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TRAPPED IN A MASONIC WORLD

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- 426 -<br />

On the 26th March 2010, the mysterious sinking of the South Korean warship the Cheonan was due to a<br />

‗close-range‘ explosion under the ship, a preliminary inquiry first found. After examining the bow of the<br />

salvaged ship, officials say the warship was damaged by a ‗bubble jet‘ caused by an external underwater<br />

blast. Analysts say that such an effect could be caused by a torpedo or a mine exploding below the ship.<br />

An explosion split the Cheonan in half and it sank, leaving 46 sailors dead.<br />

The ship‘s sinking fuelled tensions with North Korea, who ―many‖ South Koreans believe were<br />

responsible for the sinking. Anxieties are mounting as an earlier investigation has already concluded that<br />

the explosion which sank the ship was external, fuelling suspicions North Korea may have been involved.<br />

South Korea has avoided blaming the North outright and Pyongyang has denied any role in the sinking of<br />

the vessel. But tensions have mounted over the incident, with Pyongyang accusing Seoul of ‗deliberately<br />

linking‘ it to the sinking. The two countries are still technically at war since the 1950-53 war ended<br />

without a peace treaty. There have been three previous naval clashes in the same area as the Cheonan went<br />

down, off the west coast of the peninsula. [1]<br />

On the 3rd of April 2010 in was reported by the BBC that at least one person has died and eight were<br />

missing after a fishing boat sank during the search for the South Korean warship Cheonan, officials said.<br />

The South Korean boat was one of a number of private vessels searching for the warship, which sank last<br />

week near the maritime border with North Korea. One official said the boat appeared to have collided with<br />

a freighter. The fishing boat lost contact with the coastguard after sending a distress signal when it left the<br />

search area. ―We‘ve captured the Taiyo 1, a Cambodian-registered 1,472-ton freighter, which was<br />

apparently involved in the collision‖, an Incheon Maritime Police spokesman told AFP news agency.<br />

If the fishing boat is confirmed to have sunk, it will add to the sense of shock that many South Koreans<br />

are feeling following the loss of the warship, the BBC‘s John Sudworth reports from the South Korean<br />

capital, Seoul. He says the press is full of speculation about the possible causes of the explosion that sunk<br />

the Cheonan, including a deliberate attack by North Korea - a possibility not yet ruled out by the South. N.<br />

Korea denied any involvement in the sinking of the Cheonan warship, and has threatened ‗all-out-war‘ if<br />

Seoul was to retaliate [2] [3] .<br />

Then on the 20th May 2010, concluded the vessel was struck by a North Korean torpedo. As the US<br />

and South Korea push for fresh sanctions against North Korea, ‗aid groups‘ were warning that the country<br />

was on the brink of a catastrophic famine, so what happened then?<br />

With all the celebrations in February 2011 going on out there, they seemed far from being on the brink<br />

of famine, but these NGO‘s and ‗aid agencies‘ love to sensationalise, and use it as an excuse to justify as to<br />

why swarms of Jesuit-‗Christian-Aid‘ kind of ‗aid-groups‘ are ready to scramble-out there and invade<br />

North Korea as they recently have in Haiti, and with their Bible‘s in hand, are more interested in<br />

converting the starving inhabitants to their religions, - than actually feeding them.<br />

Why are we always busying ourselves, can‘t we leave these people alone, - okay, so they don‘t have a<br />

microwave oven, or colour TV, - nor are they up to their eyeballs in debt to the world‘s financial terrorists,<br />

or living in constant fear of their own government using the threat of ‗terrorism‘, as to why we‘ll no doubt<br />

be expected to have internal probes inserted in us the next time we want to fly, - and perhaps the real<br />

reason the so called West are concerned about N. Korea, is probably because there out of the fold of a<br />

possible NWO, so therefore more difficult to boss around the place. So they might have nuclear weapons,<br />

yeah, well so have we, and time and time again we keep hearing the ‗calling the kettle black‘ rhetoric.<br />

For four days during August 2010, US and South Korean troops fired artillery into the skies and<br />

dropped anti-submarine bombs on underwater targets in a dramatic exercise to warn North Korea not to<br />

strike again [4] . - Who said they struck before? Other than the South, with the backing of the West, nothing<br />

has been proved, and with our track record of no WMD, we can hardly talk. I‘m more likely to believe<br />

North Korea‘s denial, as it‘s a bit like a 5 year old going up to a 13 year old kid, built like a brick shithouse<br />

and punching him in the balls, knowing full well he‘d soon get a good old beating! It‘s not likely to<br />

happen, - is it? And what I know about the British and US and their love for a 'false flag' operations, then<br />

my bones tell me something‘s not quite right.<br />

Nevertheless an armada of American and North Korean destroyers and stealth fighter jets, led by the<br />

world‘s largest 97,000 tons nuclear-powered super-carrier seem to silence the North Korean regime. Like<br />

some husbands beat their wives into submission of silence, who wouldn‘t scared of such actions, and by<br />

showing such a brute force of bullying, which involved a military parade of 20 warships, 200 aircraft and<br />

8,000 US and South Korean soldiers may reinforce Pyongyang‘s resolve to keep building its nuclear<br />

program, and perhaps this is the real reason, remember what is likely to happen if you push a rat into a<br />

corner. The Korean peninsula technically remains in a state of war because the 1950-53 Korean conflict

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