@@cheungchingtong the Vietnam and Korean wars was about the China trying to stop the US colonial influences. but living in the US their narrative is the US being the good guy and want to stop communism lol
@@etep878Not true. Confucious teaches ppl to think critically and indpedently while only a special faction of confucianism named ZhuXi advocates obelidience to authority.
"Deceit's favourite role is to play the victim; to make the innocent appear guilty, and the guilty appear innocent" Paul Galindo: Attribution of Error Theories.
@@ramseso.8937 fortunately not lo ^^ ..swiss education, very solid in terms of general knowledge, but often lacks in teaching critical thinking towards western history and politics (or just not teaching about events and background informations at all), as it probably is the case in many other western countries no matter how good their schools are in general..
Ben, your program is so informative. I cant thank you enough for putting all of this together. Gauging politics in other countries is so difficult because finding a rational, relevant basis to evaluate political action on is nearly impossible when you know nothing. Your historical and material analysis is exactly what people need to inform them in that rational and relevant way. Really, man, thank you.
I am 82 years old ex-Korean and went through most of this account by myself. I assure you that what you have presented here is one of the most accurate one I have come up with so far.
Gracias Ben, I'm always waiting for your guidance in these confusing times, South Korea is so weird being a colony of USA and yet having a coup attempt...
Nothing really new here : Videla in Argentina, Pinochet in Chile, Suharto in Indonesia, Batista in Cuba, Mobutu in Zaire. US support of ruthless military regimes in client states ….
You are absolutely right Ben, this story didn't get enough coverage. And that's where your swoop in and save the day... Informing your audience of what is really going on. Thank you very much✊🏼
Much of North Korea's arable land was so badly contaminated by the bombing that it still unusable today, giving rise to frequent famines that persist to now. Napalm contains benzene among other chemicals.
Thanks all the time for your correct and true information of the world... especially you are the rare source who talks the truth about South Korea and Japan, Many westerers are talking wrong information on Japan and S,Korea because they cannot read Korean and Japanese languages.... I have lived in the both nations, and Your information on them are always true... I also watch the S,Korean congress listening concering the coup...and you are talking true story as the same as the listening happened in S,Korean congress now.,
Poland is in similar situation as s. kr we are force to pay for US base, and they soliders, they are excluded from Polish law. Polish gov was pressured to pay 'reparations' to Jews who lived in Poland (heirless property, rebuilt at our expense), instead Germany. You should cover more Polish situation as it's house on sand pressured from all sides with ukraine situation (to send Polish soliders there)
Poland pressured from all sides you say? That is the way it was historically for Poland, and The Commonwealth. Historically, it was Holy Roman Empire (Germany) that did the most damage to your self determination and autonomy. Perhaps, the occupier of Germany does not value Polish interests as equal to their own interests.
Imagine if martial law happened in India. How the wolves would have come out. Even when we have fully functioning democracy, we are called a dictatorship
That US duality has been playing out with their approach to the rebel takeover in Syria where they are already showing a willingness to work with HTS but when legitimate national armies overthrew unpopular governments in nations like Burkina Faso and Chad they were quick to point of their "rule" of not working with coup governments !!
@@ChrisMclean126 I prefer to point out the clear and quantifiable things they do. I appreciate it makes little difference to the big picture, but makes me feel better lol
I applaud Korean people especially the ones who protested and blocked parliament and stopped special forces from occupying the parliament ..... It's madness how South Korean regime wanting to start n word vvar just to please the US .... Same with Ukraine and Taiwan ... What's wrong those countries?!...
That is so ridiculous and deceitful, Hitler could have said he wanted to bring democracy to the world lol. I am even more surprised that the USA first fought against right-wing national socialists like Hitler, but immediately after the war they totally supported the right-wing Koreans - that just goes to show how deceitful the USA's foreign policy is.
