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Restoring Election Integrity In South Korea: Stopping The Digital Dictatorship

7 0
19.02.2026

Restoring Election Integrity In South Korea: Stopping The Digital Dictatorship

(Photo by Ludovic MARIN / POOL / AFP via Getty Images)

This content was produced via a partnership with KCPAC. The views and opinions expressed in this commentary are those of the author and do not reflect the official position of the Daily Caller.

While the free world is waking up to the existential threat of potential digital election theft, South Korea is rushing headlong into a trap.

On Nov. 23, 2025, during a visit to South Africa, Lee Jae Myung — the person currently controlling the South Korean government — made a promise to overseas Koreans. Citing the inconvenience of travel, he pledged to implement electronic and mail-in voting for the 7.5 million Koreans living abroad. He falsely claimed that safety issues have been mostly resolved.

To the casual observer, this sounds like convenience. But to those of us who have witnessed the systematic erosion of South Korea’s democracy, this is a step in the direction of a permanent, one-party digital dictatorship in charge of our country. (RELATED: Black Box Deceit: Digital Election Fraud On A National Scale)

The Global War on Truth

This is not an isolated policy shift. It is part of a global war. President Donald Trump recently highlighted a video featuring former CIA officer Gary Berntsen and author Ralph Pezzullo discussing the latter’s book, Stolen Election: The Takedown of Democracies Worldwide. President Trump declared that we must focus “all of our energy” on election fraud.

This declaration is nothing short of a “Modern Magna Carta” — a call for the restoration of sovereignty against a globalist cartel. The original Magna Carta (Latin for “Great Charter”) was first issued in 1215 in England. It limited the reigning King John’s power and affirmed that the monarch was subject to the law of the land. It was created because the King imposed heavy taxes, abused feudal rights and ignored legal norms. The powerful barons of England ganged up on him.

In their time they went to war, forcing him to accept written constraints on royal authority and prevent his arbitrary authoritarian rule. Now we are being asked to work to restore fairness in elections worldwide.

Pezzullo and Bernsten alleged mechanisms of election theft involving systems like Smartmatic and Dominion have roots in Venezuela and have metastasized globally. It’s suspected such mechanisms have reached South Korea through organizations like A-Web (Association of World Election Bodies), often with shadowy influence from the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).

While major G7 nations like Germany have returned to hand-counting paper ballots to prevent hacking, the Korean Left is moving in the opposite direction. They seek to digitize the vote because they know it will benefit them.

Forensic Evidence and “Anomalies”

Concerns over election anomalies in Korea are backed by hard data. Following the April 2020 general elections, Professor Walter Mebane of the University of Michigan, a leading expert in election forensics, applied his “Election Forensics Toolkit” to the Korean results. His conclusion was disturbing: the data showed statistical “anomalies” that strongly suggested fraudulent manipulation.

The physical evidence was equally shocking. Witnesses have alleged the existence of nicknamed “cabbage leaf” ballots (misprinted, overlapping papers), “arrow” ballots (false extra votes made by marking the ballot only with shapes, like an arrow or oval) and bundles of stiff, uncreased ballots that had clearly never been handled or folded by a human hand. Yet the National Election Commission (NEC) has steadfastly refused to reveal the server source codes to the public. It seems they rely on the “Law of Large Numbers” being broken, where early votes diverge wildly and impossibly from same-day votes to flip the outcome.

The Philosophical Battle: Order vs. Chaos

Why is this happening? The answer is not just political; it is spiritual and philosophical in nature.

As the scholar Noam Chomsky noted in Media Control, propaganda in a democracy is the equivalent of the bludgeon in a totalitarian state. In Korea, the “Media Cartel” uses this bludgeon to silence truth-seekers, labeling them “conspiracy theorists” in order to engineer social compliance.

More fundamentally, we are witnessing the collapse of absolute truth. Francis Schaeffer, in his seminal work How Should We Then Live?, warned that without an absolute moral standard — like the Biblical law — society loses the final court of appeal for justice. When the “absolute” is removed, freedom leads to chaos.

In Korea, the Left has rejected the moral absolutes of “Do not steal” and “Do not lie.” They have replaced the rule of law with “Political Correctness” and populism. This is why President Yoon Suk Yeol, a champion of constitutionalism, declared martial law — a desperate, and apparently ill-conceived, attempt to root out what he called “anti-state forces” that had captured the legislature and judiciary. His subsequent impeachment was not justice; it was the corrupt system fighting back to protect itself. We have pointed this out in a previous article posted in this column. (RELATED: The Red Shadow Destroying South Korea)

The fight for election integrity in Seoul is the same fight as in Washington. If a “Digital Dictatorship” becomes reality in South Korea, it will serve as a blueprint for globalists everywhere.

Therefore, on behalf of millions of free Koreans, I issue this call for a return to truth. Our “Modern Magna Carta” begins with a fundamental demand: President Yoon Suk Yeol, who sought to save the nation from “anti-state forces,” must be released.

Furthermore, we should insist on dismantling the potential digital theft machinery. Following the G7’s aim for free, fair and democratic elections through its RRM (Rapid Response Mechanism) and its awareness of FIMI (foreign information manipulation and interference), South Korea must end any pushes for electronic voting in favor of same-day voting with paper ballots and mandatory hand-counting.

This necessarily means that the Lee administration’s plan to digitize expatriate voting — a clear gateway to unverifiable fraud — must be scrapped immediately. Finally, the “black box” must be opened; the National Election Commission (NEC) must face an international audit regarding its server source codes and any troubling connections to A-Web and the CCP.

We cannot let “convenience” become the Trojan horse for tyranny. We must Stop the Steal, in Korea and around the world.


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