QAA Podcast - Brother’s Home (E316)
Episode Date: March 22, 2025After a viral Tik Tok conspiracy claimed there was a “true story” behind the hit series “Squid Game,” Jake goes down the rabbit hole to try to separate fact from fiction. The Tik Tok people w...ere very wrong, and what we discover instead is far more horrific. Julian and Brad are forced to cope as Jake tells the devastating story of “Brother’s Home”, an 80s era South Korean so-called ‘Wellness Center’ that turns out to be anything but. Subscribe for $5 a month to get all the premium episodes: https://patreon.com/qaa Editing by Corey Klotz. Theme by Nick Sena. Additional music by Pontus Berghe. Theme Vocals by THEY/LIVE (https://instagram.com/theyylivve / https://sptfy.com/QrDm). Cover Art by Pedro Correa: (https://pedrocorrea.com) https://qaapodcast.com QAA was known as the QAnon Anonymous podcast. SOURCES: https://www.aljazeera.com/features/2021/12/10/secrets-of-south-koreas-house-of-horrors-hidden-in-australia https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/25/world/asia/korea-abuse-brothers-home.html https://www.cnn.com/2016/10/25/asia/south-korea-brothers-home-abuse/index.html https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-52797527
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If you're hearing this, well done, you've found a way to connect to the internet.
Welcome to the QAA podcast, episode 316, Brothers Home.
As always, we are your host, Jake Rockatansky, Julian Field, and Brad Abrahams.
This week, you are at the mercy of my TikTok brain, known to scroll endlessly deep into the night on the hunt for content that could be fun and exciting instead of depressing and ominous.
Once again, I have failed you.
Nice.
But that doesn't mean we can't all learn about the horrific moments in history together.
Today, in the form of a quote-unquote wellness center that existed in South Korea in the 1980s,
that ended up leading to the deaths of hundreds of innocent people.
Most of them unhoused are from marginalized communities.
Influencers are calling it the real-life squid games, but that's not necessarily true.
It's not true at all, actually.
In fact, the reality is far worse and draws some terrifying parallels to the current state of my native land, the United States of America, and maybe Canada soon?
No, no, no chance.
You guys are both, like, white settler colonialists on native land, so.
Well, we both have, like, white settler colonialist haircuts, if you can see.
Brad and I both recently got haircut.
I swear to God, man, the guy cut it like I was fucking Adolf Hitler.
Look at the sides.
What? You kind of do have like a 30s Germany type shit going on. Yeah. You can't be Jewish in getting those haircuts, bro. Yikes. And my barber was just really methed out. Oh, nice. Stop. I kept, I was like, stop, stop. And they're like, I can't. You're so good. He actually was on meth. It seemed like it. There was so much shaking going on. That's awesome. Yeah. Awesome. I mean, it is like our God-given right in these horrible times to be extremely high at work. Well, and, you know, to get horrible haircuts.
by the way brothers home sounds like like a steam game where you get to like sleep with your various step sisters yeah brother's home yeah yeah it's like one of those like shitty like steam porn games yeah i don't know what i was expecting when i started to go down this rabbit hole but it wasn't this it wasn't where where we end up that's good i actually knew nothing about this whatsoever have you guys ever heard of brothers home or anything okay no it could also be like an sness game that was never proper
properly ported from Japan and became kind of like mythical, you know?
Well, there are technically some games played, but not the kind, not the kind that you want.
I'm sure it's bad.
So we're going to get into it.
But before all that, QAnon News.
Holy shit, it's back.
So Trump declares Biden's pardons void due to auto pen usage.
So even if he signed it, if he signed all of them, like it should still be thrown out.
Like the man, he ain't there.
President Donald Trump continues to attack a man who is no longer president, this time by declaring
that all pardons issued during Joe Biden's presidency are void, vacant, and of no further force
or effect.
Dude, he can't even hate Biden as much as he, like, kept hating Clinton after she lost
to him.
Like, you know what I mean?
Like, Biden is just, like, not that good of an object of, like, hatred or obsession.
Yeah, exactly.
Because he's just sad.
Yeah, I mean, he just, what do you get?
You're like hating an empty box.
So posting on his social media platform, Truth Social, Trump based his claim on the assertion that President Biden used an auto pen, a mechanical device capable of replicating a person's signature to approve the pardons.
According to Trump, this method renders the pardons invalid while raising questions about whether Biden was fully aware of the documents he was signing.
And he posts, oh my God, I'm like looking this up and this is an insane machine.
It is an insane machine. Yes, we're going to talk about it because I had no idea what it looked like.
like, how does this work? Is it like a spirograph? Because that's what I kind of thought, assumed it
looked like. And it kind of does. So Trump writes, the pardons that Sleepy Joe Biden gave to the
unselect committee of political thugs, and many others are hereby declared void, vacant,
and of no further force or effect, because of the fact that they were done by Autopin.
In other words, Joe Biden did not sign them, but more importantly, he did not know anything
about them. Okay. The necessary pardoning documents were not explained to,
approved by Biden. He knew nothing about them, and the people that did may have committed
a crime. Therefore, those on the unselect committee who destroyed and deleted all evidence
obtained during their two-year witch hunt of me and many other innocent people should fully
understand that they are subject to investigation at the highest level. The fact is,
they were probably responsible for the documents that were signed on their behalf without the
knowledge, our consent of the worst president in the history of our country. Crooked Joe Biden.
But Trump admitted to using Autopin. Don't worry. We'll get to that. Okay, okay. What I don't
understand about Autopenn is like, if you know that we're using this machine that basically just like
replicates your arm moving to do the signature, why are we not just using a stamp at that point?
Like what, right? Like, isn't it like more dishonest to have a weird machine so that it actually looks
like a human being signed it? Instead of a stamp? Just admit what's happening. Like, I don't get it.
Stamps are fun to use too, like...
Well, you know, he would get, like, Biden would probably die if he had to stamp something like four or five times in a row.
His arm would get, like, tennis elbow and fall off.
I like the idea if they make a whole animatronic, like, double of the president that's signing all the documents.
I think that's better.
I think Elon probably is working on something close to that.
So, but this whole thing feels very cueing on to me, right?
The idea that even pardoned individuals like Fauci and Hunter,
could actually still be thrown in jail, you know, due to their pardons being null and void.
It's kind of like- I'm not sure that legally posting a tweet, like this, this is very like
Michael Scott being like, I declare bankruptcy. Like it's like, what are you saying, man? Like,
someone taught him these words, void vacant and of no further force or effect, but like, I don't
know if a tweet is like a legally binding thing. It's like when people were posting on Instagram
and they were like, I do not allow Instagram to use my data. This is like the kind of
5D chess logic that keeps conspiracy theorists hopeful that their political enemies will be thrown
in jail. Also, there's no proof whatsoever that Biden used an auto pen for these particular
pardons. And unfortunately for Trump, legal experts have swiftly dismissed these claims,
calling them, quote, constitutionally unfounded. So the constitution basically grants the president
absolute pardon power without stipulating the method of signature required. In fact,
John F. Kennedy himself used the auto pen to expedite signing official.
documents, as did Barack Obama. Scholars emphasize that once a pardon is granted, it is irrevocable,
and the method of its authorization holds no bearing on its legality. And as we were saying earlier,
you know, I had no idea that such a technology existed. So I looked up a couple videos of the latest
tech, and it kind of looks like a sewing machine with a pen attached to it. And then you get this
like credit card looking type thing that contains your unique signature, and you insert the card,
chip facing up and the machine produces a perfect signature. Now, I have no idea if this is the same
kind of machine that they use in the White House, but the pilled half of my brain is wondering like
what stops somebody from stealing the card and signing an executive order to make McDonald's
serve breakfast all day, you know? Okay. Wouldn't be a bad idea. Kind of specific. That is like
something that Trump would actually do. Yeah, I mean, that would be one good, the only policy maybe. The only
executive order worth anything. And of course, I'm not the only one. This manufactured controversy
around the auto pen has reignited larger debates around the scope of presidential authority and
the ethics of using automated tools in governance. Conspiracy theorists have eagerly seized
upon Trump's assertion. Within hours of his statement, social media platforms erupted with
speculative narratives surrounding the auto pen's use. It's not just that he signed it with an
auto pin. It's that the auto pin isn't his signature either. These are the auto pin. That one
is his real signature. It took me a long time to figure it out because the bottom one,
his real signature, looks like Joel. And that one is clearly like not even the same B. None of
that. So I was like, that's not even his signature. But do you know who signature it is? That's Jill
Biden. What? Jill Biden. Ruby is different.
than his bee. This is his bee, not attached, two different strokes for the bee. This is Herbie,
one stroke. But these, like, legislations are just, like, you have to sign them a million times over.
