peace in Korea. According to Q, KJU and NK have been freed of the Cabal.
Moon's the best to come along so far. And him working alongside well with Trump and KJU gives me hope. He's been supportive of Trump since the beginning. However if he starts espousing open borders, I will be against him instantly.
The Korean peninsula is a naturally defensible position. As Korea gave up its historical claims to Liaodong and other parts of Manchuria, I can see China stepping back as Trump wants to reduce American military presence there as well.
Going forward, America will have good allies in Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, Vietnam and Thailand. With Trump. Not with Biden.
The SK conservatives really shat the bed with their leaders, they've deserved their losses. Moon deftly handled the panic around CV19, to win his parliamentary elections earlier this year. I can't say he won because of vote fixing. The conservatives need to get on board with Korea first (which includes both Koreas).
It's difficult to get a good sense of the state of each and every country's leadership without spending ages absorbing both the establishment media and alternate sources. So I mostly just accept that if they're cooperating with Trump then they're at least useful in TGA, and assume that Trump knows just how far to trust them.
In Korea, President Moon Jae-In is from the "liberal" party, but more importantly he is a Korea-First Nationalist. And he saw a similar spirit in GEOTUS Trump. In Korea, it was the previous "conservative" President Lee and Park that were the Globalist sellouts. Look at UK's Boris Johnson, looks like a Globalist to me. Mexico's "leftist" Obrador? Nationalist. Trump at one of his UN speeches told the world, he will put America first, but that other countries need to put themselves first. How is this even controversial?
Moon is more than a little too pro-China for my tastes. Great that he's getting along with Kim Jong Un, not so great he's getting along with China. Not to mention the Dominion-style voting irregularities that put him into office last (March? April?).
I'm not convinced he's what he appears. Need more info.
In the previous election btwn PGH and Moon, the news reported her win to the exact percentage before the polls closed. Considering the KCIA had backed PGH and LMB previously, it is hard to say the Deep State preferred Moon. And for sure Samsung isn't a fan of Moon (but Moon isn't stupid enough to strangle the Chaebols, just keep them in check). Regarding his stance on China, historically Korea and China have gotten along, with the latter having largely kept hands-off the Korean peninsula (see withdrawal of PRC troops from NK). SK conservatives have largely depended on the NK bogeyman to stay in power. So oddly enough the SK liberals have been more ethnic nationalists, with an eye on unification. To achieve that, the great powers of America, China and Russia must give the okay. Trump was the first American president to come along to support peace in Korea. According to Q, KJU and NK have been freed of the Cabal. Moon's the best to come along so far. And him working alongside well with Trump and KJU gives me hope. He's been supportive of Trump since the beginning. However if he starts espousing open borders, I will be against him instantly. The Korean peninsula is a naturally defensible position. As Korea gave up its historical claims to Liaodong and other parts of Manchuria, I can see China stepping back as Trump wants to reduce American military presence there as well. Going forward, America will have good allies in Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, Vietnam and Thailand. With Trump. Not with Biden. The SK conservatives really shat the bed with their leaders, they've deserved their losses. Moon deftly handled the panic around CV19, to win his parliamentary elections earlier this year. I can't say he won because of vote fixing. The conservatives need to get on board with Korea first (which includes both Koreas).
Good information, thanks.
It's difficult to get a good sense of the state of each and every country's leadership without spending ages absorbing both the establishment media and alternate sources. So I mostly just accept that if they're cooperating with Trump then they're at least useful in TGA, and assume that Trump knows just how far to trust them.