US have always played a double game, prior to Pearl Harbor, they supplied both the Nazis and eventual allies, and even before blocking oil to Japan in 1942, extensively supplied them whilst they launched all out war on China in 1937.
They supported Hitler to smash the Communists. The idea was 2 have Germany and Russia destroy each other and then come and clean up which is exactly what happened and we are living in that world today
Little known fact with the chaebol oligarchy: Samsung, arguably South Korea's most valuable company, is also majority owned by US shareholders. (about 51% of its voting stock owned by US firms while 71% non-voting stock also owned by foreign (presumably majority American) firms). Samsung's founders do not have a majority stake since the restructuring (or neoliberal takeover) done during the 1997 economic crisis. In other words, the US also de facto owns South Korea's economy.
Some have speculated that the US may have pushed Yoon to declare martial law so that he could then send weapons to Ukraine, which is illegal under the Korean constitution. So the US national security state may have shown support for the coup.
The authorization of preemptive nuclear strikes, particularly against a nation like North Korea, reflects a profound shift in the conceptualization of power, sovereignty, and global security. In the context of a unipolar world-one where the United States and its allies hold preeminent influence or dominion-the decision to contemplate or authorize such extreme actions serves as both a symptom and a symbol of the hegemonic ambitions underlying this global order. A unipolar world, in which the United States sits atop a hierarchical pyramid of global power, sees its military and strategic might as the primary guarantor of international stability. This world is fundamentally structured on the idea that the U.S. alone possesses the moral, political, and military authority to define global norms and enforce them, often through unilateral action or the imposition of its will on sovereign states. The notion of preemptive strikes, especially nuclear ones, further entrenches this logic by suggesting that the U.S. has the prerogative to act before a perceived threat fully materializes, regardless of the international legal framework or the sovereignty of the nations involved. In the case of North Korea, a nation long considered to be outside the U.S. sphere of influence, the authorization of preemptive nuclear strikes epitomizes the ideological foundations of the unipolar world order. North Korea’s pursuit of nuclear weapons, seen as an existential threat by the U.S., is framed not merely as a regional issue but as a global threat to the hegemony the U.S. and its allies claim to uphold. This justifies, in the eyes of those in power, the use of extreme measures-such as preemptive nuclear action-not just as an act of defense but as an assertion of authority over the global order. Such actions exemplify the way in which the unipolar world, when coupled with a doctrine of preemption, can devolve into a system where the interests of a single hegemonic power override the rights and sovereignties of other nations. This doctrine, particularly when expressed through the lens of nuclear warfare, signals a chilling departure from multilateral diplomacy and cooperative conflict resolution. Instead, it reinforces the idea that force is the ultimate arbiter of power in global politics. The preemptive strike authorization also highlights the dynamics of power asymmetry. North Korea, as an isolated state with limited international allies, faces a reality where its survival depends on nuclear deterrence against a far more powerful and technologically advanced adversary. In contrast, the United States, armed with overwhelming military superiority and a vast array of nuclear weapons, operates under a doctrine that permits the use of such weapons as a tool for geopolitical coercion and preservation of its hegemony. Thus, this reflects not only a tactical decision but a symbolic one-reinforcing the U.S.'s willingness to maintain its dominance by any means necessary, including nuclear strikes. In essence, the decision to authorize preemptive nuclear strikes against North Korea, under the leadership of Joe Biden, is a stark reflection of the imperial underpinnings of the current unipolar world order. It underscores the belief that the U.S. is empowered-perhaps even obligated-to wield its military might to shape the global landscape, regardless of the existential risks and moral ramifications that such a strategy entails. This is a manifestation of a world in which unilateralism trumps multilateralism, and the boundaries of power and legitimacy are defined solely by the capacity to project force. If a significant fraction of the American populace-or particularly its governing elite-is ostensibly unperturbed by the specter