As the birthrate of South Korea enters the “extinction” phase, the government is fixated on promoting homosexuality.
One has to wonder who might be behind this sort of an agenda.
South Korea’s supreme court on Thursday upheld a ruling that a same-sex partner was eligible for spousal benefits from state health insurance, in a move hailed as a win for LGBTQ rights in a country that has lagged other jurisdictions in the region.
The decision upheld a landmark decision by the Seoul High Court early last year that the National Health Insurance Service should provide equal spousal coverage to So Sung-wook and Kim Yong-min – a gay couple who filed a suit in 2021 against the agency which had cancelled their spousal benefits.
“I couldn’t believe when I heard the ruling. I was extremely happy and I started crying,” Kim Yong-min told Reuters outside the court.
“It took four years to earn this dependent status and…we need to fight harder to legalize same sex marriage going forward,” he said.
America’s ambassador to Worst Korea is a Jew faggot named Philip Goldberg
Chief Justice Jo Hee-de said that denying them such benefits because of gender, even though there are no clauses in the national health insurance act specifying it, constituted discrimination based on sexual orientation.
“It is an act of discrimination that violates human dignity and value, the right to pursue happiness, freedom of privacy and the right to equality before the law, and the degree of violation is serious,” Jo told a televised trial.
So and Kim have held a wedding ceremony and are often described as a married couple but their marriage is not legally recognized in South Korea.
Lawyers and advocates said the ruling marks the first legal recognition of a same-sex union in South Korea.
A lower court had initially ruled in favour of the insurer because it argued a same-sex union could not be considered a common law marriage under the current law before the appellate court reversed the decision.
While campaigns to legalize same-sex marriage have succeeded in Taiwan and Thailand, there is no legal acknowledgment of LGBTQ partnerships in South Korea, forcing couples to move abroad if they want to get married legally.
The Supreme Court’s ruling is a “stepping stone for progress” towards marriage equality, activist Horim Yi at Marriage For All, an LGBTQ campaign group, said.
Again: whose idea was this?
Is there some… foreign power that has great influence over South Korean politics?
Is that foreign power run by Jews?
The US embassy at Seoul circa 2020
Because if we were to discover that was the case, we may have found an explanation for something that is otherwise simply inexplicable.