What is it that the president was impeached and blamed on the bad atmosphere in Cheongwadae?

In South Korea, it is said that there is a "curse": no matter who becomes the president of South Korea, the outcome will certainly not be very good. 10 On the morning of March, this "curse" seemed to be confirmed again: the Korean Constitutional Court announced that it was in favor of impeaching park geun-hye, which meant that she was dismissed, and with the deepening of the investigation, she was likely to go to jail next.

From 1948, South Korea has experienced 1 1 presidents, but almost all of them have bad endings.

This "curse" has been strange to Koreans for a long time. They thought about it and came to a conclusion: this is the feng shui problem of the president's residence.

This sounds a little incredible. Cheongwadae is the official residence of the South Korean President and was once the backyard of Gyeongbokgung Palace during the Li Dynasty in North Korea.

Gyeongbokgung Palace is the first of the five palaces in Seoul and was once the political center of North Korea. In principle, it is a "land of feng shui".

Originally, Koreans may think the same thing, but it's hard to grasp the president's accidents one by one. When you doubt them, you can only blame Cheongwadae's geomantic omen.

This is not only a folklore, but also a formal media. Last year165438+1October 30th, South Korea's Central Daily News published an article saying that Cheongwadae, the presidential palace, had problems in site selection, structure and even geomantic omen. The website of Sky Daily is even more "fantastic", saying that Cheongwadae is located in a "fierce place", which suppresses the "Long Mai" of North Hanshan and Beiyue flowing to Seoul.

These media talk in one sentence: the actions of the presidential residence are serious. No wonder there is such an idea. Otherwise, I am afraid that every time a new president comes in the future, the Korean people will feel that there is another new "unlucky".

You know, the Korean people cheered and greeted the first female president in Korean history, thinking that she could break this "curse." Who would have thought that four years later, she would be ruined and protested by millions of people in the streets?