of nuclear conflict, this does indeed paint a chilling portrait of how such a mindset could manifest in the post-war world order, were the United States and its allies to decisively triumph in the containment of Russia, China, Iran, and North Korea. Such an attitude might indicate a willingness to normalize extreme measures, including nuclear strikes, as legitimate instruments of hegemonic preservation. If these measures were to be justified under the pretense of defending democracy, freedom, or global stability, the moral precedent set could erode any remaining constraints on unilateral, preemptive violence. This aligns disturbingly well with historical patterns where military interventions, sanctions, and regime changes were rationalized as necessary for safeguarding Western dominance, often at the expense of sovereign nations and their civilian populations. Were this mindset to permeate a hypothetical unipolar world order-where NATO, the United States, and the UK achieve unchallenged supremacy-it could indeed engender an international system that prioritizes power retention over collaborative governance. Any dissenting nation might be branded a threat to global stability and thus subject to preemptive action, with the justification echoing the same rhetoric used in contemporary conflicts. This scenario would also perpetuate a cycle of fear and retribution. Nations excluded from this hegemonic structure would be driven to seek asymmetrical means of deterrence-possibly including the very nuclear weapons they would be condemned for pursuing-resulting in persistent global instability. Thus, the attitude you highlight is not merely a reflection of current geopolitical tensions but also a harbinger of the ethical and strategic trajectory that might define the international system if power remains unchecked by moral introspection or multilateral accountability. If nuclear brinkmanship becomes normalized as a tool of hegemony, the world risks descending into an era of perpetual coercion, with humanity itself teetering on the precipice of annihilation.
Instead of serenading his colonial masters at the White House with a cringy rendition of "American Pie", perhaps "I Fought the Law (and the Law Won)" by The Bobby Fuller Four would be more apropos.
In 2022: The total assets of the five largest chaebols family business accounted for about 61% of South Korea's GDP. Samsung Group's among them has a total assets made up about 22% of the country's GDP. And yet only around 10% of South Korean workers are employed by chaebol large family-run conglomerates. The rest of South Korean are employed by small businesses.
Hello Ben, Thank you for all the valuable information you've shared, which has been noticeably absent from Western media coverage. Their narratives are biased and riddled with Western propaganda. You truly deserve to be nominated for the Best Broadcast Journalist Award!👍
So South Korea is just a US working camp.
What did you originally think it was?
It's one big Western propaganda project to demonstrate the supposed superiority of capitalism.
@@cheungchingtong the Vietnam and Korean wars was about the China trying to stop the US colonial influences. but living in the US their narrative is the US being the good guy and want to stop communism lol
Very much like Japan. "Freedom is slavery"
South Korea and Japan is a vassal of the Americans.
Thank you for showing real face of America
Americans don’t look at us Koreans as human beings. America is not the land of human rights and freedom.
100%
Yet knowing all this, the South Koreans still let the wolf into their house through the front door. Shame on them, Japan, and the Philippines too.
@@ngkky yup, many Koreans accept authority without question. I think it's the influence of Confucianism.
@@etep878Not true. Confucious teaches ppl to think critically and indpedently while only a special faction of confucianism named ZhuXi advocates obelidience to authority.
No offence. You should firstly be independent from the US colony and then ask for equal human rights.
Fascist South Korea
“Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” - George Santayana,
Fascist US
@@liz-sy2lj Both of them are true...
@ ya I know, I just didn’t want an inadvertent emphasis on our puppet colony.
It just copies the U.S. regime.
Ben deserves to be in the Journalism Hall of Fame. Independent journalists with journalistic integrity are the heroes of our time.
Every accusation is a confession from the empire, keep an eye on what they accuse Iran of…
"Deceit's favourite role is to play the victim; to make the innocent appear guilty, and the guilty appear innocent" Paul Galindo: Attribution of Error Theories.
The us is not a empire get evidence
Get evidence
@@sergeantzack1106 The US hasn’t needed any evidence to commit atrocities across the globe so tell the actual “government” behind the US that not me.
