
BBC News

Painful cry sounded in front of the official residence of former South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol on Friday as a Constitutional Court judge confirmed his impeachment.
“I’m full of hope and believe we’ll win…it’s so unfair.” Bog-Sil, 64, told the BBC-Sil from the rally that thousands of people gathered to support Yin.
These scenes are live on YouTube, a YouTube platform that is popular not only among Yoon supporters, but also among the president himself.
Now a shameful monk is stripped of his power, but he leaves more and more Korea.
Last December, Yoon’s Impact and alert declaration Pay him Confidence in most parts of the country. But among his supporters, his ongoing legal troubles only further underpin the image of the welcome Savior.
Many of them echoed the peddling of the influential right-wing YouTuber that supports Yoon: Martial law is necessary to protect the country from pro-North Korean opposition lawmakers and dangerous powerful oppositions, whose Conservatives are victims of election fraud.
All of this reached the climax of edge movement, which became more vibrant and extremely extreme, spilling out from behind a computer screen onto the street.
The sign of “stop stealing” has become a fixed card at the Pro-Yoon rally, a choice for supporters of U.S. President Donald Trump, who have been helped by the conservative YouTubers network.
Shortly after Yoon’s arrest in January, angry supporters attacked a court in Seoul and armed with metal beams, attacking police standing on the road.
Last month, an elderly man died after a fire near Seoul City Hall a few weeks ago. A bunch of flyers accused opposition leaders of finding pro-North Korean troops near him.
“If they stay here, our country will become a communist country.” Read the flyer. “This country has no future, and youth have no future.”

Even conservatives are surprised and disagreement with this new trend of violence.
“He watched too many YouTube videos.” A specialist in Korea’s Qiongjia Daily Reading – This is one of many conservative news outlets that are increasingly inconsistent with Yoon’s supporters. “A forced observer of biased YouTube content can live in a world dominated by conspiracy.”
From the outset, Yoon accepted right-wing YouTubers, inviting some of them to the 2022 inauguration.
In January, when he resisted arresting him, the president Tell Supporters he watched their rally on YouTube live. PPP MPs said Yoon urged them to consume “good information on YouTube” rather than “biased” old media.
Tying on these YouTube channels is the opposition Democratic narrative of Beijing and attempting to court Pyongyang.
Democrats win in polls The slope of last Aprilsome of these channels claim Yoon is the victim of China-led election intervention, while North Korea’s sympathizers lurking among the opposition are behind the failure of the ruling party. Yoon responded to similar claims when he tried to justify his brief martial law declaration.
The narratives resonate with online audiences, which led to widespread distrust of mainstream media and concerns about South Korea’s neighbors.

“I think (the election) is totally fraudulent because when you vote, you fold the newspapers, but they’re always looking for papers that don’t have folds,” Kim, whose surname was only one, told the BBC at a pro-mountain rally in January. Although the Supreme Court has previously ruled that such a vote has not been manipulated, such claims have not diminished.
Kim, 28, is one of a group of young men who become the new face of the Korean right.
Young Perspective is a Youtube channel with more than 800,000 subscribers run by a self-proclaimed “young people who value freedom” and often shares clips from parliamentary meetings, showing that PPP politicians defeated opposition members.
Another popular YouTuber is Jun Kwang-Hoon, pastor and founder of the Evangelical Liberal Unification Party, who released a politically loaded sermon video urging his 200,000 subscribers to join Pro-Yoon Rallies. This is consistent with the strong historical support for the support of Korean conservatism.
Nam Hyun-Joo, an employee of the Theology School, told the BBC that she believes the Chinese Communist Party is “the main actor behind election fraud.” In the biting January cold, she stood alone outside the Constitutional Court, holding a protest sign condemning the judiciary.
Other voices that dominate the virtual realm are snapshots of Yoon’s support base: middle-aged or older people. One of them runs a genius stroke, one of the largest YouTube channels with 1.6 million subscribers. His rally and monologue live streams sent Yoon’s opponents, often scrutinizing thousands of views, with comments filled with calls to “protect President Yoon.”
It seems that his party’s popularity has not been damaged during the turbulent months since the Declaration of the Yuanjudgment.
In fact, the opposite is true: While the PPP’s approval rating fell to 26.2% a few days after Yoon declared martial law, it rebounded to more than 40% just a few weeks later — much higher than before the chaos.
Yoon, loyal to supporters, wrote in a letter to them in January that he “feels like president” only after being impeached.
“Everyone is here to grab their heads,” said Seoul-based consultant and former journalist Michael Breen, who said, “while South Korea’s conservatives have been “very split and weak” over the past decade, Yoon is “more popular now than before he tried to introduce martial law.”
This unity may have been driven by a shared aversion to the opposition, which has sparked multiple attempts by Yoon’s cabinet members, criminal investigations into Yoon and his wife and blasted Yoon Yoon’s replacement Han Duck-soo with a parliamentary majority.
“I think the opposition’s power in parliament has surfaced,” Mr Brann said. “Now they’ve shot.”

An embattled Yuan, already greater than his life, was called a martyr and regarded martial arts as the only way to save South Korea’s democratic country.
“He wouldn’t have chosen martial law if it weren’t for the good of the country, and if he failed, he would have to pay for his life,” a pro-mountain rally attendee who only granted his last name to the Park told the BBC.
This also leads to a widening gap within the PPP. While some joined the pro-sea rally, others went beyond the party to vote for Yin’s impeachment.
PPP MP Cho Kyoung-Tae said: “Why do people worship him like a king? I don’t understand.”
Kim Sang-Wook, another PPP MP, became a well-known anti-king voice among conservatives, said he was forced to leave the party after supporting Yoon-dan’s impeachment each. According to Kim, YouTuber has now become the president’s public relations machine.
Worry about groups that are increasingly difficult to merge in conservative movements. As the influential left-wing YouTuber rallies against the king protesters, there are also concerns that political differences are getting deeper into the structure of Korean society.
“There are huge damages on the right and a lot of damage on the right,” Christopher Jumin Lee, an American lawyer and South Korean expert, told the BBC.
At this point, he added, “any compromise with a Conservative Party that continues to embrace the Met may be seen as disgust”.
“By pushing his uprising attempts to get to the center of Korean politics, Yoon effectively enforced a decade of polarization.”