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Tobacco Dreams

Joined: 05 Dec 2006
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Posted: Tue Dec 19, 2006 12:08 pm Post subject: "Invincible" KOREA; "unpardonable" Japan |
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Yesterday afternoon I taught a "teachers' class" (as I do twice a week), in which all my fellow teachers (or for this one hour, students) are Koreans.
My blood boiled as I bit my tongue and refrained, just yesterday, from answering these two talking points:
1) Goguryeo was "invincible." (I wanted to point out that Goguryeo was finally overcome by Shilla in combination with Tang China, but forgot the year, and realized that ARGUING THIS POINT WITH A KOREAN WOULD ALMOST CERTAINLY BE POINTLESS!)
2) Japan's crimes against Korea during the Colonial period of 1910-45 remain "unpardonable"--yes, these are both DIRECT QUOTES from a Korean English teacher who teaches alongside me in what is supposed to be this country's number-three ranked high school . . .
My intended response (in case 2) is that if Japan's crimes are TRULY "unpardonable" then it SERVES NO PURPOSE for the Japanese to apologize, since you (Koreans) will refuse to pardon . . .
(I did in fact argue that Japan HAS apologized, again and again, and DID pay reparations, in Park Chung-Hee's time, but my points were just waved aside with further invocations of the "unpardonable" BS.)
TAKESHIMA? Forget it. Recent developments on the Web have quite conclusively demonstrated that the Korean case for sovereignty is bogus as a kosher pork chop and entirely based on lies, but how can I even start to unfold this issue for . . . well . . . children?
and there's the rub: I half hate myself for looking down on my self-evidently inferior Korean colleagues--but if they CANNOT think (no, it's not genetics, friends--culture, culture), if they've been born and bred in a culture which rejects dispassionate analysis at all costs . . .
Forgive me, Saints above,
because I do NOT, for a thousand different reasons, want to say it or even think it:
but Koreans prove themselves irrational and un-open to argumentation or even IN-FORMATION over and over and OVER again, so predicatbly, that it's enough to drive an expat here utterly insane . . .
I'm at a loss . . .
just venting?
------------------
and JUST to heap idiocy upon idiocy, our "text" for that hour was an opinion piece from the "Korea Times" written, I swear to God, ENTIRELY in Konglish. The "teacher" who'd selected it didn't seem to understand how truly outrageous each and every sentence was. Politeness prevented me from insisting that "it's got to be the Chosun Ilbo English edition if we're going to do local rags . . ."
dear Lord above, I'm SO very much at a loss . . .
Finally (because I just can't resist the trajectory of these thoughts): Ahn Jung Geun--nationalist hero, or incredibly stupid, loser, bleeping a-hole?
I mean, come on . . .
Give up your life so that semi-civilized (generously construed!) Korea can resist (maybe!) being taught to read and write and do maths by its more advanced neighbor . . . ? |
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Hosub
Joined: 17 Apr 2006
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Posted: Tue Dec 19, 2006 2:13 pm Post subject: |
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Well at least you acknowledge that there were crimes in the colonial period, or even in other nations, so that's perfectly fine.
You don't have to talk to Japanese international students that have these points to fling out when speaking of war-time atrocities.
A. Numbers were extremely exaggerated.
B. Western witnesses were liars to diminish the sovereignty of the Japanese government.
C. Japanese witnesses were, liars. They were communists who agreed to lie in court to diminish the sovereignty of the Japanese government.
D. All newspapers that reported on the atrocities were leftist communist lying trash newspapers.
E. Lies, lies, and more lies. Japanese historians say otherwise, look at these books! Me: "Have you read them?" Them: "No."
Even a Chinese-Japanese youth denies the role Japan had in these atrocities. What is this, stockholm syndrome?
Also, to your point about Korea being uncivilized and being unable to read, I take offense at this supposition and would like you to elaborate. Realize you're venting, but that's something that must not go without further explanation.