Who gives a shit if it's Jill Biden signing them? It's Herbie. She's out of her mind. And, like,
this new TikTok thing of, like, filming yourself, like, on the bed, like, from above is just,
like, you are about to penetrate me. But have you heard of this conspiracy theory?
well, I wrote
The Jig is up
Joel Biden
Which is like
Jill and Joe
And Joe together
Did like a Dragon Ball Z fusion
So it's the idea
That she's signing it
But she meant to write Joe
But by mistake wrote Joel
Because she was thinking of her own name
I don't know
I can't keep up with these people anymore
So generally the latest hand wringing
Surrounding surrounding Trump's accusation
Over Biden's alleged use of an auto pen
Essentially is just to further the narrative
that Biden had zero autonomy, you know, and that the deep state was using his senility to push through sweeping changes and allow their allies to get away with untold amounts of crime, which is always the case, right? It's never about the actual event in question, but always about using the event to claim if, you know, if this is true, imagine how many more conspiracies are also true.
Now, when asked during an interview with MSNBC if he himself had ever used the auto pen, Trump had this to say.
a lot of stuff, and you'll make your own determination.
You have criticized question five that used an auto pen in the last few days.
Have you yourself ever used auto pen, sir?
Yeah, only for very unimportant papers.
And I don't call them unimportant.
If you do letters where people write in and, you know, they'd love to have a response
and will write responses.
And I'll sign them whenever I can.
But when I can't, I would use it an auto pen.
But to use them for what they've used them for is.
terrible.
Dude, this is such weak sauce, man.
He's like, yeah, I do use the auto pen.
Like, I, you know, I have lots of grandchildren.
They all need Christmas cards.
He looks so bad.
He looks so bad at that.
He looks like a mummified body in that video.
I mean, he is 80 now, right?
Yeah, but his skin looks like dried clay.
Yeah.
Like Biden made a, was a better looking corpse than Trump is.
Yeah.
well Trump hasn't I don't think Trump has done a lot of plastic surgery like Biden looks like a fucking Beverly Hills like his whole face is like weirdly flattened and that's why like all the conspiracy theories about like this is not even the same person they replaced him it's because he does look quite different after like all the weird face tuck shit that's true all right so next up Maui Police Chief named in Diddy Lawsuit so Maui Police Chief John Pelleteer is facing mounting scrutiny after being implicated in a civil
lawsuit involving Sean Diddy Combs. The lawsuit filed in federal court in California
alleges that Pelleteer, along with other high-profile individuals, was complicit in criminal
acts tied to Combs. The accusations are that Pellateer impersonated law enforcement from
other jurisdictions and served as security for Combs during incidents of alleged sexual assault
and other misconduct. These allegations stemmed from Pellateer's tenure in Las Vegas prior to his
appointment as Maui's police chief in 2021.
Now, this is the same lawsuit that also names NFL star Odell Beckham Jr. and comedian Drew Drusky DeBorde, both of whom have issued public denials.
Maui's mayor has urged that pelletier be placed on administrative leave while their office conducts an investigation.
But on Wednesday of last week, the police commission voted to keep him on the job, of course.
Jesus.
This is like a real dollar bin version of Epstein where it's like, who are these people?
Like, I'm sorry, what?
So conspiracy theorists are baking lots of bread over the police chiefs naming in this lawsuit,
mostly due to his proximity to other horrific events that have become the center of many conspiracy theories.
For example, Pellateer was the incident captain for the Las Vegas police at the time of the 2017 mass shooting that left 60 people dead.
Really?
I mean, that is the most, like, having a conspiracy theory about that, like, I think if you look into it, you will become weird.
Like, your brain will get kind of fucked up because it is a very busy.
thing that happened. It's fair. That's a fair one. That's a fair pilling. He was also the police chief
during the Maui fires in 2023, which many conspiracy theorists believe were triggered by
orbital energy weapons in an effort to do some sort of weird high tech land grab. They spared
all the blue homes, right? Yeah, exactly. And there are claims that Pellateer was responsible for
trapping victims in their homes so that they couldn't escape to tell the truth about the cause of
the fires. Wow. What is he like a like the SimCity manager? Can he just like, can you just like,
Can you just, like, act on, like, a larger scale?
Yeah, is he...
Yeah, is he just, like, able to, like, remove the ladders from the pools?
Yeah, this is weird.
Peltier was playing the whole city as, like, the Sims, basically, and he could just...
He's like, well, I'm putting you in the pool and the ladder's gone.
So, of course, none of this holds up under scrutiny, no hardproof, just lots of speculation.
But with his name popping up in the Diddy lawsuit, it's given these theories a fresh boost.
QAnon believers on X are pointing to it as, quote, evidence of...
of something bigger that Pellateer is a deep state, false flat cover-up artist who goes from
state to state ensuring that the real story is never uncovered. That's so awesome. His whole job
is just like cover-up guy? Yeah. Jake, did you look up what he looks like? Of course. He kind of
looks like a WWF guy meets Denny Levant, that French actor. He looks, there was a cartoon show that
I liked growing up called C-C, period, O, period, P, period, S period. And they had like mechanical
attachments. There was one of them who had like a real like long handcuff arm and stuff. He looks
like one of the characters from that show. I'm going to get like three people on Twitter
that are like, oh my God, I remember that. Good morning out there. If you are a conspiracy theorist
or if you're somebody who doesn't believe in conspiracy theories, you're going to want to stick
around for this, right? You're not going to believe what dropped today. Do you remember the police chief
from Las Vegas? You remember the guy that they shipped up to Hawaii? Guess what? Guess where I
I just saw his name.
This guy.
She said it.
She was so eloquent.
We know we've got to go quick.
Remember?
MJ Truthalter tweets this out.
What are the mathematical chances, right?
Not only was he the Maui police chief during the deadly wildfires, but he was also the
incident commander during the Las Vegas mass shootings.
And now he worked for ditty.
Why is he laughing during the Las Vegas mass shootings?
That's not like a great place to be laughing.
He's in that state where like so many people have kind of dismissed him.
cut him out of their lives and he's just like he's like you see motherfuckers like he just has that
attitude yeah also he's walking through his like whole apartment building like just kind of speaking
very loudly yeah very loud like um and of course the first tweet that he references is mj truth
ultra which is like a blatant qanon account of course no that's the new news that's like the new cnn
mj truth ultra and for my final news story jfk assassination documents released so the latest
batch of JFK assassination documents released on March 18th of this year, 2025, comprises of
over 63,400 pages, including about 2,200 files made public by the U.S. National Archives
and Records admin under an executive order from President Donald Trump.
