Samurai_Jerk wrote:Who should occupy the intellectual mainstream, Takeapoo?
Takechan, TAKECHAN, TAKECHANNN!!!!!
An important question was asked.
I would really like to know your answer!
Hot Topics | |
---|---|
Samurai_Jerk wrote:Who should occupy the intellectual mainstream, Takeapoo?
Takechanpoo wrote:of course, the whole scholars and critics majoring in any field of positivism as i suggested above.
in other words, the whole intellectuals, excluding novelists, essayists and poets().
Russell wrote:Samurai_Jerk wrote:Who should occupy the intellectual mainstream, Takeapoo?
Takechan, TAKECHAN, TAKECHANNN!!!!!
An important question was asked.
I would really like to know your answer!
Takechanpoo wrote:japans modernization got aborted. so japan is not even in post-modern yet. japanese need to do modernization over again.
wagyl wrote:I also get the feeling that if the bubble had continued this would have become a really shitty country, both to live in and on the international stage.
matsuki wrote:With the fixation on "during the bubble.." people still seem to have, it makes talking business with many places depressing, to say the least.
matsuki wrote:With the fixation on "during the bubble.." people still seem to have, it makes talking business with many places depressing, to say the least.
kurogane wrote:For the sake of ... and mental health
matsuki wrote:...but I'll never get tired of this:
A South Korean man set himself on fire during an anti-Japan protest in Seoul on Wednesday, but police said he appeared to have avoided life-threatening injuries.
The 80-year-old sustained third-degree burns on his upper body and arms and was breathing when he was carried into an emergency vehicle, said rescue worker Woo Kyung-suk. The man's motives weren't immediately clear.
The rally in front of the Japanese Embassy was attended by hundreds of people demanding justice for South Korean women who were forced to work as sex slaves for the Japanese military during World War II.
Wage Slave wrote:Interesting innovation.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:Korean barbecues himselfA South Korean man set himself on fire during an anti-Japan protest in Seoul on Wednesday, but police said he appeared to have avoided life-threatening injuries.
The 80-year-old sustained third-degree burns on his upper body and arms and was breathing when he was carried into an emergency vehicle, said rescue worker Woo Kyung-suk. The man's motives weren't immediately clear.
The rally in front of the Japanese Embassy was attended by hundreds of people demanding justice for South Korean women who were forced to work as sex slaves for the Japanese military during World War II.
legion wrote:Wage Slave wrote:Interesting innovation.
I predict an increase in rear end collisions
Takechanpoo wrote:i always get blackmail messages as soon as i post kimche-related threads.
i seem to be under kimche-tainted serveillance.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:How you like deez nutz?A Seoul court on Thursday sentenced a former Korean Air executive to a year in prison for aviation law violations that stemmed from her inflight tantrum over how she was served macadamia nuts.
Takechanpoo wrote:i always get blackmail messages as soon as i post kimche-related threads.
i seem to be under kimche-tainted serveillance.
South Korea on Tuesday demanded that the Japanese daily Sankei Shimbun delete an online column that likens President Park Geun-hye to the Joseon dynasty’s Queen Min, who was assassinated by Japanese.
Over the Sankei Shimbun, a trial is going on in South Korea for Tatsuya Kato, a former Seoul bureau chief of the daily accused of defaming Park in a different column he wrote.
According to the Sankei Shimbun, an official of the South Korean Embassy in Tokyo visited the newspaper publisher’s Tokyo head office on Tuesday.
The latest column shows a lack of understanding and a perception gap regarding South Korea’s diplomacy and policies, the official told the Sankei Shimbun, expressing concerns about the negative effects of the article on the two countries’ relations.
Citing Park’s planned participation in a military parade that China will conduct Thursday to mark the 70th anniversary of its victory in the war against Japan, the column by a Sankei political department senior writer said South Korean diplomacy is based on toadyism, in which a weak country follows a powerful one.
The column named the 19th-century queen as a woman in authority who is like Park. With her strong power, Queen Min tried to maintain the dynasty by approaching Qing, or the last dynasty of China, Japan and Russia in turn, but was assassinated by the Japanese in 1895.
South Korea’s ruling Saenuri Party has condemned the column and demanded an apology, saying that degrading the president is tantamount to a terrorist attack against South Korean citizens.
The column does not deserve a comment at the government level, a South Korean Foreign Ministry official said, slamming the writer for indulging in shameless claims about history. South Korean media organizations are also critical of the column, calling it absurd.
More
South Korea’s ruling Saenuri Party has condemned the column and demanded an apology, saying that degrading the president is tantamount to a terrorist attack against South Korean citizens.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 7 guests