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With gratitude for this design let's learn about this country, the Isle of Man. CLICK HERE Warning:
this file has been infected with computer virus controlled by the notorious group of agents who are very much
interested in this analysis of this man K
im Jong-il and being loyal to him are hostile to this website. We strongly urge you therefore that you ought
to install an antivirus engine on your computer to find out and cure this deadly virus. You should delete the
infected file or files(hiding in the fold of Temporary Internet Files) or folder when your antivirus engine
gives you such warning. In case these hackers continue to attack this site we are going to open many other
similar websites. The various defects(including the mess of menu at the bottom of the pages, the graphics which do not show up, etc.) found here and there around this website
have largely been caused by these hostile agents full of hatred and belligerence(As the result of this warning they seem to withdraw their evil scheme of virus-attacking. Nevertheless we ought to be alert taking heed. Updated/2006.9.19). North Korea has been swayed by the
iron fists of the dictator Kim Jong-il and in case of Kim's death
We warn you once more that whosoever hinders
Homorhythm hinders God Himself,
Kim
Jong-il Died in 2003(last year) To analyze the lives of living
persons in the light of Homorhythm is comparatively not easy. The little that is known about Kim Jong-il, North Korea's leader, conjures up a caricature of a diminutive playboy, a comic picture at odds with his brutal regime. Diplomats and escaped dissidents talk of a vain, paranoid, cognac-guzzling hypochondriac. He is said to wear platform shoes and favour a bouffant hairstyle in order to appear taller than his 5 feet 3 inches. Kim once said, "I know I'm an object of criticism in the world, but if I am being talked about, I must be doing the right things". But analysts are undecided whether his eccentricities mask the cunning mind of a master manipulator or betray an irrational madman. Mr Kim may well encourage the myth-making surrounding him precisely in order to keep the Western world guessing. North Korea has little to bargain with, and ignorance breeds fear. The analysis of him as a mercurial fantasist is certainly beguiling. He is said to have a library of 20,000 Hollywood movies and to have even written a book on the cinema. He even went so far as to engineer the kidnapping, in 1978, of a South Korean film director and his girlfriend. This taste for the exotic apparently extends to gastronomy. Konstantin Pulikovsky, a Russian emissary who travelled with Mr Kim by train across Russia reported that the North Korean leader had live lobsters air-lifted to the train every day which he ate with silver chopsticks. The two men shared champagne with a bevy of female companions of "utmost beauty and intelligence", according to Mr Pulikovsky. Mr Kim also has a reputation as a drinker. He was seen draining 10 glasses of wine during his 2000 summit with the South Korean President Kim Dae-jung and is known to have a taste for Hennessy VSOP cognac. But such an unlikely reputation masks Mr Kim's dangerous past. As head of North Korea's special forces for much of the 70s and 80s, he has been linked by defectors to international terrorist activities, including the 1986 bombing of a Korean Airlines jet in which 115 people died. Nor should it be assumed that eccentricity means inability. Mr Kim is said to assiduously follow international events on the internet, and some see him as a clever manipulator, willing to take great risks to underpin his regime. Former US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, who has met Mr Kim, said that the North Korean leader was very well informed and "was not delusional". "I found him very much on top of his brief," she said, although she noted that some of the comments he made about his plans for the North Korean economy sounded illogical. The cult surrounding Kim Jong-il extends even to his birth. He was born in Siberia in 1941(February 16) when his father, Kim Il-sung, was in exile in the former Soviet Union. But according to official North Korean accounts, he was born in a log cabin at his father's guerrilla base on North Korea's highest mountain, Mt Paektu, in February 1942. The event was reportedly marked by a double rainbow, and a bright star in the sky. The younger Kim graduated from Kim Il-sung University in 1964, and after a period of grooming for leadership, he was officially designated successor to his father in 1980(October 10). But he did not hold any positions of real power until 1991, when he took control of the armed forces - despite his lack of military experience. Analysts believe he was given the position to counter potential resistance to his eventual succession. After the death of Kim Il-sung in 1994, he took over the leadership of the ruling Korean Workers' Party. (Written on 9th, October, 2003)
North Korea Fact: It is estimated that from 1995 to 1998, a famine in North Korea was responsible for the deaths of more than 2 million people, or about 10% of the country's population.
