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  • fuckedgaijin ‹ General ‹ F*cked News

Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Odd news from Japan and all things Japanese around the world.
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Russell » Fri Mar 10, 2017 11:17 pm

Park ousted as S Korea's president by Constitutional Court ruling

In a historic, unanimous ruling Friday, South Korea’s Constitutional Court formally removed impeached President Park Geun-hye from office over a corruption scandal that has plunged the country into political turmoil and worsened an already-serious national divide.

Two people later died during protests against the court’s decision, which capped a stunning fall for Park, the country’s first female leader who rode a wave of lingering conservative nostalgia for her late dictator father to victory in 2012, only to see her presidency crumble as millions of furious protesters filled the nation’s streets.

The ruling by the eight-member panel opens Park up to possible criminal proceedings - prosecutors have already named her a criminal suspect - and makes her South Korea’s first democratically elected leader to be removed from office since democracy replaced dictatorship in the late 1980s.

It also deepens South Korea’s political and security uncertainty as the country faces existential threats from perennial rival North Korea, reported economic retaliation from a China furious about Seoul’s cooperation with the U.S. on an anti-missile system, and questions in Seoul about the new Trump administration’s commitment to the countries’ decades-long security alliance.

Park’s “acts of violating the constitution and law are a betrayal of the public trust,” acting Chief Justice Lee Jung-mi said. “The benefits of protecting the constitution that can be earned by dismissing the defendant are overwhelmingly big. Hereupon, in a unanimous decision by the court panel, we issue a verdict: We dismiss the defendant, President Park Geun-hye.”

Lee accused Park of colluding with her longtime confidante and private citizen Choi Soon-sil to extort tens of millions of dollars from businesses and letting Choi meddle in state affairs and receive and look at documents with state secrets. Those are the allegations that prosecutors have already raised, but Park has refused to undergo any questioning, citing a law that gives a sitting leader immunity from prosecution.

It is not clear when prosecutors will try to interview with her.

Park won’t vacate the presidential Blue House on Friday as her aides are preparing for her return to her private home in southern Seoul, according to the Blue House. Park wasn’t planning any statement on Friday, it said.

Park’s lawyer, Seo Seok-gu, who had previously compared Park’s impeachment to the crucifixion of Jesus Christ, called the verdict a “tragic decision” made under popular pressure and questioned the fairness of what he called a “kangaroo court.”

South Korea must now hold an election within two months to choose Park’s successor. Liberal Moon Jae-in, who lost to Park in the 2012 election, currently enjoys a comfortable lead in opinion surveys.

Pre-verdict surveys showed that 70 to 80 percent of South Koreans wanted the court to approve Park’s impeachment. But there have been worries that Park’s ouster would further polarize the country and cause violence between her supporters and opponents.

Sensing history, thousands of people - both pro-Park supporters, many of them dressed in army-style fatigues and wearing red berets, and those who wanted Park gone - gathered around the Constitutional Court building and a huge public square in downtown Seoul.

A big television screen was set up near the court so people could watch the verdict live. Hundreds of police were on hand, wearing helmets with visors and black, hard-plastic breastplates and shin guards. The streets near the court were lined with police buses and barricades.

Some of Park’s supporters reacted with anger after the ruling, shouting and hitting police officers with plastic flag poles and climbing on police buses. Anti-Park protesters celebrated by marching in the streets near the presidential Blue House, carrying flags, signs and an effigy of Park dressed in prison clothes and tied up with rope.

The Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency said two people died while protesting Park’s removal. An official from the Seoul National University Hospital said that a man in his 70s, believed to be a Park supporter, died from head wounds after falling from the top of a police bus.

An official from the Kangbuk Samsung Hospital in Seoul said another man brought from the pro-Park rally died shortly after receiving CPR at the hospital. The hospital official couldn’t immediately confirm the cause of death.

Park’s parliamentary impeachment in December came after weeks of Saturday rallies that drew millions who wanted her resignation. Overwhelmed by the biggest rallies in decades, the voices of Park supporters were largely ignored. But they’ve recently regrouped and staged fierce pro-Park rallies since.

