Comments by "August Hayek" (@hayek218) on "CaspianReport"
channel.
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@yuwooni9767
In 2000, Stanford University conducted comparison of history textbooks among several countries, which basically said that textbooks in China are propaganda, ones in South Korea are fantasy, and ones in Japan are most fair.
A former professor at Seoul University, Lee Young-hoon, who is a co-author of "Anti-Japan Tribalism," describes Korea's culture of lying in his preface as follows:
“A country of lies, a nation of lies: Korea's liar culture is widely known internationally. In 2014 alone, 1,400 people were prosecuted for perjury, 172 times more than Japan. Considering the population, perjury per capita is 430 times that of Japan. The greatest responsibility for the fact that the people of this country do not regard lies as lies and that the politics of this country have come to use lies as a means of political conflict can be attributed to the country's liar scholarship. The history and sociology of this country are a hotbed of lies. Universities in this country are factories of lies.”
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@yuwooni9767
K was one of the poorest nations in the world, being a tributary state of Chinese dynasties for almost one thousand years since the time of the Yuan Dynasty.
Japan made K independent after the Sino-Japanese War and assisted K in governing itself. But K failed miserably.
So your Emperor addressed the nation and begged Japan to annex:
“I have made every effort since my accession to the throne, but the disease of Korea has only worsened and its exhaustion has reached an extreme. There is no hope of recovery, and there is nothing that can be done. The situation would only get worse and worse, and there was nothing that could be done. Therefore, I have come to the conclusion that it is better to entrust this great task to someone else. I hereby transfer the right to govern Korea to His Majesty the Emperor of Japan, in whom I have placed my trust, and resolve to firmly establish peace in the Orient on the outside and to preserve the welfare of all Koreans on the inside. The people should consider the current situation of the country, submit themselves to the superior civilization of Japan, and enjoy the happiness of the people. This is not because I have forgotten the people but rather out of a desire to save them. The people should understand my will and act accordingly.”
But after the war, your parents thought it was too embarrassing to teach the truth, so they changed their minds.
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@yuwooni9767
Alternatively, if you cannot list examples of what you mentioned (religion, architecture, music, smelting technology, pottery, and countless other things), you can answer the following question:
Just look around you now, and mention ONE thing that J did not teach or give free of charge, or K did not steal from J. Just ONE thing.
I can think of paper and ttongsel. That's all.
J developed Chinese cabbage for Kimchi that can be grown under low temperatures of the Peninsula, and even the operating techniques and the facial measurements of Ks plastic faces are all J.
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