This release follows decades of public fascination and speculation, spurred by the 1992 law
mandating the disclosure of all assassination records within 25 years, even though,
delays and redactions, of course, have persisted.
Initial reviews by historians and scholars, as reported by outlets like the New York Times
and AP News, indicate no seismic shifts in the official narrative that Lee Harvey Oswald
acted alone in assassinating President Kennedy on November 22, 1963. However, the documents
do offer fresh details, particularly about Cold War era U.S. intelligence operations, including
CIA surveillance of Oswald in Mexico City in September of 1963, and covert efforts like
Operation Mungoos aimed at destabilizing Cuba.
Now, new information uncovered in these files sheds light on previously obscured aspects of the CIA's
activities in Oswald's background.
For instance, the documents reveal the extent of U.S. wiretapping in Mexico City with
Mexican government cooperation, a practice previously unknown, which was noted by historian Steve
Gillen.
They also detail Oswald's interaction with Soviet and Cuban embassies, reinforcing his political
motivations rather than the Warren Commission's portrayal of him as a mere sociopath.
he was a CIA asset. I love that there's like, yeah, we were definitely surveilling him
throughout his whole career working for us. He was handing out fucking pro-Castro like
leaflets like right near where the CIA had like their little like printing like operation
where they were trying to like honeypot communists. I mean, come on guys. Just fucking come out
and admit it. So additional revelations include CIA plots to assassinate Fidel Castro,
some involving organized crime figures like John Rossily, though these don't directly
tie to Kennedy's death. And while some of the new information sheds a little bit more light on the
historical context leading up to the assassination, experts like Timothy Naftali emphasized that they
primarily shine a light on intelligence gathering methods rather than provide a smoking gun for
conspiracy theories. Now, as you know, nonetheless, many conspiracy influencers do claim that
the documents contain the smoking gun, rehashing old conspiracies about Israeli intelligence being
somehow involved in the assassination. Yeah, when I went on X, uh, all I saw,
was that it proves that the Jews killed Kennedy.
Yes. And while it is true that the documents reveal a relationship between Israeli
intelligence and James Angleton, who was the counterintelligence chief, you know, QAnon influencers
and other people on X are using selective screenshots to make it appear much more substantial
than what has been previously known.
Wait, the CIA was working with the Mossad? That's crazy, man. The two allied countries
having their intelligence work together? How did I do for my
Travis QAnon News. That's my best. I did, that's my best Travis imitation. Beautiful.
Absolute king shit. Travis is fired. He doesn't need to come back from vacation.
It took, it took six years, but we finally like made Jake abandon his true self so much that he's like doing a perfect simulacra of, of Travis.
I know. I hate, I hate myself.
Brothers Home. So the other night, I was vertically scrolling through TikTok videos, and I stumbled
across one that caught my attention. And the claim, you know, appealed to my teeth.
TV movie mindset and happened to center around a series my wife and I are obsessed with Squid Game.
Now, for those of you who don't know, don't care, haven't watched,
Squid Game is about a group of people facing insurmountable debt
who sign up for a series of games meant to be played to the death,
with the winner taking home tens of millions of dollars.
As a massive fan of the series, I took my wife to a Squid Game, like, pop-up event for her birthday,
and we, like, played the games and stuff.
She died very early on.
I survived till the end, but then was...
killed. I had always assumed that the series was just, you know, a scathing indictment of
hyper-capitalism, using the games to represent the modern-day rat race and the Uber
wealthy who benefit from everyone else's hard work. Yeah, I mean, it's reminiscent of Stephen
King's Running Man, which he wrote as Richard Bachman. But it is like, yeah, this is, you know,
it's kind of Verhoven-y, but... Sure, and, you know, it's based on a lot of manga
as we'll get to, you know, but the claim in the video is much more literal, that the show is
based on the South Korean Wellness Center, Brothers Home, where occupants were forced to compete
in real games to the death.
Did you know Squid Games actually based on true events from the 80s?
It's all based around the 1986 Brothers House incident in Korea, where an orphanage was
essentially turned into the Squid Game. Founded in 1960, the Brothers House Orphanage ran normally
until 1986. A billionaire adopted all the kids and then bought the orphanage and locked them
all in it. Hiring workers that hid their face like this and forced these children in blue
jumpsuits to play kids games, and if you're wondering, you didn't want to lose.
The creator of Squid Game claims that it was not based on anything, but this is in the TV
show where the guards sleep, and this is at the Brothers House where they kept the children.
Also, these were the Squid Game guards, and these were the guards in the real life.
Now, you can look this up for yourself, this is actually one of the worst human rights violations
in history, but weirdly around 2020, it was kind of scrubbed from the internet.
With many people theorizing, Netflix did this in order for the Squid Games to be posted as normal.
This is until some survivors of the brother's house started speaking up this year.
They started realizing how awfully similar to Squid Games looks and plays just like the brother house.
Quid Games denies there's any influence or ties to this, but I'm going to know what your thoughts are because I think there is.
This guy's got to find a new occupation.
I don't know.
He's killing me.
This is like kind of TikTok shit, though.
He's very popular.
Really?
It's like Forrest Gump like.
Yeah.
That video had 1.7 million plays.
and almost 100,000 likes.
It's huge.
My favorite is like the part where,
because he has like images behind him,
like in that TikTok way
where you're kind of cut out.
Yep.
And you're standing in front of whatever
you're trying to like use his proof
and you're pointing kind of behind you.
Yeah, behind you.
Yeah.
But the like when he's like,
and guess what?
Like the games, you know, led to death
or like he's trying to make the actual claim
that is creepy.
It just shows a children's drawing.
You'll see.
Like a guy like being like killed or something.
Now that that's one of the few things.
that's real. Most of what this guy says is completely false. Most of what he says is completely
false. The drawing is real and the fact that it is one of the worst human rights violations
is real. You can't use a drawing as proof of a thing. That's not, you'll see, you'll see, you'll
see. It is a real drawing, I'm sure. Yes, you'll see. In the video, you see many images of
run-down-looking stairwells, painted green and pink, very similar to the Netflix series,
you know, but grounded in the real world. There are pictures of prison guards wearing pink
suits with masks similar to the guards in the fictional world of Squid Game. The only problem
is almost all of the pictures in the viral post and others like it, because this is just one
of many, are AI-generated. So the pictures were stolen from an artist in Turkey, who of course
did not consent to his AI-generated artwork being used in the post. And the only real photo
are the ones where we see people wearing jumpsuits that do look kind of like the prisoner uniforms in Squid Games.
So I have a couple real pictures for you guys to see. The top two are real. And the third picture is from the TV show.
So they change the color of the uniforms to like a teal turquoise, but they are kind of wearing these matching track suits.
But without numbers, at least on the front.
They do have numbers on the back.
Oh, unfortunately.
Oh, wow. Okay.
Yeah, we're going to get into it.
I'm so sorry.
By the way, hey, everybody listening, trigger warning for everything.
Violence, sexual abuse, you know, abuse of mentally ill, everything.
Every trigger warning that we could have, I'm putting it here before we get into the bulk of this episode.
As I looked into it further, it seemed that just about every piece of information included in this viral TikTok post was fake.
The creator of Squid Game, Huang Dong Hayek, has stated that Brothers Home was not the inspiration for the series,
but rather a combination of his experience trying to make it in entertainment and the growing class inequalities in South Korea,
as well as manga like Battle Royale.
So what was Brothers Home?
Was that even real?
To me, it kind of sounded like an after-school program for disadvantaged youth.
Was it actually something awesome and fun that had been twisted into a nightmare because the uniforms looked similar?
