Anonymous ID: f99594 April 22, 2020, 8:53 a.m. No.8884452   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4478 >>4495

This is an older article after POTUS did his CV test, and the way it was worded seems like it was coded. The 'black eye club' type code?

 

President Donald Trump on Thursday lamented his experience of being tested for the novel coronavirus during a conversation with several governors, The Washington Post's Josh Dawsey reported.

 

"I was a victim of the first test, meaning I had to go through it," Trump said. "I didn't like what was happening … I called it an operation, not a test."

 

The president went on to describe the test, saying,

"They go up your nose and hang a right at your eye."

 

Trump's reported comments come as millions of people in the US are still unable to get tested for the virus, which causes a disease known as COVID-19.

 

https://www.businessinsider.com/trump-claims-he-was-victim-covid-19-test-operation-2020-4

Anonymous ID: f99594 April 22, 2020, 9:50 a.m. No.8884977   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Short version. Not sure what's up with Kim, but speculation is heightened, that his sister is up next.

 

Speculation Over Kim Jong Un's Health Is Fueled by North Korea's Own Secrecy

 

Kim is too young to have a grown-up child to continue the Kim family dynasty, which has ruled North Korea since its founding at the end of World War II. Analysts instead focus on Kim’s sister, Kim Yo Jong, who has accompanied her brother to meetings with the leaders of South Korea, China and the United States.

 

Kim Yo Jong has emerged as a key aide to her brother. Last month, she issued a statement under her own name attacking South Korea’s presidential office and calling it an “imbecile.” In another statement last month, she revealed that President Donald Trump had sent a letter to Kim Jong Un expressing his willingness to help the North battle the coronavirus. She called Trump’s letter “a good judgment and proper action.”

 

“In recent weeks, she has positioned herself as the public face of North Korea, as her brother’s spokesman, chief of staff and national security adviser,” said Lee Sung-yoon, a North Korea expert at Tufts University’s Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy.

 

“She is the natural heir to the throne, as the Kim family regime is more a dynasty than republic,” he added. “One thing Ms. Kim has going for herself and prospects for regime preservation is that she is a known entity both within and outside North Korea.”

 

Lee Byong-chol, a North Korea expert at Kyungnam University’s Institute for Far Eastern Studies in Seoul, said the North’s deeply patriarchal elites would find it hard to accept a young, inexperienced female leader. Instead, Choe Ryong Hae, the current No. 2 in the government hierarchy, could fill a power vacuum created by Kim Jong Un’s death.

 

Either way, a new leadership in Pyongyang could presage a new bout of tensions on the Korean Peninsula. A change at the top has always unleashed military provocations like weapons tests or bloody purges of top generals and officials, as the leader struggled to establish his own totalitarian grip on power at home and show his mettle to external enemies.

 

“I would not be surprised even if he died today or tomorrow,” Lee said. “What should worry us is how power in North Korea is going to be realigned after his death.”

 

Full article here.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/speculation-over-kim-jong-uns-122306345.html