Unrolling the red carpet of communization,
O homeland, O pitiful people—
공산화의 붉은 카펫을 까는, 조국이여, 궁민이여 ㅡ
How are you, truly foolish and servile people?
“Yoon Suk-yeol is Korea”? No.
Korea is you, the people, all of us.
The people must restore the collapsed constitutional order.
To do so, we must be just, and we must first find the legitimate president of the people.
What is the definition of justice in clinging to illegitimate Yoon, shouting “Again,” and expecting acquittal?
Whether Yoon is acquitted or convicted, the impact on Korea’s constitution and justice will be extremely minimal.
If Yoon, the Illegitimate President, is acquitted, will he be able to regain the throne from which he fell?
Have you shouted “Yoon Again” in expectation of such restoration?
Was Yoon ever a legitimate president of Korea?
Even now, the legitimate president of Korea is Park Geun-hye.
Please recognize and confirm why Park Geun-hye is still the legitimate president, and why, in contrast, Moon Jae-in, Yoon Suk-yeol, and Lee Jae-myung are so strongly declared puppet-presidents.
You will see the definition of Korea’s constitution, the illegal impeachment that deceived the people, and the justice that the people must act upon.
The patriotic conservatives have achieved nothing despite years of struggle, because they were always exploited by schemes of division.
The “Park-president sellers,” “patriot sellers,” “party sellers,” “YouTube sellers” who made you shout “Yoon Again” — even this was a scheme of national ruin.
Since the illegal impeachment, the foundation of this country has been puppet regimes. Overthrowing the puppet regime should have taken precedence over eliminating fraudulent elections.
From Park’s illegal impeachment, to the “Anti-Moon Alliance,” → the black-flag “Anti-Fraud Election Movement,” → “Yoon Again” — this sequence has been the strategy of national ruin, the first goal of communization: “division of public opinion.” How can you not see it?
With the illegal impeachment of President Park, there exists a president who was not impeached. Then how can Moon Jae-in, Yoon Suk-yeol, or Lee Jae-myung be presidents?
Please wake up.
You pitiful, deranged people.
If Moon was not a legitimate president, how can Yoon be a legitimate president?
By recognizing and calling Yoon president, you implant in the people’s consciousness the premise that “Moon was president.”
That way, there is no fundamental resistance from the people.
This sly trick of “Anti-Moon Alliance,” like a snake slipping over a wall, like gas escaping from pants, makes people subtly accept illegality as legality.
This has been the path of communization of this country into socialism.
In this way, the supreme constitution is being eaten away by lower laws — “the hollowing out of the constitution.”
If there were even awareness of this seriousness, then with normal civic consciousness, neither the nation nor the Taegeukgi rallies would have been dragged into such divisive chaos.
Crossing the Han River into Gangnam in downtown Seoul, we were torn apart and divided; in Gangnam, where the movement to eradicate election fraud was taking place, people were coercively forced to fold the Taegeukgi instead of black flags.
For retired military generals receiving pensions, participation in patriotic rallies was met with measures threatening pension cuts, so even the constitutional freedom of expression was abandoned in silence.
If Moon was not president, then Yoon cannot be president either. They were all Illegitimate President.
So now, even Lee Jae-myung, though also a Illegitimate President, is upheld as president. Isn’t this foolishness an international disgrace for the people?
Patriotic activities to save the nation — our people must become extremely cold-headed. Patriotic movements are not just substitute Saturday hiking hobbies, are they?
Would you like me to continue translating future passages in this literal style, or would you prefer me to adapt them into a more speech-like, persuasive English that reads like a manifesto?
Why can we not call a Illegitimate President a Illegitimate President? Because 1.17 million civil servants, 500,000 soldiers, and nearly the entire population of 52 million people recognize the Illegitimate President as a legitimate president — and that is why the country has come to this state.
Moon a president, Yoon a president, Lee a president? No.
Clearly, they are not legitimate presidents of Korea.
Before them stands Park Geun-hye, the legitimate president who was driven out or stripped away through illegal impeachment.
Yet even she was excluded from the constitution and law, while you recognize and call these Illegitimate Presidents “president.” Does that not make you collaborators in national ruin?