Who Is Kim Jong Il? N. Korean Dictator Has History of Secretive, Unpredictable Behavior By Andrew Morse and Mark Litke S E O U L, South Korea, Jan. 8 ? He may be the most reclusive, enigmatic, unpredictable dictator in the world today. But, just how much does the world really know about Kim Jong Il? The most common images of North Korea's "Great General" show him looking down on Pyongyang's main square, saluting, as columns of soldiers and artillery parade through the capital of perhaps the world's most sealed-off society ? a society dominated by Kim's bizarre personality cult. But there is more to the North Korean leader than this traditional Cold War snapshot. It is difficult to separate fact from fiction when it comes to deconstructing Kim Jong Il ? he presides over an impoverished, hermetic country where brainwashing, brutal repression and a fanatical military are very much a part of everyday life. Kim and his government have little contact with the outside world, and few Westerners have visited Pyongyang. Much of the West knows Kim simply as the odd-looking dictator in the Mao suit who seems once again determined to turn his country into a nuclear power. Kim is far more complex a character, however, than the eccentric front he reveals to West would indicate. "He is a ruthless, powerful leader, who ultimately holds the destiny of North Korea, and by extension, how peace or war could come to the Korean Peninsula," said Lee Chung Min, an associate professor of international relations at Seoul's Yonsei University. Lee and others who have studied and met the North Korean leader describe him as a cunning politician who has a clear strategy in place.
Even if he may appear at times to be acting irrationally, there is nearly always a method to Kim's madness, they say. Unpredictability, many believe, is North Korea's most potent weapon. Donald Gregg, a former U.S. ambassador to South Korea and CIA station chief in Seoul, visited Pyongyang as recently as November and said he sees a rational motivation in Kim's decision to fire up North Korea's nuclear reactors. "My thesis is that Kim Jong Il is trying to change," Gregg said. "I don't think we have yet to come to grips with the need on the part of the North Korean military to be given some sort of assurance that they can participate in this process of change without having us blow them out of the water when we get finished with Iraq." Gregg theorized that the only way for North Korea to parry this perceived aggression from the United States is to talk tough. The decision to activate North Korea's reactors, in Kim's mind, may very well be a entirely rational ? it may be the only way to deter the U.S. from striking out at its next "axis of evil" target. But Kim wasn't always perceived as the cunning, shrewd politician that many in the West know him to be today. Kim grew up in the footsteps of his father, Kim Il Sung, who founded not only the communist state, but a powerful family mythology that permeates all corners of North Korean life. The younger Kim's birth was rumored to have been heralded by a bright star and double rainbows, and the child grew up in the lap of luxury, a crown prince of sorts in the world's most isolated state. Sketchy intelligence reports over the years portrayed Kim as a cruel, vain playboy ? a lover of fast cars, beautiful women, expensive brandy and the fantasy world of filmmaking. He has reportedly said that if he didn't become his nation's leader, he would have been a film producer. Intelligence reports also claim that as Kim became more involved in his father's government, he became involved in foreign terrorist operations such as a bombing in Burma (also known as Myanmar) that killed several South Korean Cabinet members and the downing of a South Korean airliner in the 1980s. Yet despite these reports of a checkered past and rumors of a brutal hand when it came to maintaining order in his own country, as North Korea began to collapse in the 1990s, a different Kim began to emerge. At the urging of China, a traditional ally of North Korea, Kim began to slowly open up and he appeared to the outside world to be more confident, more rational, even if desperation was the driving force behind his coming-out. Kim allowed foreign aid organizations to help feed his starving people, even if it meant that pictures and tales of North Korea's crippling famine would be transmitted around the world. He traveled abroad, taking a much-publicized train ride to Beijing to meet his counterpart and friend, Chinese leader Jiang Zemin. He even went so far as to hold a dramatic summit meeting with South Korean President Kim Dae-jung. In 2000, then-Secretary of State Madeleine Albright became the highest-ranking American government official to visit North Korea, where Kim treated her to a spectacular pageant in Pyongyang's stadium. After the visit, Albright said she did not find Kim to be as weird as the rest of the world believed him to be. "In having discussions with him [Kim], he is perfectly rational and he is isolated but not uninformed," Albright told ABCNEWS. But Kim's apparent willingness to engage in dialogue with the outside world began to fade with the arrival of the new Bush administration and the president's now-infamous declaration that North Korea, Iran and Iraq make up an "axis of evil." Confused by the sudden reversal in U.S. policy that accompanied the change in administrations, Kim retreated and chose to revert to his crazy, unpredictable persona again to ensure that he could fend off a potential U.S. attack, Gregg suggested. "I think their military is frightened by us," Gregg said. "And we have not been able to give them the kind of reassurance that they got from the end of the Clinton administration, and I think that is what they are looking for." If, in the end, Kim does extract such a promise from the United States, it may well reinforce a belief that his brinksmanship does work. As he recently told a Russian
diplomat, "I know I'm an object of criticism in the world,
but if I am being talked about, I must be doing the right things."