Well, it wouldn't be the QAA podcast if I, you know, didn't inform you that, no,
Brothers Home was real and was definitely not fun and awesome and, in fact, was far more horrific
than the fictional series that isn't based on it, if that makes any sense.
Yeah.
In the period following the Korean War, South Korea was thrust into a tumultuous political situation.
Park Chung-hee, the second-highest ranking officer in the South Korean Army, had seized power
from the interim government in a coup in May of 1961.
He served for two years before officially being elected
as South Korea's third president in 1963.
The government at this point was staunchly anti-communist.
Naturally, he was in very close communication with the United States
who still had a firm presence in the country following the Korean War.
So as you know, the United States, we helped South Korea during the Korean War
while the Soviet Union helped North Korea.
So we still had a very strong presence, like even in the years following the war, which I believe was 1950 to 1953.
Yeah, it's one of the most violent and awful proxy wars the U.S. has waged.
Like, it's worth listening to the whole season dedicated to it on the blowback podcast.
Absolutely.
So Park Chung-hee even sent South Korean troops to support the United States in the Vietnam War.
He kicked off a series of economic reform that led to massive industrialization and growth in South Korea.
Now, during this time, there were the formation of what our country.
called Che bowls, which are large industrial companies controlled by an individual or family.
The word literally means rich family or financial click. Some notable ones that still exist today
are Samsung, LG, and Hyundai. I currently own products from two out of the three of those.
Nice. So I felt great. I felt really good reading that. The government's goal at this time was
pretty focused. Prepare the nation for the hosting of the 1988 Olympic Games, show off a thriving
South Korea and essentially rid the streets of what the regime labeled as quote-unquote vagrants.
Jesus fucking Christ. God, I love American freedom. Which in their definition was
beggars, gum sellers, or street hustlers who, without a fixed residence, wanders around
the place where many people gather or pass by, such as tourist spots, hospitality establishments,
train stations, bus stops, or residential areas, and harasses passerbyes by begging or
forcefully selling items. Gum sellers. Damn, gum sellers. A fucking visit, a visit
poor person who's like trying to scrape together some money that get get them out of here wait
to you see who they took so really obviously as as as we're saying it just meant anybody who was
unhoused marginalized or potentially mentally ill they would take people who were drunk like
business men who you know were like coming home from work they got wasted they fell asleep on a
sidewalk they they would be sort of wrapped up in this oh poor businessman who got drunk and got
wrapped up on this sad i'm just saying that
The people that they ended up taking, I have stats later on.
It was not, quote-unquote, vagrants.
No, all the purges are always like this.
It's like insane.
It's like, we're going to kill the communists.
By the way, we should also take care of all the Chinese and gay people.
Yes, yeah, exactly.
So authorities launched incentives to, quote-unquote, cleanse urban areas of anyone who might mar their pristine vision.
And in the crosshairs were unhoused, street vendors, day laborers, and even children.
In 1975, the Ministry of Home Affairs,
announced Directive 410, which required municipalities to assemble, quote,
vagrant patrol teams.
These officers were required to patrol the streets at least once a month and disappear
anyone that didn't fit in with Park Chung's vision for the new and improved South Korea.
Police officers swept these individuals off of the streets, often without explanation,
and transfer them to facilities like Brothers' home.
The official narrative painted these efforts as benevolent,
promising rehabilitation, care, and a path to reintegration.
The reality, however, was far bleaker.
Many of the children that they took were, in fact, not unhoused.
They had families who were waiting for them to get home from school.
Oh, my God.
Choi Sung Wu was on his way home from school in 1982 when police stopped.
This is like when we were born, by the way.
This is so fucked up.
When police stopped him on the street, they searched his bag and found a half-eaten piece of bread.
Sung-Wu told the officers that he had saved it from his school lunch,
but of course they accused him of stealing it.
And he was thrown in a van.
and sent to
Hungjee-Bukjuan
or Brothers Home,
the largest facility
of its kind
in the southeastern
port city of Busan.
Do you have any idea
how old that kid was?
He was, I think,
six or seven.
Imagine being an adult
in doing this shit.
There's another survivor
who I'll quote later
who was nine
when he and his sisters
were taken.
And they didn't even ask
like, you know,
where are your parents?
Mm-mm.
No.
Wow.
If you think about it though,
like kids are kind of
all vagrants, you know?
They just kind of hang around.
They don't really
contribute. Send them to some sort of weird jail.
No, and the kids would protest. There's actually
records of, you know, them asking
kids for information saying, where's your address? Where do your parents
live? And then they would take that information
and then take them to a completely different city, like, march them
into some random grocery store or whatever, and be like,
hey, do you know this kid's parents? And the shopkeeper would be like,
no, I've never seen them before. And they'd be like, well, see, you're homeless.
And they would cart them back to Brothers Home. So they,
They would pretend, I think at first they would pretend like they were helping or they were reaching out to the families or whatever.
And then they would just, and if anybody spoke up, they would either beat you or find another way to keep you from getting home.
Brothers Home operated under the protection of political connections and state subsidies.
It was initially established as an orphanage.
The turbulent war years had left many children without parents or families and because they were considered a great shame upon the nation by the military regime, running an orphanage became a big business.
The more children you housed, the more funding you would receive.
Bye-bye.
Buy-bye communism.
You got what you wanted.
So, yeah, so this shield of impunity allowed it to function as a detention center rather
than the welfare facility that it claimed to be.
So those detained were not given the benefit of due process.
Instead, they were labeled as vagrants, which was, you know, a term that became a catch-all
for anybody who was deemed undesirable, like Julian said.
But how you, it's like a six-year-old and you're like, you are a vagrant.
He's six.
You can't, you're nothing, your child.
It's so, it gets so much worse.
Jake, would that be like the youngest, though, like six or did they even?
No.
No.
No.
They're like interrogating a baby.
You'll see.
In this environment of unchecked power and social conformity, brothers home thrived,
a grim reflection of a society willing to overlook its vulnerable in favor of a curated image.
This is like the story of the Olympics.
Kind of, yeah.
Inside Brothers Home.
Survivors recount Brothers Home not as a facility for,
for care, but is a prison-like complex marked by brutality and despair.
From the moment detainees entered its gates, they were stripped of their identities,
assigned numbers instead of names.
Individuals were forced to adapt to an existence where their humanity was systematically erased.
In some ways, there is a parallel here to the fictional world of Squid Game,
where inmates in the games are given and referred to only by their numbers.
One huge difference, though, is that they volunteered to be there.
Everyone at Brothers Home was taken against their will.
every single person.
Hong Jong-sun, who was just eight years old when he and his sister were sent to
brothers home, recalls how he came to the facility in 1984.
So he and his sister were to spend a day with their father in the city, but their dad had
to run a couple errands first.
So Han's father thought the responsible thing to do was leave the kids at a police
substation where they would be safe until he could finish the handful of errands that
he had to run.
However, within 30 minutes, a bus pulled up in front of the station and the police
officers told Han and his sister
to get on it. They began to protest
saying their dad would be coming back for them
and they were immediately beaten by officers
on the bus for being quote too loud.
A couple hours later, they found
themselves at brothers home. I mean,
the dad, it's like, oh, I got some shit to do.
I'm just going to drop my kids off at a police station.
He's like, hmm, I wonder if they're doing
that vagrant thing and maybe they can
these kids are a pain of the fucking off.
Brad, will you take, will you take Hans' quote?
The beating started the very next
day. My face was covered with blood.
Swollen so severely I couldn't
eat properly for three days.
It's so crazy because it's like, why are you
doing? Like there's not even any advantage
to this. I guess like it's a for-profit
business. Violence and abuse for-profit.
Yeah, and a lot of sadistic.
Yeah, yeah.
So the abuse
was relentless.