Perhaps, you, the grand Westerner should show the meager pitiful oriental here what you exactly mean. |
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yesnoyesyesno

Joined: 28 Jan 2006
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Posted: Tue Dec 19, 2006 3:12 pm Post subject: |
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a new low has been reached. congrats |
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mindmetoo
Joined: 02 Feb 2004
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Posted: Tue Dec 19, 2006 3:14 pm Post subject: |
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You should mention to your teacher that their government already pardoned Japan for its crimes back in the '60s in return for interest free development loans. Korean sex slaves have had no luck in Japanese courts because Park Chung Hee forgave 35 years of colonial rule for bag full of Japanese magic beans. It seems to me Korea's own elected rulers have long been allies to Japanese machinations. They should start there. |
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TheUrbanMyth
Joined: 28 Jan 2003 Location: Retired
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Posted: Tue Dec 19, 2006 3:20 pm Post subject: Re: "Invincible" KOREA; "unpardonable" J |
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Tobacco Dreams wrote: |
Yesterday afternoon I taught a "teachers' class" (as I do twice a week), in which all my fellow teachers (or for this one hour, students) are Koreans.
My blood boiled as I bit my tongue and refrained, just yesterday, from answering these two talking points:
1) Goguryeo was "invincible." (I wanted to point out that Goguryeo was finally overcome by Shilla in combination with Tang China, but forgot the year, and realized that ARGUING THIS POINT WITH A KOREAN WOULD ALMOST CERTAINLY BE POINTLESS!)
2) Japan's crimes against Korea during the Colonial period of 1910-45 remain "unpardonable"--yes, these are both DIRECT QUOTES from a Korean English teacher who teaches alongside me in what is supposed to be this country's number-three ranked high school . . .
My intended response (in case 2) is that if Japan's crimes are TRULY "unpardonable" then it SERVES NO PURPOSE for the Japanese to apologize, since you (Koreans) will refuse to pardon . . .
(I did in fact argue that Japan HAS apologized, again and again, and DID pay reparations, in Park Chung-Hee's time, but my points were just waved aside with further invocations of the "unpardonable" BS.)
TAKESHIMA? Forget it. Recent developments on the Web have quite conclusively demonstrated that the Korean case for sovereignty is bogus as a kosher pork chop and entirely based on lies, but how can I even start to unfold this issue for . . . well . . . children?
and there's the rub: I half hate myself for looking down on my self-evidently inferior Korean colleagues--but if they CANNOT think (no, it's not genetics, friends--culture, culture), if they've been born and bred in a culture which rejects dispassionate analysis at all costs . . .
Forgive me, Saints above,
because I do NOT, for a thousand different reasons, want to say it or even think it:
but Koreans prove themselves irrational and un-open to argumentation or even IN-FORMATION over and over and OVER again, so predicatbly, that it's enough to drive an expat here utterly insane . . .
I'm at a loss . . .
just venting?
------------------
and JUST to heap idiocy upon idiocy, our "text" for that hour was an opinion piece from the "Korea Times" written, I swear to God, ENTIRELY in Konglish. The "teacher" who'd selected it didn't seem to understand how truly outrageous each and every sentence was. Politeness prevented me from insisting that "it's got to be the Chosun Ilbo English edition if we're going to do local rags . . ."
dear Lord above, I'm SO very much at a loss . . .
Finally (because I just can't resist the trajectory of these thoughts): Ahn Jung Geun--nationalist hero, or incredibly stupid, loser, bleeping a-hole?
I mean, come on . . .
Give up your life so that semi-civilized (generously construed!) Korea can resist (maybe!) being taught to read and write and do maths by its more advanced neighbor . . . ? |
Why do you (an enlightened civilized expat) care so much? Why does it make your blood boil as you said? What's it to you. Most expats would just brush off that stuff with a chuckle and move on to something else.
It seems you have serious issues if you get so worked up about stuff in ANOTHER COUNTRY's history. And a few nationalists are hardly representative of all of Korea.  |
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doggyji

Joined: 21 Feb 2006 Location: Toronto - Hamilton - Vineland - St. Catherines
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Posted: Tue Dec 19, 2006 4:00 pm Post subject: Re: "Invincible" KOREA; "unpardonable" J |
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Tobacco Dreams wrote: |
Yesterday afternoon I taught a "teachers' class" (as I do twice a week), in which all my fellow teachers (or for this one hour, students) are Koreans.