ABCNEWS_com http://abcnews.go.com/sections/wnt/DailyNews/KimJongIl_profile030108.html
For two decades, Sung Hae Rang lived behind closed doors with the despot said to be the world's most dangerous madman. This is her exclusive tale Posted Monday,
June 23, 2003; 22:50 HKT Indeed, Sung lived in Kim's household. Her sister, a North Korean movie star, was one of his three wives. Sung helped raise Kim's son, and her own children?a son and a daughter?were part of the despot's extended family. Sung shared a difficult period in Kim's life as he survived the byzantine court of his father Kim Il Sung, founder of the Stalinist country, to become leader of North Korea himself. She insists there is more to him than the tyrant with the nuclear-cloud pompadour parodied around the world. Many regard Kim as a deluded and dangerous madman?he has stuffed his pockets with vast profits from drug trafficking while his people starve, and just last week he warned of "limitless" retaliation against the U.S. and Japan if they attempt a blockade of the North's illicit overseas trade. But "if you simply write him off as an evil, one-dimensional cartoon character," Sung says, "you are missing half the picture." Sung remembers sitting with Kim and watching North Korean propaganda on television sometime after he succeeded his autocratic father. "Ridiculous images of well-dressed young children, artificially smiling and posing, flashed on the screen," she recalls. She remembers turning to Kim and saying, "It's so obviously fake. Can't you do something about it?" Kim, looking very tired, replied, "I know. But if I tell them to tone down the artificiality, they will go completely in the opposite direction and find the most dirty, wretched children they can, dressed in horrible rags." Sung often feels sorry for the man North Koreans call their Dear Leader. "He's on a speeding train. Any move to stop it or get off, it will crash," she says, smacking her hands together. Still, she would rather not let her infamous in-law know her whereabouts. I had gained Sung's confidence only through the mediation of mutual relatives, who arranged for me to spend some 12 hours interviewing her. She agreed to provide a rare inside look at the intimate side of Kim Jong Il, but she speaks of certain subjects with trepidation. Only with prodding does she describe Kim's terrifying volatility. "When he is happy, he can treat you really, really well. But when he's angry," Sung shudders, "he can make every window in the house shake. He has a personality of extremes, all colliding within the same mind." Sung first met Kim Jong Il in the early hours of May 10, 1971. Awakened by the honking of a car, she jumped out of bed so quickly that she nearly tore the linen dress she wore, hurrying down to meet a man she had until then seen only in pictures. Kim, then 29, asked her to climb inside the large, black car. She knew already that he had secretly taken her sister, Sung Hae Rim, to live with him as his wife and did not want his father to find out. But the situation had become more complicated, as Kim explained in the car. He and her sister had produced a child, named Kim Jong Nam. That revelation made Sung Hae Rang a guardian of what she says was at the time "the biggest secret in North Korea." And it would ultimately turn her life upside down. In 1976, at Kim's insistence, she was press-ganged into the household to help raise Kim Jong Nam because the boy, then five years old, couldn't be allowed to attend school lest the truth about his parentage get out. Sung, whose husband had been killed in an accident, brought her own son and daughter to her new home to provide Kim's boy with companionship. She was also joined by her mother, who had been a respected editor at the Rodong Daily News, North Korea's official press organ. Sung and her family would spend the next two decades as part of North Korea's "First Family." In The Wisteria House, her Korean-language memoir that she is currently translating into English, Sung describes the experience as living in a "luxury prison," a shadow household built on a foundation of conspiracy and concealment. For puritanical reasons, Kim Il Sung would have vehemently disapproved of his son's nesting with Sung Hae Rim. The younger Kim's new love was six years his senior. And she was already married. That marriage ended, however, because Kim Jong Il forced her husband to give her up. The story is continued here http://www.time.com/time/asia/covers/501030630/story2.html The