Beatings with clubs, water torture,
sexual violence became daily
occurrences. Nighttime in particular
was fraught with dread. As survivors
remember, the lights going out, signaling
the onset of sexual assaults.
Oh, God.
Oh, God.
When the lights were turned off, that's when the sexual abuse started.
I watched a documentary by 101 East, which is by Al Jazeera.
And they were interviewing this one guy who's basically said he was raped every single night.
And while he's talking about this, he, like, completely breaks down.
He goes, I'm sorry, I have to take some medication.
And he basically, like, fumbles for, like, a handful of pills, you know, just to, like, endure, you know,
endure his life. So, so the sexual assaults were being perpetrated by like the guards or the
workers there or other like inmates by the guards who are also inmates. You'll see I'm going to get
to that about the military structure. So of course, of course, you know where this is headed.
It's, it's, it's, yeah. During this time there and the year since, Han has created numerous
drawings to outline the abuse that he and others endured while imprisoned at the home. So while he was
there, he basically was drawing these pictures and hiding them so that if he ever escaped,
he could show people like what was happening.
So that's where the drawing and the TikTok video comes from,
even though none of the real information is given.
I take back my criticism of the drawing.
Yeah, yeah, it's awful.
It's awful.
In his later years, Han has even created a small model village of the camp
to map out areas of abuse for investigators and journalists.
So to get to Brad's inquiry from a couple minutes ago,
the brother's home was run like a military operation.
There were rows and rows of barracks built through forced labor of those imprisoned there.
If you behaved really well, you essentially became a capo and were given a platoon of 120 inmates to command.
So within that platoon, there were designated team leaders, there was a general secretary, all composed of inmates so that no money was wasted on hiring staff.
Oh, God.
So this dynamic created a hierarchy of fear and exploitation, and survivors like Han describe a grim survival instinct.
He says, quote, from the moment you open your eyes,
to the moment you fall asleep, there's abuse.
If I suffer today, others will suffer tomorrow.
Guards referred to various torture practices as games, according to Hong Jansun.
Another parallel to the fictional Netflix series.
Han describes two of these torture practices.
One was called Motor Vehicle, where the guards, inmates themselves, would take turns
punching victims in one eye or the other.
And during one torture session, Han was hit so hard a couple of his teeth were
knocked loose, and the guards basically said, okay, well, let's pull.
pull them all out. They tied strings around his teeth and pulled the rest of his teeth out. And this is,
this is the eight-year-old? I mean, yeah, he was, he was at some point, I mean, he was a pre-teen or,
yeah, he was probably 9, 10, 11 around then. And then in the documentary I watched, he takes out
his dentures. He has no teeth left. Oh, man. Another game was called Hiroshima, where
inmates were forced to hang upside down from bunk beds by their ankles to see who could last
the longest. This is horrible torture as children's faces would
swell as the blood rushed to their head.
Most people would just pass out within minutes and then fall upside down to the hard barracks floor,
resembling a bomb dropping out of the sky, hence.
There's nothing more appropriate than just, like, naming one of these sadistic things,
like, the biggest, like, one of the biggest war crimes that the United States has ever committed.
And it's like, this is the side of Korea that, yeah, like, is defined by what Americans wanted Korea to look like.
Yeah.
Monday mornings at Brothers Home brought with them the horrifying spectacle of, quote,
people's trials. Now, these were public punishments for alleged rule breakers, designed not only to
discipline, but to instill fear among the detainees. These took place in a massive church on the
premises, of course, built with slave labor. It housed up to 3,500 people, and at 5.30 a.m. every
single morning, sermons were blasted through loudspeakers in every building that housed a platoon.
Inmates were made to stand by their bunks in their matching blue track suits and listen to
what God had to tell them that day. Jake, did you get the
the impression or learn, like, did it just immediately start this horrific, or did it unraveled
become this way?
It immediately started this horrific.
It feels like you kind of hit the ground running when you're coming out of a war.
Like, you're coming out of a sick, sadistic war situation where violence and killing and
genocide, you know, is just like so part of the game.
And then it's like, well, back to civilian life.
Let's start to create these structures all over again.
Yeah.
And as we'll get to in the next section, the guy who ran.
Manet came from a military background and had tons of connections and they're using religion
to justify it. So, yeah, we're going to get into that. But no, it was even as an orphanage
before this decree was passed to round up all of, you know, to round up whoever the police
wanted, essentially, it was not good. And there's more. There's more. Yay. This is, this is the anti,
this is the anti-Ticot video where you get only real information and it's not 60 seconds long. It's like
an hour and 10. Jake, was this year like, you know, pre-bedtime writing session? I just, no, I was like
going through and I, like, turned to my wife and I was like, oh my God, there's like a real,
they found like a real squid game that it's like based on. And she was like, I think all those
pictures are AI. And I was like, oh, really? And I started like looking into it. Then I went to
the Wikipedia and I went to others. And I was like, oh my God. And there's tons of great
journalists on it. BBC has done amazing work. Al Jazeera has done amazing work on this.
The South Korean, like, archival, like, services have collected a lot of stories and stuff
from survivors. So there's a lot, there's a lot of information to be found on this. It's just not
really talked about. And you can see why. Yeah. I just don't know how, like, you go to sleep
after your first research session. Yeah, this was like your, we left you to your own devices
completely and you decided on this. Well, I didn't realize it first. I was like, oh, I think there's
like a real-life squid game and, like, there's some, like, misinformation TikToks and I'm going to sort through
and figure out what's real. I didn't understand
the extent of it when I started
working on it, which is often the case.
Sure. Some people like to know the full
picture when they propose a QAA
episode. I just like to know
the tip of the iceberg.
Right.
Park Incun
So the man at the center
of what has been called Busan's Auschwitz
was a guy named Park
in Coon, a former military officer
and ex-boxer. As far as
the government was concerned, Park was a
hero. He was keeping the streets, clean,
while providing shelter and rehabilitation to society's most vulnerable.
Park was given medals by the government and featured in a pure propaganda documentary in 1981 about Brothers Home,
where he was portrayed as a saint and the Wellness Center as a place of awesomeness and fun.
But in reality, he ruled with an iron fist.
Survivors claimed Park kept handcuffs in his desk and would dole out vicious beatings personally.
There was one rumor from one of the survivors who said that they had heard that Park was responsible for 30 to 50 murders of people.
who were contained in the game.
Brad is coping so hard that he's like doing weird selections in the document,
like just kind of like trying to cope by just like selecting the name, parking
tune.
I'm just double-clicking, holding on for dear life.
Park ran brothers home alongside his wife, Lim Sung Soon, and her brother, Lim Young
soon, all claimed to be devout Christians.
During the Monday morning people's trials, Park would have rule breakers brought up in the front
of the church, and they were made to publicly apologize to all in attendance, and
And then Park would put on boxing gloves and beat them senseless.
Following the public beatings, Park's wife's brother, a pastor, would get up and perform a sermon preaching about the healing powers of Jesus Christ.
So they were essentially beating these kids and young adults, like in front of everybody, and then saying like, oh, Jesus can console those who have sinned and do all this stuff.
So it was kind of like they were using religion to sort of wash away the horrors of what all of these people just witnessed, you know, minutes.
ago. Inmates were forced to perform in Christian plays for local and foreign guests. They were given
Easter eggs as rewards. They also ran an adoption agency directly out of the welfare center.
They worked closely with the Protestant church who connected them with families who were looking to
adopt or had them writing letters, asking for money from families who had already adopted.
And this is the worst part. There were two platoons that were housed on the far end of the center
called baby platoons, and these were reserved for children too young to work and would
ultimately be put up for adoption.
Subsequent investigations discovered that Brothers Home had facilitated 19 adoptions between
1979 and 1986.