Prosecutors have arrested and indicted a slew of high-profile figures over the scandal, including Park’s confidante Choi, top Park administration officials and Samsung heir Lee Jae-yong.

Since she’s now no longer in power, prosecutors can summon, question and possibly arrest her. Her critics want to see Park appear on TV while dressed in prison garb, handcuffed and bound like others involved in the scandal. But some analysts worry that could create a backlash by conservatives ahead of the presidential vote.

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You have to give it to those Koreans. They know how to deal with crooked politicians in the highest ranks. Japan can learn something from them!
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“I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones.” ― Albert Einstein
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Wage Slave » Sat Mar 11, 2017 3:42 pm

Screwed-down Hairdo wrote:
Takechanpoo wrote:when the fuck on earth will western liberals notice that those korean just make a bad use of their liberal mind for the endless tragic heroine masturbation???
:rolleyes:


I'm with you on this issue, Take.


In one sense, so am I. If it is the case that an unequivocal apology has been made and recompense paid then yes, the only proper thing to do is to forgive and move on. Building these statues all over the world is not consistent with that and is deplorable.

But, and it's a big but, Tacky and others consistently and noisily seek to deny that anything that warrants an apology ever happened. Given that , it's hardly surprising that the other side feels they are justified in banging on about it. And it's not only Koreans that feel that way.
It is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.

- Macbeth (Act 5, Scene 5)

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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Greji » Sat Mar 11, 2017 8:06 pm

Given previous Korean history, one might think to ask if it is "coup d'etat time yet"?
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Takechanpoo » Sat Mar 11, 2017 9:37 pm

Greji wrote:Given previous Korean history, one might think to ask if it is "coup d'etat time yet"?

you are posting in a bed of a nursery home after a long time? or his son is posting this?
:???:
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Russell » Sat Mar 11, 2017 10:11 pm

Takechanpoo wrote:
Greji wrote:Given previous Korean history, one might think to ask if it is "coup d'etat time yet"?

you are posting in a bed of a nursery home after a long time? or his son is posting this?
:???:

With all those nurses around, it is probably hard to get Greji out of his bed...
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Mike Oxlong » Sat Mar 11, 2017 10:57 pm

Russell wrote:
Takechanpoo wrote:
Greji wrote:Given previous Korean history, one might think to ask if it is "coup d'etat time yet"?

you are posting in a bed of a nursery home after a long time? or his son is posting this?
:???:

With all those nurses around, it is probably hard to get Greji out of his bed...

Some say Korean nurses are the bomb! :drool:
•I prefer liberty with danger to peace with slavery.•
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Screwed-down Hairdo » Sun Mar 12, 2017 11:01 am

Wage Slave wrote:
Screwed-down Hairdo wrote:
Takechanpoo wrote:when the fuck on earth will western liberals notice that those korean just make a bad use of their liberal mind for the endless tragic heroine masturbation???
:rolleyes:


I'm with you on this issue, Take.


In one sense, so am I. If it is the case that an unequivocal apology has been made and recompense paid then yes, the only proper thing to do is to forgive and move on. Building these statues all over the world is not consistent with that and is deplorable.

But, and it's a big but, Tacky and others consistently and noisily seek to deny that anything that warrants an apology ever happened. Given that , it's hardly surprising that the other side feels they are justified in banging on about it. And it's not only Koreans that feel that way.


It goes without saying that all imperial powers should be made to atone for their sins, but as long as the British, American, French, Russian, Dutch, Belgian, German, Italian and other various colonial exploiters never address their injustices they will always feed the denial of Japanese revisionists.
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Coligny » Sun Mar 12, 2017 12:02 pm

Screwed-down Hairdo wrote:It goes without saying that all imperial powers should be made to atone for their sins, but as long as the British, American, French, Russian, Dutch, Belgian, German, Italian and other various colonial exploiters never address their injustices they will always feed the denial of Japanese revisionists.


Butterfly effect !?
Don't forget that when we claim territories as new colony of the republic or empire we bring civilisation, culture and indoor plumbing.

When the japs steps somewhere out of their shaky nutcase island... they only bring embarrassment for mankind...
Marion Marechal nous voila !