@ look in a mirror for evidence of 🧠washing.
The American Military Industry dictates when and where.
They decides what is best for you and your country.
Always an education to listen to you, Ben: thank you!
The more I hear about America and their antics the more I dislike the American government and the British government, from Australia 🦘
Thank you Ben❤
Amazing work Ben
Geopolitical Economy Report, aka 'What they don't teach you in School'
thank you so much 👍
Humm!
Sounds very much, like USA education sistem( especially in their domestic own history , and of course world history).
@@ramseso.8937 fortunately not lo ^^
..swiss education, very solid in terms of general knowledge, but often lacks in teaching critical thinking towards western history and politics (or just not teaching about events and background informations at all), as it probably is the case in many other western countries no matter how good their schools are in general..
Yoon Suk wou't be singing American Pie any more.
"Sympathy For The Devil"?
That was utterly embarrassing. Can you imagine any statesman doing the same?
@@tukity Well, there was Yeltsin in the 90s saying "God bless America" to their Congress. Thankfully, Russia rose up out of that humiliating decade.
Ben, your program is so informative. I cant thank you enough for putting all of this together. Gauging politics in other countries is so difficult because finding a rational, relevant basis to evaluate political action on is nearly impossible when you know nothing. Your historical and material analysis is exactly what people need to inform them in that rational and relevant way. Really, man, thank you.
CIA is not sending their best.
As always, my sincere thanks to you, Ben.
I am 82 years old ex-Korean and went through most of this account by myself. I assure you that what you have presented here is one of the most accurate one I have come up with so far.
Thank you for covering this important point. This is a crucial part of the puzzle.
Listening to Yoon’s speech to Congress, I now can’t decide who’s the biggest hypocrite, Biden or Yoon?😂
Hope the Korean people stand up and get this guy out of the office before it's too late.
Yoon was selected so i Biden. They wanted to pull the same sheet this election, they couldn't because it was too obvious.
He is not going anywhere until Washington say so .
The world is changing it can leave.
Thank you Ben, as Always.
Gracias Ben, I'm always waiting for your guidance in these confusing times, South Korea is so weird being a colony of USA and yet having a coup attempt...
No it's not
@sergeantzack1106 lol with U.S. military bases inside South Korea. They can't even question what they are doing. That's the mark of a colony.
The fact that people take 'Voice of America' seriously still is embarrassing. Thanks for the work you do Ben, keep going.
Nothing really new here : Videla in Argentina, Pinochet in Chile, Suharto in Indonesia, Batista in Cuba, Mobutu in Zaire. US support of ruthless military regimes in client states ….
Horror of horrors! Thank you, Ben Norton!
That's a great definition of 'convoluted' Thanks Ben, take care from Australia.
You are absolutely right Ben, this story didn't get enough coverage. And that's where your swoop in and save the day... Informing your audience of what is really going on. Thank you very much✊🏼
Forced alliances with your colonizer.
They replaced one colonizer (Japan) with another (USA)
100%
Or, "marry your rapist."
The us is not a colonizer get evidence
Get evidence
Much of North Korea's arable land was so badly contaminated by the bombing that it still unusable today, giving rise to frequent famines that persist to now. Napalm contains benzene among other chemicals.
Thanks for the content
21 hour working day would not leave much room for freedom .
Or sleep!
Thank You Ben, from the overthrown Kingdom of Hawai'i.
Kū Kia'i Hawai'i!!
Nobody wants war , only a bunch of peoples. 1%
Thanks Ben! Excellent reporting! Msm has more news about Johnny Somali, than the actual coup.
Yes
Martial law in Taiwan since day 1 in 1949 until 1987. Another US-backed democracy.