My blood boiled as I bit my tongue and refrained, just yesterday, from answering these two talking points:
1) Goguryeo was "invincible." (I wanted to point out that Goguryeo was finally overcome by Shilla in combination with Tang China, but forgot the year, and realized that ARGUING THIS POINT WITH A KOREAN WOULD ALMOST CERTAINLY BE POINTLESS!)
2) Japan's crimes against Korea during the Colonial period of 1910-45 remain "unpardonable"--yes, these are both DIRECT QUOTES from a Korean English teacher who teaches alongside me in what is supposed to be this country's number-three ranked high school . . .
My intended response (in case 2) is that if Japan's crimes are TRULY "unpardonable" then it SERVES NO PURPOSE for the Japanese to apologize, since you (Koreans) will refuse to pardon . . .
(I did in fact argue that Japan HAS apologized, again and again, and DID pay reparations, in Park Chung-Hee's time, but my points were just waved aside with further invocations of the "unpardonable" BS.)
TAKESHIMA? Forget it. Recent developments on the Web have quite conclusively demonstrated that the Korean case for sovereignty is bogus as a kosher pork chop and entirely based on lies, but how can I even start to unfold this issue for . . . well . . . children?
and there's the rub: I half hate myself for looking down on my self-evidently inferior Korean colleagues--but if they CANNOT think (no, it's not genetics, friends--culture, culture), if they've been born and bred in a culture which rejects dispassionate analysis at all costs . . .
Forgive me, Saints above,
because I do NOT, for a thousand different reasons, want to say it or even think it:
but Koreans prove themselves irrational and un-open to argumentation or even IN-FORMATION over and over and OVER again, so predicatbly, that it's enough to drive an expat here utterly insane . . .
I'm at a loss . . .
just venting?
------------------
and JUST to heap idiocy upon idiocy, our "text" for that hour was an opinion piece from the "Korea Times" written, I swear to God, ENTIRELY in Konglish. The "teacher" who'd selected it didn't seem to understand how truly outrageous each and every sentence was. Politeness prevented me from insisting that "it's got to be the Chosun Ilbo English edition if we're going to do local rags . . ."
dear Lord above, I'm SO very much at a loss . . .
Finally (because I just can't resist the trajectory of these thoughts): Ahn Jung Geun--nationalist hero, or incredibly stupid, loser, bleeping a-hole?
I mean, come on . . .
Give up your life so that semi-civilized (generously construed!) Korea can resist (maybe!) being taught to read and write and do maths by its more advanced neighbor . . . ? |
I don't get why you are that much upset. Also, you seem to be playing too much with a couple of words. Yeah, Goguryeo was a strong nation and was 'invincible' (for a certain period of time like many other nations in history). What makes your blood boil? And why the title invincible Korea rather than invincible Goguryeo? Maybe another huge fan of the occidentalism site or just a hardcore Japanophile...ha ha just joking.
(Actually I wrote a longer reply but an error occured. ) |
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conan
Joined: 24 Oct 2006
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Posted: Tue Dec 19, 2006 5:09 pm Post subject: |
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ha.welcome to the nightmar eetha tis korean people...........ever wondered why when they go oveseas the only do it in huge packs? and bring their own food............worst race of people in the world |
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mnhnhyouh

Joined: 21 Nov 2006 Location: The Middle Kingdom
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Posted: Tue Dec 19, 2006 5:19 pm Post subject: |
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conan wrote: |
ha.welcome to the nightmar eetha tis korean people...........ever wondered why when they go oveseas the only do it in huge packs? and bring their own food............worst race of people in the world |
Race? Koreans are not a race, they are a subset of a race, which, like most races, is very poorly defined. Sure if you compare the people from the geographical centers of the original distributions of each "race" they are different. But they shade in a continuum as you move between most centers.