That's so low.
It was like, what, 3,500 people at the facility?
Uh, 38,000.
38,000 went through from 1970, something, from middle 1970 to middle 1980.
And this is the amount they actually got adopted.
God. Well, this is, I mean, this is on record. There, you know, there could be many more that they don't have. These are just the ones that they know for sure. Yeah. So investigators found that 90% of the inmates at Brothers Home had families and were of sound mind. So this is just straight up human trafficking. They worked alongside many adoption agencies, including six agencies based in the United States. And this was just one of the many revenue streams for Park and Kuhn and his family. Brothers Home was not just the center of abuse. It was also a site.
of forced labor and economic exploitation.
Detainees, including children, were made to work long hours in factory-like conditions
producing goods such as clothing, shoes, fishing equipment.
One of the survivors talks about how for, you know, like 10 hours a day, they would have
to run fishing line through poles.
So they were just made to do like all of this, like, you know, forced, forced labor as
children for no or little pay.
These items were then sold for profit and the money would go to Park, Illinois.
in Coon, his family, they became very wealthy. I think when Brothers Home eventually is rated by
authorities, they found like over $5.5 million today in today's value of money that they had
basically just been like embezzling from the government, stealing from selling the goods that they,
you know, that they were producing with slave labor. And so one detainee said that they were given
$140 after seven years of unpaid work. And so yes, from 1976 to 1980,
an estimated 38,000 people were swept off the streets and fed into brothers' home.
And it could have been thousands more if it hadn't been for a fateful hunting trip.
In 1986, a local prosecutor named Kim Jong-wan heard a rumor from some local hunters
that they had seen what looked like young laborers being assaulted by guards with clubs
on a nearby mountain in Ulsan.
Kim trekked out to the construction site himself during a pheasant hunting excursion
and photograph the guards himself.
So this is Kim's picture from when he was spying on basically the chain gang, essentially.
Yeah, it's so eerie.
It's just being photographed from, you know, behind branches and leaves.
So, of course, he's disturbed by what he sees.
He launches an investigation and uncovers, you know, thousands of individuals at Brothers Home
who are being held against their will.
And basically what he claims that he saw inside when the home was raided was, quote,
A perfect detainment facility, not a welfare center, locked from the inside and out.
He found a hospital ward where patients had been left untreated, as well as graveyards
behind the facility's church, unmarked graves hinting at the deaths of detainees.
An official inquiry would later reveal that over 650 people died at Brothers' home.
Their causes of death ranging from beatings to untreated illnesses and malnutrition.
Just like the concentration camps, I mean.
Yeah.
And there's all sorts of stories.
Like, if you watch any documentaries about this, the survivors, everybody seems to have a story where somebody acted out of turn or a little kid wet their pants and basically is like beaten to death in front of the children or beaten so bad hauled away and then they never come back, which means that, you know, they died.
So this is fucking crazy too.
So subsequent investigations found that the Brothers Home purchased over 250,000 tablets of Thorazine in 1986, alongside a handful of other antipsychotics.
So these would be given to inmates who dared to speak up or worse tried to escape.
They were beaten, sent to the hospital wing to have their injuries treated, and then force-fed
benzos until they were compliant.
Han Jong-soon, the boy who was kidnapped with his sister in 1984, told investigators and
journalists in interviews that his sister, who had broken the rules to come and visit him
in his platoon, was given so many pills that she developed severe mental illness while
in prison in the camp, and then was therefore locked in the camp's mental ward, which had, like,
apparently horrible, horrible conditions.
Even worse.
Yeah.
Just want to remind, these are the anti-communists.
I mean, this defines, like, anti-communism in Asia during the Cold War.
There were two million people fucking killed in Indonesia, like, ritualistically, just, like, organized slaughter, and they would just feed the bodies into the river.
Bad.
Anti-communism is, in fact, kind of fascism.
Despite the overwhelming evidence, Kim's investigation faced significant resistance.
After the arrest warrant was issued for Park and Kuhn, the mayor of Busan called Kim and told him that he should let Park go.
Park wielded considerable influence and political pressure from higher-ups hamper the inquiry.
While Park was eventually arrested in January of 1987, he faced only minor charges and served just two and a half years in prison for embezzlement.
So initially, he was supposed to face 15 years for embezzlement of government funds as well as false imprisonment.
And there were two.
There was false imprisonment during the day, and then false imprisonment during the nighttime.
And first, they let him off the charge of false imprisonment during the day.
And so he was only up to be charged with false imprisonment during the evening.
Bizarre.
Very bizarre.
Yeah.
And then eventually all imprisonment charges were dropped.
And he got hit with the embezzlement, and he served two and a half years, and he got out.
Damn, I would love to do, like, motor vehicle or Hiroshima or whatever to him.
Yeah.
Well, Brad is being interviewed by a couple of weird guys.
Yeah.
They're taking them to a place called like Brothers Home or something, but the American version.
Swept off the street.
Yeah, swept out.
They found out he was Canadian, actually.
No, this, like, this whole thing is very, we'll talk about it a little bit at the end, but this is very, it's relevant considering what's happened over the last couple weeks in this country.
Yeah.
In 2025, not 1980s.
So at the time of Park's arrest, his brother-in-law, second in command, Lim Yongsoon, was nowhere near South Korea.
A year prior in 1986, he had moved his family to Australia to begin preaching at a Presbyterian church in Sydney.
He used embezzled money from brothers' home to give large donations to other churches in the area, buying his family influence.
When Park got out of prison in 1989, he too was granted visas to go and visit his family in Australia,
and in 1990, he and his brother-in-law used the money that they had stolen from the government to start their own church.
In 1995, Park started the family company, Jobstown, in Australia, whose co-owners were all of his family members who had helped him run Brothers Home.
Same configuration.
They spent $1.5 million on a driving range in sports complex in a suburb of Sydney, all funded by the slave labor of workers from Busan.
They even flew over former inmates of Brothers Home, even after it closed following Park's arrest, to work dawn to midnight at the driving range,
paying them nothing and beating them with golf clubs if they protested.
These are like horrible, horrible monsters.
Lim Yongsun became a senior member of the Korean Presbyterian Church in Australia.
So Han Jong-sun, this is the guy who is kidnapped with his sister.
He was also the artist who drew the pictures of the abuse that he witnessed at Brothers Home.
He was the first survivor to demonstrate publicly against the atrocities committed at the home.
Well, that's actually not quite true.
In 1982, a man by the name of Kang drew up a petition that he delivered to the government, asking them to look into his brother's mistreatment at Brothers Home.
The case was handled by the Busan Bookbu Police Station, who had connections to Park in Kuhn, the center's director, and Park claimed that Kang had made a false accusation, and Kang was tried and sentenced to eight months in prison in December of 1982.
Oh, my God.
So, Kang, like, served more time.
Yes, yes.
That's insane.
So the first guy, the first guy who was like, hey man, like my brother got out.
or escaped, like, I don't know the specifics of how people...
I know that people tried to escape a lot, and they were, like, punished for it.
But some people must have gotten out at some point, because this guy went to authority saying,
like, hey, man, I think they're, like, beating people in there.
Like, I don't think it's good.
And they essentially, like, threw that guy in prison for eight months.
Beautiful stuff.
Beautiful stuff.
So, you can see why people were afraid to speak up.
Back to Han, in 2012, he began standing alone outside South Korea.
as National Assembly.
And soon after, other survivors joined him.
Here's a picture included for you.
Hell, yes.
Everybody they're wearing.
They are like sitting outside.
They've got white sheets, white sheets and headbands on with words of protest written on it.
And a huge, a huge crowd of people basically are rallying behind them.
