(Monday, Sept. 28, 2020, Washington, D.C.) – At a press conference held at the National Press Club in Washington D.C. on Monday, September 28, hosted by the Honolulu-based conservative leadership organization, New Institute, former National Assemblyman from the Republic of Korea (South Korea), Min Kyung Wook, gave a stern warning to Americans regarding the November presidential election, if they don’t pay attention to what has already happened in South Korea in its own general election held in April.
Min started off his press conference presentation with a quick background on the people involved with the fraudulent elections, naming an individual by the name of Yang Jung Chul, who led the Democratic Party of South Korea’s Democracy Institute, and who left politics behind the day after his party’s historic victory.
“If G.W. Bush had Karl Rove, who was praised as the ‘architect’ of Bush’s re-election, then, Moon Jae-in has Yang. But instead of celebrating the victory, Yang said the day after the historic win that he was scared, and that he would be leaving politics. Why would he say this?”, said Min.
Min also shared that Yang had traveled to mainland China before the elections, signing MoUs with the Communist Party of China (CCP), and visiting the headquarters of Huawei and Tencent, two major Chinese tech companies. The result of all this, according to Min, can only mean that China played a part in manipulating the election held in South Korea.
Min stated that the official slogan of the CCP, “Follow the Party,” was found as a digital footprint or an Easter egg by researchers who studied and analyzed the computer software that was used in the election.
“This April general election is one where digital technology was used in a high tech fraud, where 50 to 62 seats had their outcomes flipped because of the fraud,” said Min during his press conference presentation.
When it comes to election fraud, Min said that there are generally three reactions from the people:
1) What times are we living in that such a fraudulent election can be carried out?
2) If the ballots were counted by hand, how can fraud happen?
3) If the computers counted twice, how can mistakes be made?
Min said that because we are living in these times, it is possible to carry out digital crimes, and because it is in South Korea, where technology is highly advanced, something like this happening is very possible. As for the second point – the ballots were not individually counted, but the bundled ballots were flipped through. Lastly, a computer is a machine, controlled by a program, code written by bad seeds who were part of the fraud.
Another figure mentioned by Min is Jo Hye Ju, a civil servant in the National Election Commission (NEC), and was involved in Moon Jae-in’s presidential campaign. After Moon became president, despite the vehement opposition by the minority party, Moon placed Jo in a high, Cabinet-level position within the NEC. “The April 15 fraud election is the creation of Jo”, said Min.
As he was concluding his presentation, Min stated that at the exact same moment as the press conference was being held, his team of lawyers and other patriotic South Koreans were monitoring and guarding one of the NEC buildings in Seoul housing the servers, so that evidence would not be removed and destroyed. Min also updated those gathered at the press conference that the persecution of patriotic South Koreans perpetrated by the Moon administration is on-going, with the latest arrest of Kim Gyung Jae, one of the citizens who organized a mass rally on August 15. He is being prosecuted for violating laws pertaining to large gatherings and preventing the spread of COVD-19.
Min warned that the Moon administration’s use of the Coronavirus as a cover to silence his critics will only continue, as the people of South Korea are at a boiling point with the situation in the country. Most notably with the Minister of Justice, Choo Mi Ae, abusing her power to get her son out of trouble in the military, the recent shooting and burning of a South Korean civil servant by North Korean forces, and now this on-going fraudulent election from April.
In conclusion, Min stated that he too will most likely be arrested when he returns to South Korea and called on the international community and the foreign media to focus on and report on this issue. He also called for the U.S. government to release a statement calling for fairness in the elections in South Korea or to put together an international investigative team to look into this matter.
Min ended his presentation with a warning to all, that in South Korea right now, that democracy is dead, the judiciary is dead, the opposition party is dead, the news media is dead, and that only the foreign media, especially in the U.S., can be trusted now – “Be aware or be next!”