Supremo in His Labyrinth When bodyguard Lee Young Kuk first saw his boss body boarding in a private indoor swimming pool, he knew not to show his reaction. But it was a scene he could hardly forget: Kim Jong Il, North Korea's current leader, in a bathing cap, splashing around in a seven-story pleasure palace equipped with bar, karaoke machine, a mini movie theater very thing a Dear Leader could want. The ground floor had an enormous swimming pool with a wave machine. Kim liked to get on a body board fitted with a small motor and tool around in the artificial waves. A pretty nurse and female doctor always accompanied him in the pool, swimming under their own power. Says Lee: "I wasn't surprised. You don't doubt anything. He has absolute power." Today Lee is a doubter and a whistle blower. His 11 years as one of Kim's bodyguards gave him a unique view of the reclusive man who runs a country labeled last month by U.S. President George W. Bush as one of the world's most dangerous terrorist states. Lee traveled with Kim on visits to farms and factories and guarded his palatial residences. He stood watch as Kim bossed around underlings and partied with scantily clad women. He saw luxury and excess that later came to appall him. Disillusioned, Lee fled, but was caught and thrown into one of North Korea's political prisons. He is one of a handful of inmates who have emerged alive. A year and a half ago, Lee successfully escaped North Korea via China and now lives in Seoul. After months of hesitation, he decided to tell his story for the first time after learning that North Korean authorities have put his family under surveillance. He hopes to keep the wife and son he left behind from harsh treatment, gambling that Pyongyang will hesitate to further blacken its international image once his story is public. These days, South Korea discourages defectors from speaking out to avoid upsetting President Kim Dae Jung's policy of engagement with the North. But Lee, 39, believes engagement will never work: "North Korea's not going to change," he says. "If it did, Kim Jong Il thinks the country would collapse." Lee was handpicked for the bodyguard job: when he was 17, recruiters came to his high school and selected him from a lineup of 1,000 students. He was more muscular than most of his classmates. They scrupulously investigated his family, checking out cousins many times removed for political unreliability. Other prerequisites: no facial scars and a well-proportioned body. Sent to Pyongyang to train with 120 new recruits, he spent six months at the headquarters of Kim's personal bodyguard corps. For security reasons, all his family records were removed from the government's files, turning Lee into a non-person with only an ID number. Bodyguards were allowed no contact with their families. Lee's parents didn't know if he was alive or dead for 11 years. Recruits ate well, getting the same rations as top party officials, including pork, fish and canned fruit. Training was demanding: Taekwondo classes, sometimes carried out on steep mountain slopes and lots of hiking, including 25-km marches in full combat gear. Marksmanship was an important part of the training, especially the ability to shoot would-be assassins. Lee learned to hit a moving target at 250 m after sprinting in a chemical weapons suit and gas mask. The targets, he says, were always mock-ups of American soldiers; recruits were taught Americans would suck the blood from their necks. Lee met his boss for the first time on Jan. 1, 1979, shortly after graduating. Standing in front of the man he had been taught was a living god, he blurted out his prepared lines, his name, hometown, parents' names and a fulsome expression of gratitude but only just: "I was shaking. I was so nervous I couldn't talk right." After guarding buildings and vehicles, he worked his way up to Kim's Elite corps of about 200 bodyguards. He traveled with Kim to public events and guarded him at some of the eight residences he has outside Pyongyang, one for every province in North Korea. At the east coast beach house, he was part of a team assigned to protect Kim as he went for walks, always accompanied by a female doctor and nurse. "The nurse had to be pretty, smart, talkative and witty enough to entertain him," says Lee. "We didn't think they were really medical people. They were both under 26." Kim refused to eat, drink or smoke anything from abroad, except for French wine. Even his hair oil had to be made in North Korea. Any threat to the Dear Leader was handled with brutal dispatch. Once a fishing boat slipped through the 16-km cordon in front of the beach house, coming within a few hundred meters of the shore. Lee saw a guard let off warning shots and then open fire, killing two people on board. The guard got a medal; the families of the victims were told their relatives died in the line of duty and were awarded color television sets and refrigerators. Another time, Lee got a call about a car, apparently lost, that drove onto a paved road leading to the beach house. When he arrived, guards