Verdun

ni oubli ni pardon

never forgive never forget/ for you illiterate kapitalist pigs


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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Wage Slave » Sun Mar 12, 2017 6:22 pm

Coligny wrote:
Screwed-down Hairdo wrote:It goes without saying that all imperial powers should be made to atone for their sins, but as long as the British, American, French, Russian, Dutch, Belgian, German, Italian and other various colonial exploiters never address their injustices they will always feed the denial of Japanese revisionists.


Butterfly effect !?
Don't forget that when we claim territories as new colony of the republic or empire we bring civilisation, culture and indoor plumbing.

When the japs steps somewhere out of their shaky nutcase island... they only bring embarrassment for mankind...


Not going to agree with that, but there's a grain of truth in it. More significantly, It remains a pathetically weak argument to say "Oh we have to deny we did anything wrong because we don't feel other countries have apologised sufficiently for their (non denied) misdeeds.".
It is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.

- Macbeth (Act 5, Scene 5)

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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Takechanpoo » Sun Mar 12, 2017 7:45 pm

british and aussie history textbook are a whole range of whitewashings of numerous evil british wrongdoings. but nobody complains about it. im really jealous of it from the bottom of my heart. yeah really. ppl often say that its justified because they are winner. but ive never heard how concretely its justified. anyone can explain it logially?? thank you
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Russell » Sun Mar 12, 2017 9:49 pm

Takechanpoo wrote:british and aussie history textbook are a whole range of whitewashings of numerous evil british wrongdoings. but nobody complains about it. im really jealous of it from the bottom of my heart. yeah really. ppl often say that its justified because they are winner. but ive never heard how concretely its justified. anyone can explain it logially?? thank you

You didn't mention the Dutch, you ignoramus.

Let me introduce you and your audience to Max Havelaar, a Dutch book that is considered by some as the major factor responsible for the end of Western colonialism.

It is standard fare at Dutch lessons in high school in the Netherlands. And it is a masterwork.

If only there was a Japanese equivalent...
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby wagyl » Sun Mar 12, 2017 10:02 pm

... and if only the novel had not taken 112 years to be translated into the language of the colonised, and if only the movie adaptation, made in Indonesia and with Indonesian investment, had not been banned there for 11 years* ...

There is a school of thought that the Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies and many other parts of South East Asia during the war, no matter how flawed it may have been in practice, did serve to show that you don't need ghostly white skin to be a colonial power, that the brown brothers can be players in the modern world on their own, and was the final impetus needed to encourage nationalist movements in the region leading to decolonisation. It may be difficult to dislodge your colonial masters while they are entrenched, but once they have been kicked out by the Japanese, you are in a much stronger position to renegotiate the power balance between motherland and colony when they try to return.

* Having seen the film many years ago, I wonder how much of that ban was because it was too fucking long, almost longer than the period of Dutch colonialism.
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Russell » Sun Mar 12, 2017 11:02 pm

wagyl wrote:... and if only the novel had not taken 112 years to be translated into the language of the colonised, and if only the movie adaptation, made in Indonesia and with Indonesian investment, had not been banned there for 11 years* ...

There is a school of thought that the Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies and many other parts of South East Asia during the war, no matter how flawed it may have been in practice, did serve to show that you don't need ghostly white skin to be a colonial power, that the brown brothers can be players in the modern world on their own, and was the final impetus needed to encourage nationalist movements in the region leading to decolonisation. It may be difficult to dislodge your colonial masters while they are entrenched, but once they have been kicked out by the Japanese, you are in a much stronger position to renegotiate the power balance between motherland and colony when they try to return.

* Having seen the film many years ago, I wonder how much of that ban was because it was too fucking long, almost longer than the period of Dutch colonialism.