Thanks all the time for your correct and true information of the world... especially you are the rare source who talks the truth about South Korea and Japan, Many westerers are talking wrong information on Japan and S,Korea because they cannot read Korean and Japanese languages.... I have lived in the both nations, and Your information on them are always true... I also watch the S,Korean congress listening concering the coup...and you are talking true story as the same as the listening happened in S,Korean congress now.,
This is very true thank you so much Ben ❤❤
"History repeats itself first time as a Travesty, next time as a Farce" Karl Marx.
Japan is ruled by one party the entire time since after ww2....hmmmm....this isn't autocratic??
Partocracy. Kinda like Russia's Единая Россия (united russia). Hypocrisy if you ask me. "Democracy" has no meaning to the US govt and its alliance
Fantastic reporting Ben!
Bye bye miss American Pie 😂😂😂
Poland is in similar situation as s. kr we are force to pay for US base, and they soliders, they are excluded from Polish law. Polish gov was pressured to pay 'reparations' to Jews who lived in Poland (heirless property, rebuilt at our expense), instead Germany. You should cover more Polish situation as it's house on sand pressured from all sides with ukraine situation (to send Polish soliders there)
Poland pressured from all sides you say? That is the way it was historically for Poland, and The Commonwealth. Historically, it was Holy Roman Empire (Germany) that did the most damage to your self determination and autonomy. Perhaps, the occupier of Germany does not value Polish interests as equal to their own interests.
When you have control over the army of your ally...
And now he blames China..what a loser for America
Imagine if martial law happened in India. How the wolves would have come out. Even when we have fully functioning democracy, we are called a dictatorship
"Democracy" only means doing what the US wants. Comparing their response to this event and the elections in Georgia says it all.
Yoon have his own yoonest fans and yoon voters at least now. This is why he didn't leave.
Shocking
Gracias por la realidad Ben .
Excellent Job Benjamin 👍🎯
Thank you, Ben 🙏🙏
That US duality has been playing out with their approach to the rebel takeover in Syria where they are already showing a willingness to work with HTS but when legitimate national armies overthrew unpopular governments in nations like Burkina Faso and Chad they were quick to point of their "rule" of not working with coup governments !!
Did you frame the decades long attack and final collapse of Syrian autonomy as not being an Uncle Sam imperial project?
@@ChrisMclean126 I prefer to point out the clear and quantifiable things they do. I appreciate it makes little difference to the big picture, but makes me feel better lol
I applaud Korean people especially the ones who protested and blocked parliament and stopped special forces from occupying the parliament ..... It's madness how South Korean regime wanting to start n word vvar just to please the US .... Same with Ukraine and Taiwan ... What's wrong those countries?!...
this is great journalism
That is so ridiculous and deceitful, Hitler could have said he wanted to bring democracy to the world lol. I am even more surprised that the USA first fought against right-wing national socialists like Hitler, but immediately after the war they totally supported the right-wing Koreans - that just goes to show how deceitful the USA's foreign policy is.
Not only foreign.
US have always played a double game, prior to Pearl Harbor, they supplied both the Nazis and eventual allies, and even before blocking oil to Japan in 1942, extensively supplied them whilst they launched all out war on China in 1937.
They actively recruited Nazis to work for them & co-opted the military victory over them to assert dominance in Europe.
They supported Hitler to smash the Communists. The idea was 2 have Germany and Russia destroy each other and then come and clean up which is exactly what happened and we are living in that world today
Thank you Ben for your top notch work! Always great content, thank you.
Thanks!⭐
Please make a video to cover the Nanjing Massacre in 1937. Thanks
"Be a Loyal Plastic Robot for a World that doesn't Care" Frank Zappa (1970s).
That Boy with a capital B was taught well, " out democracy is threatened" bravo so unique
What happened in S. Korea will not stay in S Korea stand by America when things go bad Americans will Rebell.
Excellent journalism. This explains how Hyundai got to sell on Amazon recently. Wouldn't have happened if Yoon made a deal with Biden and CIA!
