Actually that was going to be to be my main point.
A Korean re-unification has been in the works but I think it tips in the favour of China; as in, China is becoming a liberal consumption economy. Japan and South Korea already are.... The idea is to create an East Asian Union similar in structure to the European Union. Now that doesn't necessarilly mean freedom of movement for peoples just yet, though at some point in time, I think a significant portion of the Chinese population will be granted pure freedom of movement around most of Asia and indeed the globe, much like Americans are granted today visa-free entry in huge swathes of the globe.
But for starters, this is going to take form as a Free-Trade-Agreement Vol.2 AKA a political union with shared decision making.
I've speculated as have others that in order to create an East Asian political union, between countries that have fought amongst themselves, committing some of the worst war crimes, atrocities and crimes against humanity in recent collective memory to have some kind of existential threat in order to come together, much like WW2 was for the Europeans, and which lead to the European Union.
Well, it seems that East Asians youths do have a political will to not actually enter war and just do the damn thing without opposing it politically much.... Therefore even though you can find great percentages of Chinese who hate Japanese and don't want them in their country, and vice-versa, seems like a political union and shared-decision making process is something that is happening (at least behind the scenes) and many people just won't have the will to oppose it, since it does signal or at least appear to signal better economic prosperity and stability for the region....
Call this argument what ever you will, but I think a Korean reunification has been just as much in the cards as the collapse of the Berlin Wall... It's all part of the globalist plan to create supranational regional governing entities which can all be fused into World Government...
Not only are these events planned, but I mean, even if guys like the leader of North Korea didn't want anything to do with it, well, the war would momentarilly go hot for regime change, and the changes would take place anyway...
It's very tricky in this era to stay in the past and keep the traditions and history alive...
People have to move on...
Plus like some people have pointed out, re-uniting the Koreas is actually a nice thing, just like reunited the two Germanys was... At the end of the day, it's stupid to separate people of the same culture and language for political expediency of and reasons that don't make any sense any more...
I'm actually glad that this could happen peacefully rather than through conflict... It is surely a better way, and since these changes would come anyway, I whole-heartedly support a peaceful resolution rather than N.K regime change...
I think China has a large part to do with this... Kim went to China (first official state visit of this president) before any of this... Trump will pat himself on the bat and take credit for it because of America's claimed hegemonic status in international affairs; but this is all China's doing.
It's not all China's doing. China was letting NK skirt the sanctions by letting NK produce product in China to get around the sanctions, they were also caught shipping coal into NK...the Trump administration called them out on it. That's what it takes to force people to come to the table. The very carefully crafted media presentation of bringing his sister onto the world stage during the Olympics was also a crucial factor promoting the benefits of being accepted instead of banished on the world stage. China had the ability to do this all along but never did, this was crafted, in my opinion, from the first meeting at MarLaGo between Trump and China, the plan was laid out, agreed upon and Trump didn't just let things slide back into their normal behavioral patterns he kept China focused.
Actually that was going to be to be my main point.
A Korean re-unification has been in the works but I think it tips in the favour of China; as in, China is becoming a liberal consumption economy. Japan and South Korea already are.... The idea is to create an East Asian Union similar in structure to the European Union. Now that doesn't necessarilly mean freedom of movement for peoples just yet, though at some point in time, I think a significant portion of the Chinese population will be granted pure freedom of movement around most of Asia and indeed the globe, much like Americans are granted today visa-free entry in huge swathes of the globe.
But for starters, this is going to take form as a Free-Trade-Agreement Vol.2 AKA a political union with shared decision making.
I've speculated as have others that in order to create an East Asian political union, between countries that have fought amongst themselves, committing some of the worst war crimes, atrocities and crimes against humanity in recent collective memory to have some kind of existential threat in order to come together, much like WW2 was for the Europeans, and which lead to the European Union.
Well, it seems that East Asians youths do have a political will to not actually enter war and just do the damn thing without opposing it politically much.... Therefore even though you can find great percentages of Chinese who hate Japanese and don't want them in their country, and vice-versa, seems like a political union and shared-decision making process is something that is happening (at least behind the scenes) and many people just won't have the will to oppose it, since it does signal or at least appear to signal better economic prosperity and stability for the region....
Call this argument what ever you will, but I think a Korean reunification has been just as much in the cards as the collapse of the Berlin Wall... It's all part of the globalist plan to create supranational regional governing entities which can all be fused into World Government...
Not only are these events planned, but I mean, even if guys like the leader of North Korea didn't want anything to do with it, well, the war would momentarilly go hot for regime change, and the changes would take place anyway...
It's very tricky in this era to stay in the past and keep the traditions and history alive...
People have to move on...
Plus like some people have pointed out, re-uniting the Koreas is actually a nice thing, just like reunited the two Germanys was... At the end of the day, it's stupid to separate people of the same culture and language for political expediency of and reasons that don't make any sense any more...
I'm actually glad that this could happen peacefully rather than through conflict... It is surely a better way, and since these changes would come anyway, I whole-heartedly support a peaceful resolution rather than N.K regime change...
I think China has a large part to do with this... Kim went to China (first official state visit of this president) before any of this... Trump will pat himself on the bat and take credit for it because of America's claimed hegemonic status in international affairs; but this is all China's doing.
Peace and Love xx
It's not all China's doing. China was letting NK skirt the sanctions by letting NK produce product in China to get around the sanctions, they were also caught shipping coal into NK...the Trump administration called them out on it. That's what it takes to force people to come to the table. The very carefully crafted media presentation of bringing his sister onto the world stage during the Olympics was also a crucial factor promoting the benefits of being accepted instead of banished on the world stage. China had the ability to do this all along but never did, this was crafted, in my opinion, from the first meeting at MarLaGo between Trump and China, the plan was laid out, agreed upon and Trump didn't just let things slide back into their normal behavioral patterns he kept China focused.