If you then moved from these aforementioned centers, and placed new centers where you originally had boundaries, you could then redraw most of the racial boundaries anew with different races....
We have a hard enough time defining species, let alone races.
h |
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Doogie
Joined: 19 Jan 2006 Location: Hwaseong City
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Posted: Tue Dec 19, 2006 6:55 pm Post subject: |
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The thing that saddens me is that all the little kids are taught to hate Japan. I teach elementary school and my students are always going,"I hate Japan", or "Japan is bad and mean." During my time here, I've read all about Korean history of the 20th century. I agree, the Japanese were brutal to the Koreans. It was, however, over 60 years and 2 generations ago. The Japanese military elite of the time are all dead and buried. How can they hold the Japanese people of today responsible for what their fathers or grandfathers did? 30 years from now, will my students also teach their kids to hate Japan? Probably. |
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Hosub
Joined: 17 Apr 2006
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Posted: Tue Dec 19, 2006 7:01 pm Post subject: |
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Doogie wrote: |
The thing that saddens me is that all the little kids are taught to hate Japan. I teach elementary school and my students are always going,"I hate Japan", or "Japan is bad and mean." During my time here, I've read all about Korean history of the 20th century. I agree, the Japanese were brutal to the Koreans. It was, however, over 60 years and 2 generations ago. The Japanese military elite of the time are all dead and buried. How can they hold the Japanese people of today responsible for what their fathers or grandfathers did? 30 years from now, will my students also teach their kids to hate Japan? Probably. |
They don't own up to what their government says. Not that it justifies teaching hate to children. But, the Japanese youth do not acknowledge these events that happened in China and Korea. They are all fictional accounts. Now granted that the sample I have is a very small one, 24 Japanese students, but it is a consensus that all the charges brought by other nations are trumped up and exaggerated or nonexistent.
Edit: They are all international students in the same age range of 20-25. I don't know about older generations or younger ones.
Last edited by Hosub on Tue Dec 19, 2006 7:03 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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yesnoyesyesno

Joined: 28 Jan 2006
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Posted: Tue Dec 19, 2006 7:03 pm Post subject: |
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conan wrote: |
ha.welcome to the nightmar eetha tis korean people...........ever wondered why when they go oveseas the only do it in huge packs? and bring their own food............worst race of people in the world |
yet another low reached! there's no bottom!!! |
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MissSeoul
Joined: 25 Oct 2006 Location: Somewhere in America
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Posted: Tue Dec 19, 2006 7:40 pm Post subject: |
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OP, your job is teaching english and when your contract over, go back to your home country and don't look back korea.
Makes your blood boil ???
Man, you sound very stupid !! |
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RACETRAITOR
Joined: 24 Oct 2005 Location: Seoul, South Korea
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Posted: Tue Dec 19, 2006 7:47 pm Post subject: |
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It sounds like you'd be a lot happier in Japan. Don't let the door hit you in the as$. |
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Niagara
Joined: 24 Jul 2006 Location: Daegu
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Posted: Tue Dec 19, 2006 8:03 pm Post subject: |
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yesnoyesyesno wrote: |
conan wrote: |
ha.welcome to the nightmar eetha tis korean people...........ever wondered why when they go oveseas the only do it in huge packs? and bring their own food............worst race of people in the world |
yet another low reached! there's no bottom!!! |
Hahaha....conan and I have a bit of an argument going...stretching back like two months. He just keeps proving what a dumbass he truly is. Thanks buddy! |
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jajdude
Joined: 18 Jan 2003
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Posted: Tue Dec 19, 2006 8:20 pm Post subject: |
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I also dislike hearing kids so unequivocally state their hatred of Japan and the bad people there. It's just a shame to hear. Carrying hate around is not good for the soul. It can make one feel self-righteous and indignant, which I suppose gives a certain limited energy and unity among the clan, a solidarity of something to be angry about and say, 'woe is me, I been done wrong.' Psychologically it helps avoiding being responsible or accountable for yourself since others, outsiders, are the violators and wrongdoers, not me. It's hard to have a good discussion where emotion rules and minds are already set in stone. |
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