Ending
Tensions with North Korea: What South Korea Could Learn
from Latin America
By
Dr. David Leffler
Social tensions
between South and North Korea have escalated once again
due to the sinking of the Cheonan. The two Koreas have
remained technically at war with each other ever since the
1953 ceasefire ended the Korean War. If one considers the
premise that their long-term struggle is a "cold
civil war" with periodic "hot flashes,"
then it could be argued that the protracted "civil
wars" in Latin American countries like Colombia,
Bolivia, etc. have followed similar patterns. However, the
latter situation is now changing, and perhaps both Koreas
could learn something from new developments regarding the
implementation of Invincible Defense Technology (IDT) in
Latin America.
The Invincible Defense Technology is a field-tested,
practical approach to world peace and national defense -
an approach validated by more than 50 replications and 23
studies published in leading peer-reviewed scientific
journals. It is a direct technological application of the
most advanced discoveries in the fields of quantum
mechanics, neuroscience, and human consciousness. The
approach calls for the immediate establishment of large
national groups of peace-creating experts practicing
specific "technologies of consciousness" that
have been scientifically shown to neutralize acute ethnic,
political, and religious tensions that fuel violence,
terrorism, and social conflict.
Four countries in
Latin America are now in the process of deploying IDT.
They are establishing "Prevention Wings of the
Military" - large groups of soldiers who have been
trained in these technologies of consciousness, including
the Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi program. At
least one of these Prevention Wings will consist of 3,000
military personnel. Although details are still being
finalized, the leader of the Latin American TM
organization has provided the two accompanying photographs
of one of the Prevention Wings for publication.
In addition, another
Latin American country has decided to implement
Consciousness-Based Education, which utilizes the same
technologies of consciousness applied in IDT, throughout
the national school system. Furthermore, the Brazilian
government is training 1.5 million of its citizens in
these technologies. And civilian groups in Colombia,
Bolivia, Peru, The Netherlands (Holland), Trinidad and
Tobago, already are staffing fully operational IDT
systems.
Scientific research
has confirmed that large groups of peace-creating experts
practicing the TM and TM-Sidhi program together can create
measurable positive change in the surrounding population,
including reductions in crime, violence, war and
terrorism. The underlying mechanism appears to be a field
effect of consciousness in which collective coherence
within the group spills over into the surrounding
population, dissolving the buildup of racial, religious,
and political tensions in society that fuels the outbreak
of violence. To create this effect on the national level,
research shows that a country must maintain a TM-Sidhi
group of at least the square root of one percent of its
population. The powerful coherence generated by such
groups defuses enmity so that no enemies arise, thereby
leading to a more invincible nation.
Here is an example
of how to calculate the size of these groups. According to
Wikipedia, the country in Latin America with the
largest population is Brazil. In The World Factbook,
the CIA gives Brazil's population as 198,739,269, which
when multiplied by 1% equals 1,987,393. The square root of
1,987,393 is 1,410. Therefore, if the military of Brazil
wanted to become invincible, it would need to maintain a
minimum of 1,410 Invincible Defense Technology (IDT)
experts. The US would need 1,800 experts. A Military
Prevention Wing of 3,000 soldiers well exceeds the square
root of one percent of the population of any Latin
American country. So the military leaders organizing the
new Prevention Wing pictured above, and those in other
countries who have launched earlier such projects, are to
be congratulated for their wisdom of deploying a military
strategy of "overwhelming force" to ensure
invincibility for their countries.
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Sometimes
major discoveries take time to be fully
accepted and used. Nevertheless, these
examples in human history should be a
lesson so as to avoid committing new
mistakes. Let us recall that history is
made by those who, in life, think beyond
their contemporaries.
-
Lt. Gen. Tobias Dai, (Ret.)
Former Defense Minister of Mozambique
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I am
currently working with an international
group of generals and defense experts that
advocates Invincible Defense Technology.
Our goals are twofold: to establish a new,
larger and more powerful coherence group
in Ecuador that will meditate and create
societal coherence in support of the new
government; to create the conditions
necessary for economic and social progress
that will lead Ecuador out of
"underdevelopment" by 2025. Our
strategy is to make Ecuador
"invincible" in the sense that
it will no longer have any enemies. No
enemies, whether foreign or domestic means
- no war or terrorism.
-
Lt. Gen. José Martí Villamil de la
Cadena (Ret.) Former Vice-Minister of
Defense of Ecuador
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Countries that have
implemented IDT have based their defense on the Unified
Field of all the laws of nature. According to the
Harvard-trained physicist Dr. John Hagelin, the technology
of the unified field is a thousand million million times
more powerful than the nuclear force. Yet it is inherently
safe, despite its power, because it is based on the
application of a completely holistic level of natural law.
Years from now, in retrospect, it is likely that this
development may have far more historical significance than
the US military's Manhattan Project quest to develop
nuclear weapons.
Despite the
extensive scientific research validating the efficacy of
IDT, as well as the results of field tests by the
militaries of Mozambique and Ecuador presented at the
International Sociological Association Research Committee
01 Seoul National University & Korea Military Academy
International Conference on Armed Forces & Conflict
Resolution in a Globalized World, the South Korean
National Parliament Memorial Grand Hall and the Korea
Institute for Defense Analyses (KIDA), South Korea has
still not tried IDT. Perhaps in the future the
predicted successes of the various Military Prevention
Wings in Latin America will inspire South Korean leaders
to deploy IDT after they endure another crisis like the
sinking of the Cheonan. But it would make more sense for
them to act now by preventing the danger before it
arises - and before the crisis escalates into
another full-blown and very hot "civil war"
potentially worse than that of 1950-53.
About the
author:
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David
Leffler, Ph.D. a United States Air Force veteran,
is the Executive Director of the Center for
Advanced Military Science (CAMS) Dr. Leffler
served as an Associate of the Proteus Management
Group at the Center for Strategic Leadership, US
Army War College. A leading scientific journal in
Pakistan, The Journal of Management &
Social Science, recently published a paper
that Dr. Leffler presented in South Korea titled
"A New Role for the Military: Preventing
Enemies from Arising - Reviving an Ancient
Approach to Peace," indicating that the
military application of Transcendental Meditation
has merit.
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