What I found during research on 2020 S. Korea election fraud:
In the early 2010s, the nationalism-leaning S. Korean administration at that time was working hard towards self-reliance in electricity by helping develop the nation's advanced nuclear reactor technology industry. They were almost there too. [LINK 01]
Then, after a false flag event + a colour revolution; in 2017 the hyper pro-Beijing administration came into power in S. Korea. (Sounds familiar?)
The new admin cancelled and closed down the nation's nuclear reactor technology industry, and instead, they have imported solar panels and parts for wind power stations from China or Chinese companies, and started to installed them all over the places without considering real life efficiency and safety comparisons. All in the name of green energy policy. In the process, the new S. Korean government help selling the nation's nuclear reactor technology to China.
What happened in the end?
Their new green energy policy didn't go anywhere. It was virtue signalling or "bureaucracy theatre for show" in its purest form. And many of their nuclear reactor technology industry declared bankruptcy + China has become largely self-sufficient in reactor design and construction, as well as other aspects of the fuel cycle, with the help of Bill Gates (?) + Israeli nuclear scientists and S. Korean nuclear scientists who went to China to find a job. [LINK 02] [LINK 03] [LINK 04]
Here, I don't want to too quickly compare S. Korea's nuclear technology industry to the US shale gas industry. But I am afraid that I might be seeing some parallels in the near future.
What I found during research on 2020 S. Korea election fraud:
In the early 2010s, the nationalism-leaning S. Korean administration at that time was working hard towards self-reliance in electricity by helping develop the nation's advanced nuclear reactor technology industry. They were almost there too. [LINK 01]
Then, after a false flag event + a colour revolution; in 2017 the hyper pro-Beijing administration came into power in S. Korea. (Sounds familiar?)
The new admin cancelled and closed down the nation's nuclear reactor technology industry, and instead, they have imported solar panels and parts for wind power stations from China or Chinese companies, and started to installed them all over the places without considering real life efficiency and safety comparisons. All in the name of green energy policy. In the process, the new S. Korean government help selling the nation's nuclear reactor technology to China.
What happened in the end?
Their new green energy policy didn't go anywhere. It was virtue signalling or "bureaucracy theatre for show" in its purest form. And many of their nuclear reactor technology industry declared bankruptcy + China has become largely self-sufficient in reactor design and construction, as well as other aspects of the fuel cycle, with the help of Bill Gates (?) + Israeli nuclear scientists and S. Korean nuclear scientists who went to China to find a job. [LINK 02] [LINK 03] [LINK 04]
Here, I don't want to too quickly compare S. Korea's nuclear technology industry to the US shale gas industry. But I am afraid that I might be seeing some parallels in the near future.
What I found during research on 2020 S. Korea election fraud:
In the early 2010s, the nationalism-leaning S. Korean administration at that time was working hard towards self-reliance in electricity by helping develop the nation's advanced nuclear reactor technology industry. They were almost there too. [LINK 01]
Then, after a false flag event + a colour revolution; in 2017 the hyper pro-Beijing administration came into power in S. Korea.
The new admin cancelled and closed down the nation's nuclear reactor technology industry, and instead, they have imported solar panels and parts for wind power stations from China or Chinese companies, and started to installed them all over the places without considering real life efficiency and safety comparisons. All in the name of green energy policy. In the process, the new S. Korean government help selling the nation's nuclear reactor technology to China.
What happened in the end?
Their new green energy policy didn't go anywhere. It was virtue signalling or "bureaucracy theatre for show" in its purest form. And many of their nuclear reactor technology industry declared bankruptcy + China has become largely self-sufficient in reactor design and construction, as well as other aspects of the fuel cycle, with the help of Bill Gates (?) + Israeli nuclear scientists and S. Korean nuclear scientists who went to China to find a job. [LINK 02] [LINK 03] [LINK 04]
Here, I don't want to too quickly compare S. Korea's nuclear technology industry to the US shale gas industry. But I am afraid that I might be seeing some parallels in the near future.
What I found during research on 2020 S. Korea election fraud:
In the early 2010s, the nationalism-leaning S. Korean administration at that time was working hard towards self-reliance in electricity by helping develop the nation's advanced nuclear reactor technology industry. They were almost there too. [LINK 01]
Then, after a false flag event + a colour revolution; in 2017 the hyper pro-Beijing administration came into power in S. Korea.
The new admin cancelled and closed down the nation's nuclear reactor technology industry, and instead, they have imported solar panels and parts for wind power stations from China or Chinese companies, and started to installed them all over the places without considering real life efficiency and safety comparisons. All in the name of green energy policy. In the process, the new S. Korean government help selling the nation's nuclear reactor technology to China.
What happened in the end?
Their new green energy policy didn't go anywhere. It was virtue signalling or "bureaucracy theatre for show" in its purest form. And many of their nuclear reactor technology industry declared bankruptcy + China has become largely self-sufficient in reactor design and construction, as well as other aspects of the fuel cycle, with the help of Bill Gates (?) + Israeli nuclear scientists and S. Korean nuclear scientists who went to China to find a job. [LINK 02] [LINK 03]
Here, I don't want to too quickly compare S. Korea's nuclear technology industry to the US shale gas industry. But I am afraid that I might be seeing some parallels in the near future.