That is a good argument. Indeed, the Indonesians seeing how their former "masters" got imprisoned by the Japanese certainly helped to open their eyes.
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Wage Slave » Sun Mar 12, 2017 11:03 pm

wagyl wrote:There is a school of thought that the Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies and many other parts of South East Asia during the war, no matter how flawed it may have been in practice, did serve to show that you don't need ghostly white skin to be a colonial power, that the brown brothers can be players in the modern world on their own, and was the final impetus needed to encourage nationalist movements in the region leading to decolonisation. It may be difficult to dislodge your colonial masters while they are entrenched, but once they have been kicked out by the Japanese, you are in a much stronger position to renegotiate the power balance between motherland and colony when they try to return.


Yeah, but the writing was well and truly, and rightly, on the wall anyway. In the case of Indonesia it almost certainly speeded the process up. In the cases of India, Burma, Malaya/Singapore and Hong Kong it isn't so clear. Let's be generous and say it accelerated the process by 5 years. And that is generous.
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby wagyl » Sun Mar 12, 2017 11:58 pm

Wage Slave wrote:Yeah, but the writing was well and truly, and rightly, on the wall anyway. In the case of Indonesia it almost certainly speeded the process up. In the cases of India, Burma, Malaya/Singapore and Hong Kong it isn't so clear. Let's be generous and say it accelerated the process by 5 years. And that is generous.

New Delhi... maybe; but I don't think you would have found a Mr Curzon down at the Raffles, or a M Duval in the Hotel Continental, Saigon, or a Dhr. Zuremelk in the Hotel des Indes in Batavia in 1938, who had any idea that their whole lifestyle would be over thirty years in the future.
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Takechanpoo » Mon Mar 13, 2017 12:14 am

If only there was a Japanese equivalent...

excuse me, what imperial japan did in taiwan and korea is not so terrible as what british did in india, what dutch did in indonesia and what belgium did in congo, etc, contrary to the persistent propaganda by kimche-smelling fellows.
thank you

and as for ww2, there is excellent works by japanese scholars. for example,
https://www.amazon.co.jp/%E5%A4%B1%E6%9 ... 4122018331
but i do know almost all of you gaijin dudes japanese skill never reach a point enough to read that level of japanese books.
yea, i know.
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby wagyl » Mon Mar 13, 2017 12:28 am

An analysis of the organisational structure within the military and an extrapolation of that thinking to explain why Japanese enterprises struggle in certain situations, is not the same as a critique of human rights issues arising from colonial exploitation .... but you knew that, anyway.

Relative culpability is a measure that shifts based on perspective. I don't think you can objectively say for certain that one act has a badness score of 7 and another a badness score of 5. Anyway, "Yasu-chan was worse than me and he got off scot free!" wasn't an attractive or valid excuse for your misdeeds when you were six, and it isn't very big or clever now.
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Takechanpoo » Wed Mar 15, 2017 12:50 pm

brainwashed Korean students.jpg

i do wonder if korean know what is self-projection. and according to them, they never do anti-japan education in their schools.
it seems so, seriously.
:liar:
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Coligny » Wed Mar 15, 2017 2:20 pm

yea sure selfprojection... youze a bit of a one trick monkey...
Marion Marechal nous voila !

Verdun

ni oubli ni pardon

never forgive never forget/ for you illiterate kapitalist pigs


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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby matsuki » Fri Mar 17, 2017 10:12 am

JaPan?

monkey[1].png


I guess if they're going to work in retauraunts, the JaPan monkeys should know Kimchi is Korean food.
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Takechanpoo » Thu Mar 30, 2017 9:19 pm

South Korea has joined the ranks of the world's most polluted countries, with air pollution in the first months of this year soaring to record levels.

Long associated with Asian capitals such as Beijing or Delhi, hazardous smog has for weeks blanketed Seoul — a city now appearing among the world's three most polluted in daily rankings.

Many in South Korea blame pollutants wafting in from China — but experts say much of the pollution is homegrown.

"The government is sitting idly by while passing the buck to China," said Kim Shin-do, a professor of environmental engineering at the University of Seoul.

"Only after we handle our own air pollution problems can we grasp the extent of air pollution or fine dust [coming from] the deserts in China and Mongolia."

The South Korean environment ministry attributes up to 80 per cent of the fine dust to overseas sources during periods of pronounced pollution.But Prof Kim believes China is to blame for only 20 per cent of South Korea's fine dust. Environmental group Greenpeace puts the figure at 30 per cent.

