South Korea** once in 2021, actually caught a 14-year-old drug dealer. This is not an isolated case, ** also caught a few middle school students, these middle school students began to sell drugs in the form of subcontracting, and actually established a simple drug trafficking network. This has made some elderly South Koreans say that it is simply a fantasy, and most middle-aged South Koreans over the age of 40 say that they have never seen drugs in their lives. However, in recent years, there has really been an "explosive period" in the number of drug abuse among young people in South Korea.
Drugs have been found in various components in sewage treatment plants, and another way to look at this problem is that all sewage treatment plants in South Korea have found drug ingredients. And there are all kinds of drug ingredients, **powder,**all kinds of drugs leftover. If we extrapolate backwards from the measurement of drug residues in sewage, then in South Korea, on average, 1 out of every 1,300 people per day is injected*** This is a staggering statistic.
In the history of South Korea, during the military period, drugs and violent crimes were severely cracked down. At the end of the 90s of the 20th century, domestic drug crime was suppressed to a very low level. At the beginning of this century, drug crimes in South Korea were very rare. South Koreans were once very proud of their country's "drug-free" status.
From the late 80s to the early 90s, the military-born ** Lu Taeyu cracked down on underworld crimes with an iron fist, and a large number of drug-addicted entertainers have appeared in the current Korean entertainment industry. Including many big-name actors, they were exposed to suspected drug use, such as actor Ha Zhengyu was once exposed to drug use, but it was not followed by it.
The famous South Korean actor Lee Sun-kyun, who committed suicide a few days ago, also faced a large amount of liquidated damages because of the drug-related investigation. This year, he was accused of smoking ** and injecting *** several times at A's home, but in the first two investigations, he claimed that he was deceived by A and unknowingly took drugs.
Lee Sun-kyun, who had just committed suicide and died and was caught in a drug abuse scandal, and the top executives of the South Korean chaebol were also exposed to use physical therapy in beauty salons, where it was revealed that Lee Boo-jin, the sister of the chairman of Samsung, had been injected with a large amount of propofol for a long time in a plastic surgery hospital in Gangnam-gu, Seoul. But it was later denied, and the investigation did not intervene.
South Korea's top Bai Fumei Li Fuzhen was exposed to taking drugs during the interval between physical therapy in beauty salons
The problem of drug abuse in South Korea has intensified in the past five years. In 2017, South Korea seized 69 drugs1 kilogram – but in 2021, that number increased to 12725 kg, an increase of up to 184 times. The number of drug offenders also increased by 6 during the same period9 times, from 719 to 4,998.
Lee Yoon-ho, a professor who studies drug problems in South Korea, said: "South Korea is becoming a big consumer of drugs, and with the rapid increase in drug demand and the shortage of drugs, human drug transportation and other new methods will gradually emerge ......."”
Drugs are appearing in more and more places disguised as green tea, candy, and even children's complementary food. In particular, nightclubs, where foreigners gather a lot, are the hardest hit areas.
The nightclub invested by Lee Shengli, a member of the Korean Wave Big Bang, broke out in a drug abuse and pimping scandal, and the problem is not that South Korea has become sluggish, but the epidemic of drug problems actually has a deep international background. In recent years, Western countries have changed their thinking and changed their thinking from anti-narcotics to allowing a certain range of drugs to be legalized. This idea was spread to countries and regions that were deeply influenced by Western culture as the experience of advanced countries.
South Korea is such an unlucky victim, and more importantly, in addition to ideological infiltration, South Korea has the US military locally. The number of drug users and drug traffickers in the US military is not low, and South Korea has nothing to do with this source.
The US military stationed in South Korea is addicted to drugs and trafficked, and the South Korean police cannot control the new generation of young people in South Korea at all, and the pressure is very high, and they have not eaten the dividends of the economic take-off of the previous generation. Brutal involution began at birth, and in big cities such as Seoul, South Korea, there are many children who are still cram school at midnight. And after being admitted to university, I have to continue to prepare for interviews, written exams for large companies or public *** The young generation of South Korea needs some ways to release pressure, so in recent years, there have been a lot of drug addicts in their teens and twenties caught in South Korea.
South Korea's virtual currency market is extremely developed, which provides great convenience for drug trading, and modern drugs are no longer the kind of bags of *** drugs, which can be disguised as green tea, candy, and pills. All forms are hard to prevent. Addicts trade virtual currencies on anonymous forums, a covert tactic that makes it difficult for South Korean police to track.
In fact, what makes it even more difficult for powerful departments such as the police is due to the infiltration of Western white-left ideology. In the past, the common knowledge in South Korea was that drugs were a social evil and should be strictly controlled. But now, there are a lot of **, elites who are openly saying: drug use is not sinful, it is just an unfortunate disease. People need to look at drug addicts with compassion rather than hatred, and society should step in and save them. This has made the South Korean police, who are supposed to crack down on crime strongly, afraid to deal with drug crimes, and there is no thunderous method for more than 20 years.
There is no hope of a turning point in South Korea's drug war for the time being.