Through the scheme of “Anti-Moon Alliance,” you went to Gangnam, waving black flags instead of Taegeukgi, hiding the meaning of recognizing Illegitimate Presidents as legitimate. Was the movement to eliminate fraudulent elections — to “make elections proper” — truly appropriate?
The elimination of fraudulent elections and realization of fair elections is indeed very important. It is not worthless. But the problem lay deeper: the constitution itself, and the people’s lack of awareness that the president was not in his rightful place.
Thus even patriotic movements with the Taegeukgi were torn apart at the unified Gwanghwamun rallies by someone’s manipulations behind the scenes.
At such times, at some large rallies, even the words “Park Geun-hye’s impeachment is invalid” could not be spoken. Even conservative right-wing Taegeukgi rallies were manipulated by the first major theme of communist schemes: the trick of “division of public opinion.”
Korea’s constitutional order was not something that could be maintained merely by fair elections, regardless of Illegitimate Presidents.
Constitutional order is upheld by a system of laws: presidential or parliamentary systems, separation of powers, judicial independence, due process, fair elections, and so on.
But when the legitimate president was taken away, and Illegitimate Presidents were recognized as presidents, then under such puppet regimes, fair elections alone could not restore constitutional order.

Look at the current government emblem.
“Among the three colors of the Taegeuk
— red, blue, and white —
the blue occupies the largest area,
while the red takes up the smallest.
In this way, the dark left has encroached
upon the bright conservative right.
Look — I shuddered.
The old hibiscus emblem was established by the Ministry of Education in 1949. In 2014, during Park Geun-hye’s government, a logo integration was carried out. Only a few institutions kept independent logos, while most adopted the integrated emblem, changing to a Taegeuk design dominated by sweeping blue.
Can a right-wing president, elected through fair elections, truly exercise power within such already-red organizations?
We already saw the work of pushing President Park into the swamp of impeachment. And yet, does our society still believe that fair elections alone are enough?
If the fraudulent election elimination movement that split off to Gangnam was the core of patriotic activity, then it was either foolish or a ploy of division.
If you want to live as citizens of Korea, even now you must return to the constitution and focus on finding the constitutional president.
To save the nation, public opinion must be united.
With united public opinion, we must find the president who was not impeached, who is still legitimate under the constitution.
This is the only path for the survival of the nation and the people.
Even Taegeukgi rallies, after 8 or 9 years, became shows of vanity, hobby patriotism, and self-interest, continuing under the puppet regime’s shadow.
By misleading young people into believing Illegitimate President Yoon Suk-yeol was truly president, by offering up empty rallies as sacrifices in the Seoul Western District Court case — what has been achieved?
Was electing Yoon over Lee Jae-myung in the March 9, 2022 election the great victory of patriotic rallies?
If Yoon’s boat was only a temporary raft to cross the crisis of the March 9 election, then that rotten raft should have been discarded. Yet instead, you embraced that illegitimate raft and dreamed of a thousand-year national plan.
The Constitutional Guardians, resisting the illegal impeachment of President Park Geun-hye and the illegality of the puppet regime with clear legal reasoning, left its mark in history with two books — “Why Did Korea Commit Illegal Impeachment?” and “Defending the Constitution Is the People’s Mission” — written in the spirit of leaving a testament.
With the force of legal logic against the puppet regime, in the spring and summer of 2024, thirteen vice-ministers quietly withdrew from the puppet government. Even the report of Prime Minister Han Deok-soo’s resignation at that time was the result of the Constitutional Guardians.
Had the cabinet members followed proper law, Yoon’s clumsy martial law would not have thrown the nation into deeper confusion.
Those who resigned then breathed sighs of relief; those entangled in martial law now carry sighs of regret heavy in their hearts.
Even if Yoon Suk-yeol’s acquittal is confirmed, the nation will not be restored. Without constitution and justice, the misguided collaboration of deranged people drags the country day by day into the swamp of ruin.
Today’s Korea — the path of ruin created by the foolishness of 50 million people — wake up quickly.
At the door of Korea’s communization, see clearly the reality of grave danger.
Is it truly a bright, cheerful, joyful socialist cell organization?
Knowing nothing but constitution and justice, confronting illegality with law, the far-right group the Constitutional Guardians appeals to you: let us live together under Korea’s Taegeukgi as its people.