Pollution-tracking website AirVisual this week found three South Korean cities and no Chinese cities among the world's 10 most polluted.

Much of the country's pollutants come from vehicle emissions and construction or industrial sites. Power plants also play a crucial role — and energy officials are pushing to develop even more coal-powered capacity.

The government operates 53 coal-powered plants and intends to construct 20 more in the next five years. Ten ageing plants will be shut by 2025.

Between 2005 and last year, the capacity of the country's coal-fired power plants increased almost 95 per cent. Burning of the fossil fuel — a source of carbon dioxide emissions and smog — accounts for about 40 per cent of the country's energy generation.

http://www.cnbc.com/2017/03/29/south-ko ... tries.html

this must have not a less relation to causing me cough variant asthma and hurting my bronchi. fuck you bitch cunts.
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Takechanpoo » Tue Apr 04, 2017 11:56 pm

During my time working at the Seoul Rape Crisis Center, one of the more well-established response service in Korea, I saw how yellow bodies silently absorbed this cost: sexual assault of Korean women by white men, mostly American, constituted at least a third of the Center’s cases. This is, of course, invisible to those in the West because of the concealed workings of globalization, racism and colonialism, and the failures of carceral feminist approaches to sexual violence.

.....

The normalization and prevalence of sexual violence against Korean women by white men demonstrate the material consequence of the unequal distribution of mobility. The Rape Crisis Center’s record quantifies this kind of assault as a third of its annual cases, but I wonder what the recorded incidents amount to and how many go unrecorded. These assaults often take place in bars, clubs, and motels of areas like Itaewon. Survivors rarely know their assailants, and do not recall enough identifiable details to file a report. Those who are able to make a report find themselves in a dead end when they find out that their assailants have left the country. White men come and go–untraceable and unaccountable.

http://novaramedia.com/2017/03/12/who-g ... s-not-see/

really? :neutral:
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby wagyl » Wed Apr 05, 2017 8:53 am

Takechanpoo wrote:
carceral

My, that is a big word.

Notwithstanding the question of whether the Take character understands it, I wonder whether the author understands it herself. I certainly don't know what agenda she is trying to promote by choosing it.

Then again, I am pretty certain that the term "yellow fever" or its various uncensored versions predates 1988. The fetishised exoticism of the orient, including the oriental female, certainly does. Consequently, I read the rest of the article with the same fistful of salt. Whatever point Take is trying to obtain from out-of-context quotes in that article (if it is any deeper than 'Yasu-chan was worse than me and he got off scot free!"), you can actually use different out-of-context quotes from the same article to argue that K-pop should be permanently banned.
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby matsuki » Fri Apr 07, 2017 8:47 am

Not to mention the whole "they're stealing/raping our womens!" fear mongering is the most overused tool in the racist toolbox.
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Takechanpoo » Sun Apr 09, 2017 1:51 am

South Korean police will 'never side with a foreigner', says expat


When Leo Mendoza decided to go shopping with his wife on March 30, he did not imagine that it would lead to one of the most hurtful experiences in his 16-year stay in Korea, all because he wanted to save a child’s life.

As they spotted a Korean boy about to be hit by a car in the parking lot, his Korean wife Shin Jin-young instinctively screamed to stop the vehicle, which prevented an accident.

The child’s grandparents, who were not paying attention when this happened, started to yell at Mendoza and his wife for startling the boy. The incident soon turned into a quarrel involving racist slurs and physical confrontation.

“I called the police. I expected them to prevent the man from further insulting and attacking me and my wife,” the 44-year-old Busan resident told The Korea Herald. “But they allowed the verbal abuse to continue. This part was the most hurtful to me and my wife.”

The Korean man even called him “a Polish son of b****” in front of police officers, but they didn’t do anything, Shin said.

After learning that Mendoza was from Colombia, the man said, “Colombia? It is a lower quality country than Poland. Colombian son of b****,'” she said. “I was also called a b**** numerous times.”