So this started to gain more and more and more national attention.
Families and survivors continue to demand justice from the South Korean government.
And eventually, their voices were heard.
In 2014, Park and his son were extradited to Busan to face trial once again for embezzlement and false imprisonment.
His son, Park Jun Quang, was sentenced to serve three years in prison.
Park and Kuhn's charges were suspended, however, because he had acquired dementia, and he died two years later in 2016.
Fucking hell.
The fucking craziest thing about this dude is that they found out after these investigations that he had had a nudge.
another orphanage before this. Oh, of course. So when they raided, they finally raided Brothers
Home, they found in the basement thousands and thousands of like children's clothing, like,
you know, new clothing that people had donated people from churches, families, you know, from the
adoption agencies, they'd all been donating these clothes to the center and they weren't giving it to
any of the people that were in prison there. They were selling these clothes and they realized
That's how these guys were essentially making money.
And before this, they'd operated under a different name.
They had another orphanage and they were doing the exact same thing.
And then they got busted doing it.
So basically what happened is this guy was like, he was like essentially propping up
orphanages using the money from the government, not spending it on the kids there,
but using it to enrich himself, enrich his family.
There was a little bit of suspicion.
He was like, all right, well, I'm out.
He changed his name and then started another one, which eventually became Brothers Home.
in the midst of this, like, you know, sweeping reform to, like, clean the streets or whatever.
Yeah, it's like, well, you know, it's time to, it's time for everyone to self-determine and try to make a
career and make some money. And he's like, oh, I have a business plan. It's, it's, what if,
as an entrepreneur, I'm proposing concentration camps for profit. Yeah, exactly, exactly.
And the worst part is that concentration camps do work. Like, capitalism makes the, the kind of context for that to be
a very profitable way to do things.
Like control and violence and like, you know, institutional abuse, like that, that can be profitable.
Very profitable.
They were millionaires, you know, had there, there hadn't been this kind of like huge public
outcry for the South Korean government to like bring these guys to justice and retry them
and acknowledge, you know, these tens of thousands of people, survivors suffering.
They would have lived happily ever after in like Australia at the Gulf Range.
It's so crazy, though, like uncovering the last few.
decades, basically the Cold War period, like post-World War II period. The story is always this,
like, even in, I don't know, Canada, where you're like, oh, yeah, they were just, like,
bury, they were, like, abusing to death and, like, burying native kids, like, at these boarding
schools. And now we, like, found all the bodies super later. It's like, yeah, of course this is
what the structure produces, right? I mean, that, it makes sense, like, you know, so fucking
frustrating. Because you can't really, like, you can't be like, well, you know, capitalism
requires this level of abuse and violence. It's like, no, it just sets the conditions for that to be
something you can do and get away with and have be profitable.
So finally, in 2022, just three years ago, South Korea's Truth and Reconciliation Commission
formally acknowledged the events at Brothers Home as a, quote, grave human rights violation
by the state. The Commission's findings provided survivors with a degree of validation,
but nevertheless, much remains unresolved. Survivors like Han Jong-sun and Choi
Sung Wu have spent years advocating for formal apologies and meaningful compensation, asking
for merely $30,000 for their work and suffering while in the camp. But finances are the least
of their worries. They want formal acknowledgement that their best years were stolen from them,
thrown in the back of a van with vagrant transport vehicle printed on the side. To quote
Choi, even as our country democratized, we never became part of a mainstream class. We were treated
like something it was best to keep out of sight.
Yeah.
So look, I mean, here's a situation where we have these videos go viral, right?
You know, they claim that they've stumbled on a real-life squid game, but they're using AI images stolen from an Instagram account, and they get the majority of the facts completely wrong.
Meanwhile, there are hundreds of pages, court documents, and research about Brothers Home, despite it not being, you know, super well-known.
And I don't think I need to emphasize how important this story is in the wake of ICE unlawfully arresting, detaining, and threatening to deport pro-Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil.
Just as Brother's home was used to disappear those that the government considered undesirable, Kalil's detention highlights the precarious position of those who challenge dominant narratives.
Honestly, like in 35 years, we're just going to have this kind of disclosure, but for what ICE has been doing throughout like the Obama, Biden, Trump, like all.
of these different regimes. We're just going to find out that of course. It was clear. It was even
covered. We know. We were running concentration camps. We already know. We already know it's all. We're
already here. They're disappearing people off the streets. They're ripping kids away from their
families. And it's not like, oh, it's just started happening. It's like this has been, this has been
us. Oh, yeah. No, we put Japanese people in concentration camps in America. Like, I don't know.
There's this idea that like America was always just like a good guy. And it's like, America was
kind of like the main competitor to Hitler, like, it wasn't opposed to what Hitler did. In fact,
Hitler admired the United States. I think probably his biggest mistake was not allying with
the United States very early. He could have probably fucking gotten a bunch of like Southern
boys to be like, you know what? You're right. The Jews are fucking awful. Yeah, probably. Probably.
He loved America. This country, this country is like by far the most evil country like after World War
two. Yeah. Like the whole, the entire Cold War up until today, what an evil empire, man.
And it's fucking crazy, too, to me because, like, the Soviet Union, like, totally saved our asses in World War II.
100%.
You know, a lot of the Jews who were in concentration camps, like, saw Soviet faces.
Yeah, of course.
They were the majority of the people lost in the combat.
Not American ones.
And, like, it's so crazy that to turn around after that and to be like, well, they saved our asses, boys, but this ideology has to be snuffed out in every shape of form for the next hundred years.
Oh, yeah, dude, they didn't want to join the war.
like, this is your European bullshit.
Like, leave us out of it.
Our enemy is communism.
Yeah, man.
And then they were kind of forced into joining it because it just got out of hand.
Anyways, we're kind of off.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So all I'm saying, I guess, is fucking conspiracy theory, TikTok influencers.
Do fucking better, you know?
You can use your little, like,
the fucking song that everybody uses and you can point to things behind you.
But there's plenty of real information.
It's just fucking laziness.
Like, the guy got so much shit wrong.
He said it was bought by, the orphanage was bought by a, a billionaire, and then he imprisoned everybody.
No, no, it was always a prison.
It was always a prison.
The guy wasn't a billionaire.
He was just like an ex-military officer who took advantage of a situation.
And he was like, oh, shit, if I don't feed these children, you know, I can fucking make a shit ton of money.
I'm going to bring in my wife.
I'm going to bring in my brother-in-law.
We're going to make it a church.
We're going to make it two churches.
I feel like fucking short form video, vertical dimensions.
and like the broccoli head.
Yeah, these people are not helping you.
Okay, so to cap, I know this is incredibly depressing.
So to cap us off, I wanted to end with, you know, another thing that I found late night
scrolling through the depths of our conspiracy.
And I'm just, it's somewhat of a poem.
I'm just going to read it to you.
So just, you know, if you're in bed right now, you're listening to this episode, you're
really fucking sad.
You know, just kind of turn your brain off and let the soothing words of our conspiracy
flow through your mind.
The title of the post is,
I'm a clairvoyant.
These are the visions I'm having.
From an early age,
I have had visions that end up being shockingly true.
Family and friends have witnessed it firsthand,
but you choose to believe what you wish.
I'm not here to make you believe me.
It's more so a deep-rooted need for me to share.
We are being monitored by a more advanced life form.
Oh, boy.
That life form resides on our moon, within our ocean, and mountains.
The life form is nefarious.
Oh, come on.
The life form is already intertwined with our day today.
Elon Musk is ET and has flat out stated this in a tweet on X.
Physically, though, kind of the same physique.
That belly, that big belly, that big E.T. belly.
Yeah.
Other high-profile individuals are likely E.T. as well.
