Youtube hearted comments of Kim Jong-un (@SupremeLeaderKimJong-un).

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  34. The Hong Kong Zoological and Botanical Gardens you visited is important because not only is it one of the oldest zoological and botanical centers in the world as it was founded in 1864, but also all of the cultivated trees of the Hong Kong orchid, Hong Kong's symbol, derive from one cultivated at the Hong Kong Botanical Gardens and widely planted in Hong Kong starting in 1914! The Hong Kong orchid is a hybrid leguminous tree of the genus Bauhinia. This tree was discovered in around 1880 by a French Catholic Missionary of the Paris Foreign Missions near the ruins of a house by Pok Fu Lam and propagated to the formal botanical gardens in Victoria/Central! I love funicular systems! A favorite funicular system of mine is Haifa's Carmelit which goes up the religiously important Mount Carmel! It's quite the unique system since the oldest underground transit system in the Middle East, as it opened in 1959, is actually a funicular that's only 1.1 miles long! Not to mention it serves the beautiful Baháʼí World Centre. Another funicular that's also underground like the Carmelit is the Tünel line in Istanbul! Inaugurated in January 1875, the Tünel is the second-oldest fully underground urban railway in the world after the London Underground and the oldest in continental Europe as it pre-dated the Budapest Metro by 21 years! French engineer Eugène-Henri Gavand was inspired to create the line after he visited the city as a tourist and noticed how many people struggled walking up and down Yüksek Kaldırım Avenue
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  64. As part of the Japanese influencing Korea before annexing it, Japan assassinated the defiant Korean queen Empress Myeongseong and intervened in the 1894-1895 Donghak Peasant Revolution. In the revolution, Joseon requested the Qing for assistance in stopping the revolution, which the Japanese were angry because Qing did not inform them (which was part of an agreement of the Convention of Tientsin) with and started the First Sino-Japanese War! By the time of her death in 1895, the queen had acquired basically more political power than even her husband the Gwangmu Emperor Gojong. Because of this, she made many enemies, among them were the king's father the Heungseon Daewongun, pro-Japanese ministers of the court, and the Japanese-trained Korean army regiment, the Hullyeondae. Weeks before her death, Japan replaced their emissary to Korea with a new one, Miura Gorō. Miura was a former military man who was inexperienced in diplomacy and was frustrated with dealing with such a powerful empress. Less than a month after his arrival in Korea, Empress Myeongseong ordered the disbanding of the Hullyeondae militia. Miura saw this as a first step in an attempt to remove pro-Japanese members of the government and loyalists to the Heungseon Daewongun, aligning Korea with the Russians to offset Japanese influence. Miura struck a deal with Adachi Kenzō of the newspaper Kanjō Shinpō and the Daewongun to carry out her killing in October of that year. The agents were let into the palace by pro-Japanese Korean guards. Once inside, they beat and threatened the royal family and the occupants of the palace during their search for the queen. Two women suspected of being the queen were killed. When the queen was eventually located, her killer jumped on her chest three times, then finished her off with a sword. The Japanese government arrested the assassins, but were acquitted of all charges, despite the court acknowledging that the defendants had conspired to take her down. Later, after the Japan–Korea Annexation Treaty in 1910, Miura became a privy councilor and focused on eliminating vestiges of the clan-based factionalism from politics
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