....
“I’ve been spit at, been called a dirty foreigner more times than I can count.”

http://newsyarn.info/south-korean-polic ... says-expat
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid ... =3&theater

the barefacedness of korean racism never cease to amaze me.
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Coligny » Sun Apr 09, 2017 5:10 am

Almost as bad as japan you mean ?
Marion Marechal nous voila !

Verdun

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never forgive never forget/ for you illiterate kapitalist pigs


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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby matsuki » Sun Apr 09, 2017 7:52 am

Coligny wrote:Almost as bad as japan you mean ?


Almost....

There is still no law banning discrimination based on race, religion or sexuality.


but...

The chief of the Yonje Police Station later called Mendoza and offered an apology, which Mendoza accepted and described as “understanding and professional.”


Still, that guy was actually assaulted...the article had a bunch of stories with people demanding police action for being called slurs. Spit at, fine...but why waste your time and demand police intervention over some words?
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Takechanpoo » Fri Apr 14, 2017 12:38 am

I can not live with anyone who does not know only one ' How tough it would be if that person was a neighbor. Because I do not live in the same house, I can not divide and I can not move, so I get tired. Korea is facing such a miserable neighbor.

Nowadays, there is an unfounded "North Snowing in April", and its epicenter is Japan. The idea that the United States will bomb North Korea on the 27th this month first appeared on a personal blog called "Japan Biz." The reason for bombing on that date is because it is a dark day in which the crescent moon rises. As we saw in the 1991 Gulf War, the United States said it would begin its war on the moonlit night with an air strike, so that it would be northbound on that day. It is a ridiculous and awkward logic. If there is a Korean who sympathizes or believes in fake news that is not such a jaw, then one should doubt his intelligence.

Japan's prominent politicians and governments are also grateful for the way they pour out 'North Korean snowfall' and 'war policy'. Former Liberal Democratic Party chairman Shigehisa Ishiba said at a seminar on September 9, "There is a horrific situation on the Korean Peninsula that can not be expressed as a war novel. We must go to the means of rescuing the Japanese. " It also shows that Korea is trying to strengthen the power and role of the Self-Defense Forces through the misfortunes of others while at the same time promoting the war of the Korean peninsula. It is surprising that the level of consciousness of politicians, who are considered the next prime minister of the governing ruling party, is this level.

The Japanese government issued a "State of the Korean Peninsula Statement" to its nationals visiting Korea on November 11. Although the US government, the main body of the "North Korean heavy snow", is quiet, the Japanese government is fuming with anxiety. The Japanese government seems to have a stronger character than 'believe in North Korea', rather than believe in North Korea.

There are many analyzes that the retaliation `reward psychology is laid in the behavior of Japan. The Japanese traditionally has a strong sense of 'paying as much as you can' and 'not forgetting a small grudge for the rest of your life'. It is a kind of revenge for South Korea to set up the 'Peaceful Girl Award' in front of the Busan Japanese Cultural Center and make Abe government troubled. I wish I had met a reasonable neighbor who did not take advantage of others' misery, but I am always tired and tired. At this time, I think that Korea is not North Korea or China, but Japan. Revenge is an act that ruins both the self and the other. There is a saying in Japanese proverb. "If you want to get revenge, you have to dig two graves first."

translated by google
http://www.imaeil.com/sub_news/sub_news ... 64&yy=2017

a typical sample of paranoid schizophrenia.
and if you browse some korean forums, you will understand that most of korean think the same way with this guy
:keyboardcoffee:
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby wagyl » Fri Apr 14, 2017 9:53 am

Why would the Japanese dig a grave if they cremate? The revenge proverb is usually attributed to Confucius, without anyone pointing to the writings of Confucius which it is claimed to come from.
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Re: Those Koreans got a lot of nerve

Postby Takechanpoo » Tue Apr 18, 2017 2:15 pm

in shizuoka, 7, april, 4 korean guys, who live in owariasahi city, aichi pref., have been arrested for stealing 68 trucks and forklifts,
approx 1000 car navigations and so on in shizuoka, aichi, gifu and mie prefectures. the total amount of damage is approx 1.15 hundred million yen.

http://snjpn.net/archives/18782

fucking japantimes and japantoday havent report this korean-related case, as fucking always.
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