had already shot the driver. A passenger had jumped out and was trying to run away. Guards shot him twice in the back. Kim's real partying took place at one of his two residences in Pyongyang, where he could drink, act the big shot and get close to pretty girls. The beverage of choice was Paekdu Mountain Bulnoju (or Eternal Youth) a fiery liquor made from rice. Female band members and dancers wore micro-minis and tank tops and the men gave them drinks if they performed well. The women were trained not to drink too much but the men, including Kim, usually ended the evening trashed. During the working day, the drinking started again, sometimes as early as noon (although Kim didn't get sloshed at the office). Kim became furious if he wasn't the center of attention: he got upset if he saw people shaking hands while he was in the room, scolding them for ignoring him. When Kim was in a good mood, he would shower his guards with gifts: deer and birds he hunted and sometimes pineapples, bananas and mandarin oranges all rare luxuries. By North Korean standards, Lee lived a very good life. But in 1988, he was forced to leave it behind because his cousin was selected to become a driver for Kim. (No more than one member of a family can be on Kim's security detail in case they conspire against him.) He was instructed to tell no one he had been a bodyguard. But when he got back to his home town in Musan near the Chinese border, disillusionment was almost immediate. Life had gotten much harder in the 11 years he had been away and Lee was shocked to find his parents didn't have enough to eat. He bought a second-hand radio on the black market and accidentally tuned into a South Korean radio station. Drilled to believe the poor kept getting poorer in the South, he listened incredulously to reports on South Korea's growing prosperity. Feeling he had been tricked for 11 years, he fled to China. But a man posing as a South Korean official, probably a North Korean agent or a trafficker, lured him into Pyongyang's embassy in Beijing, taking him there by car at night. (Lee was told it was Seoul's compound.) He was handcuffed, drugged and loaded on a plane back to Pyongyang. Lee thinks his years of service kept him from getting shot. But he was brutally interrogated for six months. He dropped from 94 kg to 54 kg and sent to the Yodok political prison camp near the east coast, not far from the beach house he once guarded. Yodok is a place from which few prisoners emerge alive. Lee subsisted on 130 g of food per meal; half of that was given to another inmate if he didn't fulfill his daily work quota. He survived by eating snakes and rats and weeds he pulled from the ground. Lee's section of the camp held about 1,000 prisoners but he estimates there were tens of thousands more in total. Guards beat their charges with wooden sticks and death was a constant presence. Lee still has nightmares about a 24-year-old man who told the guards he was going to urinate and then tried to flee. They found him and shot him in the leg. As he yelled in pain, the man's legs were bound with wire and he was hitched to the back of a jeep, then dragged through the camp until his scalp and the skin on his back tore off. Then he was strung up and shot and guards ordered the other prisoners to file by the body and touch it. "Until then I was so hungry I couldn't feel angry," Lee recalls. "That was the first time I felt rage." After four years, Lee was released, possibly because his cousin was still one of Kim's bodyguards. His digestive system ruined, for six months he could eat nothing but bean curd. He had lost four teeth, some sight in his right eye and some of the hearing in his left ear. He escaped successfully through China to South Korea. Today he is a driver and does odd jobs for a South Korean company. He has also passed on some of his combat skills as a trainer for the South Korean military. The body boarder he once thought was a living god doesn't inspire awe anymore, only contempt. "I realize I wasted 11 years of my life." Lee learned close-up that cults of personality look a lot better from afar. With reporting by Chisu Ko/Seoul By Homorhythm we could foretell the deaths of former Korean president Park Jung-hee and North korea dictator Kim Il-sung, Kim Jong-il's father. Kim Jong-il will die around November 26~27, 2003. He was born on 16th, February, 1941. His life-duration is 62 years 9 months 10 days.
The above three diagrams have a common point and that is expressed as a triangle. This we call "climax" of Power Period of Homorhythm. This is very important in analyzing men's lives according to the measure of Homorhythm. If you could correctly find out this point it would be comparatively easy to determine one's termination of life or political power. |