Okay.
Some type of harvesting is happening.
We are programmed to quote head to the light when we die.
But that light source is actually a collection device.
Wow.
Individuals who do not follow the light fall off the escalator into purgatory.
Ghosts rattling obfelling.
Objects, slamming doors, et cetera, are upset spirits or souls that are trying to warn us.
Cow mutilations are simply the more advanced life form testing our food supply for environmental changes slash toxin detection.
COVID was a program designed by these more advanced life forms.
The injections had something in them similar to nanobots.
A cataclysm is coming and COVID is related.
70% of the global population took the vaccine.
This advanced life form will either collect or destroy the 70% of the population who took the vaccine.
The moon affects the tides.
We have a body of water massively larger than our ocean under the floor of the ocean.
Don't know if that's true?
Oh, that's the one you don't know if it's true?
I don't know about that.
The advanced life form controls the moon.
Awesome.
Once the 70% and been wiped, the advanced life forms are going to essentially back up the moon
to cause biblical flooding, wiping out most of the remaining 30% away.
This has already happened once, at least in history.
Great flood, I'm guessing.
Wait, wait, wait.
What does back up the moon?
Like a truck?
It's just like, beep, beep, beep.
And the moon is, like, backing up towards the earth?
Yeah, I think they mean, like, hook a toe cable onto it and, like, back it up a couple light years.
I don't know.
Hell yeah, dude.
There's a weird element of duty here.
For instance, the advanced life forms take on different shapes, etc., such as we take on
roles for careers. In doing this, they're assigned to Earth and are required to stay on it.
The advanced life forms that appear human are preparing for the cataclysm, billionaire bunkers.
This is why Elon keeps encouraging people to have children because he knows people are being harvested.
His children will not be affected by the cataclysm. I love it. This is like an anti-Elon-like-pilled alien
person. It's kind of positive about him, though. It kind of is, yeah.
It's like, listen, he knows the shit, he's smart, he's ET, and he's taking care of shit so that his kids don't
get harvested. A good father. This is a recurring thing and the advanced life forms toggle between
doing this on Earth and Mars. Something happened on Mars. My gut is telling me the people there
realized what was happening and intentionally eradicated their planet via nuclear means to prevent
the cycle from continuing what people? The Martian people. It's also why these advanced life
forms are so concerned about nuclear weapons on Earth. And that's the end of the post. That's
really fucking, that person's brain is dirtier than mine somehow. I will say, you know,
I don't check in on our conspiracy all that often, but it used to be, for a while, when I first
got on it, it was kind of like lefty conspiracy theorist. Like, there was a lot of stuff about Bush,
a lot of stuff about 9-11, you know. Then it was like all right wing for a while. It was like,
COVID and vaccines and all of this stuff. And now when I went back recently, it's like, I don't
know, like five posts are like kind of like lefty conspiracy theories and like five posts are
like righty conspiracies. And then there's one post like this that's just completely, you know,
just bonkers like out of the blue that's like, we are being controlled by Elon's tummy.
It feels like people are kind of just dissociating. Yeah. They're not like, I think that we're
heading past anger into like just total narcotic haze. Yeah, yeah. I got to say like anecdotally,
it's kind of rare that I have a conversation with somebody outside of work that isn't like completely down the rabbit hole, like politically in one way or the other.
Yeah, I get it though. It's like, you know what?
Yeah.
Fuck this shit. We're backing up the moon, boys.
Yeah. But like, it's so fucked because like I didn't get to enjoy any of that.
Like this podcast basically came along and like Travis View came along and like destroyed my ability to sort of like enjoy conspiracy theories.
So now everybody is pilled, but I'm not.
I'm like, well, I mean, think about, you know, well, think about it.
I mean, where did you get this information?
And they look at me like, who the fuck cares?
Who cares where we got the information?
It's true.
It's true.
I mean, I love Travis, but like, he did sort of destroy.
He destroyed my ability to enjoy.
Like, I just can't, like, I don't know.
I just, I hear his voice.
It's like a disappointed father.
Every time I try to like, you know, get pilled on something, I'm just like,
be like, but what's, where's the source?
You can like unbutton your shirt and reveal Travis like a quato like in your stomach.
He lives inside you.
He's piloting you.
Yeah, that's why you haven't heard his voice on the pod and, you know.
As a result, you were like, I'm going to do whatever I want for this episode.
It's going to be a kind of historic deep dive that's very depressing about how like.
I was like way in over my head.
I was like, oh my God, I didn't realize like what I had signed up for.
I thought I was kind of like, you know, debunking some squid game shit and that I like to show.
And then, of course, I find out that it's like this, this horrific, horrific, tragic, tragic tale.
I think you did it justice, man.
I think I did okay.
I think that I had some great sources, which I'm going to, you know, obviously link in the show notes.
And there's a lot of good, especially at Al Jazeera, has done a lot of, like, really good work on interviewing survivors of brothers' home and sort of like laying out, like, you know, the amount of money where it came from, where it went to.
you know, what happened when the family kind of like fled to Australia.
So there's some great journalists who are doing great work.
And I hope that this serves as a fairly comprehensive look so that, you know, the 60-second vertical videos, you know, there's something out there that's kind of combating them.
I guess that's what this podcast is.
Just battling the vertical videos.
Send that broccoli ass head motherfucker like the link to the episode when it comes out.
He's going to be like he got everything.
It took him an hour and a half to get everything wrong.
He's going to be like, Jesus, the view counts on this podcast are so low.
I make like $2 million every week.
Yes, exactly.
1.7 million.
He's like, and counting.
Wait, the broccoli head?
Yeah, yeah, 1.7 million views on his video totally wrong about it.
Oh, okay, okay.
I thought you were saying he made like $1.7 million.
No, no, no.
But he had $1.7 million views.
I don't know what that translates to in TikTok bucks.
Can we just get ice to just pick up the broccoli heads?
That would be hard because that would be hard because that would.
It would be like all of Doge picked up by ice.
Yeah.
Hmm.
Anyways, just kind of spitballing.
Yeah.
You know what?
We'll keep brainstorming and maybe we'll figure out what to do with the broccoli heads.
It's perms, by the way.
They're getting perms.
Really?
Thanks for listening to another episode of the QAA podcast.
You can go to patreon.com slash QAA and subscribe for $5 a month to get a whole second episode every single week,
plus access to our entire archive of premium episodes.
Oh, follow Brad Abrahams at Brad W-T-F on Twitter.
I think that's his handle.
If you can't find Brad by now, God help you.
Got to find Brad.
Watch his documentary, Love and Saucers.
Great movie.
It's such a good movie.
I have one of that guy's paintings on my wall now.
Yeah, the paintings are haunting.
I own an original.
It's crazy.
For everything else, we've got a website, QAA-A-Podcast.com.
Listener, until next week.
May the Deep Dish bless you and keep you.
We have auto-kewed content based on your preferences.
All right, so a lot of people are thinking that Squid Games is based off of this true event.
That is based off of No Brothers Land in 1986.
They're claiming that the real Squid Games took place in an underground bunker.
that these men dressed in very similar track suits as in the show were forced to compete in games.
Now, this is a real photo of inmates at Brothers Island.
These images, however, are AI generated.
Don't believe me, I did some research.
I'm sorry.
Their home did not actually look like this.
Now, the Brothers home was a concentration camp with over 40,000 people prison there.
Basically, it was a place for undesirables, people with mental health.
conditions, orphans, etc. Now of course there's similarities between the home and
Squid Games, but no, this is not what actually Squid Games was based off of. What's sad is
that a lot of violence did occur in this prison. Follow for part two and I'll explain more.
Also follow me here in case there's a ban. Yeah.