This is a brilliant report, concise and eye opening, thank youuuuuu so much. Subscribed. 👍👍👏👏👏👏😍😍😍😍💪💪💪💪💝💝💝💝💝💝💝💝
So much intrigue & passion. 😮
Wonder whom and whom behind it . All those military exercises.
I've always considered Yoon to just be an absolute U.S puppet. Just entirely anti-Korea, these types are the same all over the world.
Same drones flying around New Jersey recently!
Silverbeem: allegedly from a "Mother Ship" just like 'Star Trek'!!!
Ben, this was the funniest news program you have ever done, I couldn't stop laughing.
Thank you from Germany ❤
I learn so much from your videos
Excellent Summary and backgrounder. Hard to believe what our own eyes are seeing
Little known fact with the chaebol oligarchy: Samsung, arguably South Korea's most valuable company, is also majority owned by US shareholders. (about 51% of its voting stock owned by US firms while 71% non-voting stock also owned by foreign (presumably majority American) firms). Samsung's founders do not have a majority stake since the restructuring (or neoliberal takeover) done during the 1997 economic crisis. In other words, the US also de facto owns South Korea's economy.
Excellent research!
It reads like a fiction novel but it’s real time!
Mody & Yoon is the labrador pets for the West .
Thanks for a brilliant report Confirming all we suspected. Indeed those who criticise others are committing the injustices themselves
Great talk! God bless you and ur channel!
"democracy"
*¡Benjamín Norton es tan bueno, que yo comparto el video antes the ver el video completo!* ✨💖🛠💖✨
I also share before
Watching
Some have speculated that the US may have pushed Yoon to declare martial law so that he could then send weapons to Ukraine, which is illegal under the Korean constitution. So the US national security state may have shown support for the coup.
The authorization of preemptive nuclear strikes, particularly against a nation like North Korea, reflects a profound shift in the conceptualization of power, sovereignty, and global security. In the context of a unipolar world-one where the United States and its allies hold preeminent influence or dominion-the decision to contemplate or authorize such extreme actions serves as both a symptom and a symbol of the hegemonic ambitions underlying this global order.
A unipolar world, in which the United States sits atop a hierarchical pyramid of global power, sees its military and strategic might as the primary guarantor of international stability. This world is fundamentally structured on the idea that the U.S. alone possesses the moral, political, and military authority to define global norms and enforce them, often through unilateral action or the imposition of its will on sovereign states. The notion of preemptive strikes, especially nuclear ones, further entrenches this logic by suggesting that the U.S. has the prerogative to act before a perceived threat fully materializes, regardless of the international legal framework or the sovereignty of the nations involved.
In the case of North Korea, a nation long considered to be outside the U.S. sphere of influence, the authorization of preemptive nuclear strikes epitomizes the ideological foundations of the unipolar world order. North Korea’s pursuit of nuclear weapons, seen as an existential threat by the U.S., is framed not merely as a regional issue but as a global threat to the hegemony the U.S. and its allies claim to uphold. This justifies, in the eyes of those in power, the use of extreme measures-such as preemptive nuclear action-not just as an act of defense but as an assertion of authority over the global order.
Such actions exemplify the way in which the unipolar world, when coupled with a doctrine of preemption, can devolve into a system where the interests of a single hegemonic power override the rights and sovereignties of other nations. This doctrine, particularly when expressed through the lens of nuclear warfare, signals a chilling departure from multilateral diplomacy and cooperative conflict resolution. Instead, it reinforces the idea that force is the ultimate arbiter of power in global politics.
The preemptive strike authorization also highlights the dynamics of power asymmetry. North Korea, as an isolated state with limited international allies, faces a reality where its survival depends on nuclear deterrence against a far more powerful and technologically advanced adversary. In contrast, the United States, armed with overwhelming military superiority and a vast array of nuclear weapons, operates under a doctrine that permits the use of such weapons as a tool for geopolitical coercion and preservation of its hegemony. Thus, this reflects not only a tactical decision but a symbolic one-reinforcing the U.S.'s willingness to maintain its dominance by any means necessary, including nuclear strikes.
