South Korea’s Admission of Adoption Abuses Highlights the Cost of Globalist Overreach
South Korea’s president officially apologizes for decades of abuses in foreign adoption programs, exposing how international bureaucracy and cost-cutting harmed vulnerable children—raising urgent questions about protecting American families and national interests.
In a rare moment of accountability, South Korean President Lee Jae Myung issued a public apology for the country’s mismanagement of foreign adoption programs—programs plagued by fraud, human rights abuses, and systemic failures. This acknowledgment comes after a government commission confirmed what many suspected: the state prioritized reducing welfare spending over protecting children’s welfare during the mass adoptions of the 1970s and 1980s. When Bureaucratic Cost-Cutting Becomes Child Exploitation The Truth and Reconciliation Commission's findings reveal that thousands of South Korean children were removed from their birth families under falsified pretenses or outright theft, then sent overseas without adequate protections....
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