Eric Schmidt has TIES to North Korea!!
https://steemit.com/freemason/@activist-news/kim-jong-un-and-trumps-masonic-spectacular-theater-for-the-masses-video
Kim jung un is a freemason with diplomatic ties to the Rothschild. This should also help explain why there is an abundance of freemasonic symbols embedded within north korean architecture. Most notably, the 333 meter high,pyramid shaped, Ryugyong Hotel, which was built by an egyptian company with ties to the previous CEO of Google, Eric Schmidt, who visited north Korea on a few occasions. I mean, one should really ask what buisness google has in north korea,right? Most freemasons will claim that there is no Freemasons in North korea, but some are willing to concede. According to the freemason dot com,which is a freemasonic forum, they claim that "Freemasonry in Korea did begin in mines that are now in the Area called North Korea. The oldest lodge here in South Korea began there in 1908. It is Hanyang Lodge #1048, on the rolls of the Grand Lodge of Scotland." They also claim that the existing three Scottish lodges in South Korea and the one lodge under charter by the grand Lodge of the Philippines, has a history of conflict with japan.
https://www.androidauthority.com/why-eric-schmidt-north-korea-148851/
It’s important to mention that Schmidt didn’t travel alone. Former Governor of New Mexico Bill Richardson was his guide and he travelled in a delegation alongside eight other members.
A former UN ambassador, Richardson was in North Korea on a humanitarian mission in response to North Korea’s launching of long range missiles late last year. The White House referred to that trip as “ unsuccessful,” unfortunately. It’s also worth note that Richardson no longer enjoys any official political capacity, so this was a private trip.
Richardson described Schmidt’s reception as that of a “rock star”, which sheds a little light on just how important this issue of an open Internet really is. Sure it’s just the Internet, but it represents so much more than that. Right now in North Korea, the Internet is only available to a select few: the government, the military and universities. That’s representative of an intranet, which is basically what its technology is. Schmidt notes that there is a “supervised” Internet, which means “that people were not able to use the Internet without someone else watching them”.