In essence, the decision to authorize preemptive nuclear strikes against North Korea, under the leadership of Joe Biden, is a stark reflection of the imperial underpinnings of the current unipolar world order. It underscores the belief that the U.S. is empowered-perhaps even obligated-to wield its military might to shape the global landscape, regardless of the existential risks and moral ramifications that such a strategy entails. This is a manifestation of a world in which unilateralism trumps multilateralism, and the boundaries of power and legitimacy are defined solely by the capacity to project force. If a significant fraction of the American populace-or particularly its governing elite-is ostensibly unperturbed by the specter of nuclear conflict, this does indeed paint a chilling portrait of how such a mindset could manifest in the post-war world order, were the United States and its allies to decisively triumph in the containment of Russia, China, Iran, and North Korea.
Such an attitude might indicate a willingness to normalize extreme measures, including nuclear strikes, as legitimate instruments of hegemonic preservation. If these measures were to be justified under the pretense of defending democracy, freedom, or global stability, the moral precedent set could erode any remaining constraints on unilateral, preemptive violence. This aligns disturbingly well with historical patterns where military interventions, sanctions, and regime changes were rationalized as necessary for safeguarding Western dominance, often at the expense of sovereign nations and their civilian populations.
Were this mindset to permeate a hypothetical unipolar world order-where NATO, the United States, and the UK achieve unchallenged supremacy-it could indeed engender an international system that prioritizes power retention over collaborative governance. Any dissenting nation might be branded a threat to global stability and thus subject to preemptive action, with the justification echoing the same rhetoric used in contemporary conflicts.
This scenario would also perpetuate a cycle of fear and retribution. Nations excluded from this hegemonic structure would be driven to seek asymmetrical means of deterrence-possibly including the very nuclear weapons they would be condemned for pursuing-resulting in persistent global instability.
Thus, the attitude you highlight is not merely a reflection of current geopolitical tensions but also a harbinger of the ethical and strategic trajectory that might define the international system if power remains unchecked by moral introspection or multilateral accountability. If nuclear brinkmanship becomes normalized as a tool of hegemony, the world risks descending into an era of perpetual coercion, with humanity itself teetering on the precipice of annihilation.
The DPRK flying literal trash over the south. That is HILARIOUS!
Thank you for all the work you put into your reports
very very good thank you. This is journalism .
Great research!
Instead of serenading his colonial masters at the White House with a cringy rendition of "American Pie", perhaps "I Fought the Law (and the Law Won)" by The Bobby Fuller Four would be more apropos.
Holy F**k!!! Sounds like a comedy sketch 😂😂😂
They trying to regain Burma too
R we really heading towards ww3.
100% as detailed by Albert Pike in the 1800's
In 2022: The total assets of the five largest chaebols family business accounted for about 61% of South Korea's GDP. Samsung Group's among them has a total assets made up about 22% of the country's GDP. And yet only around 10% of South Korean workers are employed by chaebol large family-run conglomerates. The rest of South Korean are employed by small businesses.
Good job as always
Thanks Ben
Thanks Ben 👍
Thank you Ben , you are so right when it comes to imperialism, if you can't laugh the study of it can cause tears of depression.
This sounds like another Maidan coup!
Thank you for awakening my mind
No Free Money to criminals, and traitors.
Hello Ben,
Thank you for all the valuable information you've shared, which has been noticeably absent from Western media coverage. Their narratives are biased and riddled with Western propaganda. You truly deserve to be nominated for the Best Broadcast Journalist Award!👍
21.5 hour work day?!?!?!?!
If someone makes a quick movie about this it will be an instant hit
NYPD has bigger funding than NK's army - that speaks more about NYC than NK 😂
Oh my goodness thank you for teaching us what the f is going on