Yoon Seok-youl, South Korea’s former attorney-general, recently announced his candidacy for president. He strongly denounced the Moon Jae-in regime as “unjust” and stressed the need for “regime change.” South Korea’s general election is about to kick off. On June 29, Yoon formally announced his challenge for the presidency. At a news conference that day, Yoon spent about half his time denouncing the malpractices of the current regime, saying they are too numerous to list them all and stressing the need for regime change. He criticized the Moon administration’s core policies of “income-led growth,” “real estate policy,” “procuratorial reform,” and “disintegration from nuclear power plants.” He said the government “has disregarded common sense, justice, and the rule of law, crumbling the foundations of the country and plunging its people into frustration and anger.” At the same time, he promised to “restore crumbling liberal democracy and the rule of law, and create …