見出し画像

South Korea has no Sincerity, which returns evil for good compassion.

2020/11/30
I have been subscribing to the monthly magazine Themis, which is not sold in bookstores but is published by subscription only.
I read an article by Masayuki Takayama.
He is the one and only journalist in the post-war world.
In this month's issue, his article, which arrives today, is an eye-opener and a genuine treatise in its own right.
I am proud to say that I do the work of 120 million people, or 6.5 billion people, and Masayuki Takayama has the same pride and commitment as I do.

South Korea has no Sincerity, which returns evil for good compassion.
Think of the Olympics without the Koreans if you want to impose a grudge
Independence Day to stir up a grudge
The United States gave Korea its independence.
MacArthur went out of his way to make Korea independent on August 15, 1948, when it could have been any day of Japan's surrender.
Everything this man did was insidious, and he never tried to hide his racial prejudice and vengeance.
The prosecution of Class A war criminals on Emperor Showa's birthday and the Crown Prince's birthday's execution are good examples.
He also intended to overlap Korea's Independence Day with Japan's National Memorial Service for War Dead to remind Koreans of Japan's yearly domination, stimulating national resentment and arousing resentment against Japan.
Koreans fell right into the scheme and are still making noise with fresh hatred.
The first Korean to be driven mad with resentment was the first president of Korea, Syngman Rhee.
Before he came back, the peninsula was taken care of by Japan.
We built the roads and railroads, and the sanitary environment they now boast of, such as the K-quarantine, was created by Japan.
However, after Japan's defeat, no one gave them money anymore.
Up to 80% of the nation's wealth was public and private property left by Japan.
He should have worked like the Japanese taught Korea, but in the same way before the war, Syngman Rhee only thought of extorting to Japan.
He came up with the idea of participating in the peace conference about Japan as a member of the Allies and taking money in the name of wartime reparations.
But MacArthur said, "You are neither a victor nor a vanquished nation. You are just a third-world nation," he prodded.
So Rhee decided to extort Japan on his own.
That was the Rhee line setting up of February 8, 1952, which pushed South Korea's territorial waters out of its own accord.
They took Takeshima Island and began to capture Japanese fishing boats that came to fish and detained their crews.
Using this as an excuse to extort, on January 6 of the following year, Rhee visited Japan and demanded Shigeru Yoshida pay a ransom for the fishermen and compensation for colonial rule.
Yoshida chastised Lee for his outrageousness, turned him away, and refused to visit Korea to reply to the president's visit.
Angered, Lee seized 233 fishing boats and detained 2,791 people in total.

It released 474 Korean criminals in Japan.
The detention facilities were so poor that five of the detained fishermen died.
When Yoshida learned of this, he was furious.
He told the South Koreans that the first step toward severing diplomatic relations was to close the Korean legation in Japan, arrest illegal Korean residents in retaliation, and use force to remove Korean vessels that had come to capture Japanese fishing boats.
Seung-man Lee was so horrified that he cried out to the U.S. and hurriedly drafted the Japan-U.S.-Korea Friendship and Security Treaty to force the U.S. to keep Japan in check. 
The Cabinet of Ichiro Hatoyama, who replaced Yoshida, needed to be more competent and always favored friendship in everything.
Believing that it was important to be considerate of the other country, he withdrew Yoshida's hard-line policies.
He accepted the mutual prisoner exchange agreement that South Korea had put forth. 
The Japanese side was forced to make a one-sided concession: release all Japanese fishermen detained by the South Koreans, and the Japanese side would release all smuggled Koreans currently held at the Omura Detention Center, plus 474 Koreans presently serving time for murder and other crimes, with permission to remain in Japan. 
The Japanese side agreed to this and also added the consideration of relinquishing all national and private property left on the peninsula. 

The amount of money at the time was 7 trillion yen.
It was enough money to start an entire country, more than the national budget of Israel at the time of its founding.
Korea became a wealthy nation. 
Having made so much unjustified money, Korea wanted more.
Park Chung-hee, who became president in the 1960s, had a natural talent for exploiting Japanese goodwill. 
He could go from elementary school to teacher's college for free, courtesy of the Japanese.
That was enough for him, but when he was nearly 30 years old, he applied in writing in blood to go to a military academy.
The Japanese are susceptible to such feigned enthusiasm.
They were fooled, and he was admitted to the Manchurian Military Academy. 
After the Korean War, when he became president, he demonstrated his Japanese maneuvering skills to the fullest. At the time, Japan refused to rearm under the U.S.-made Constitution and did not cooperate in the Vietnam War.
Park then proposed deploying 300,000 South Korean troops "on Japan's behalf" to get aid from the U.S. while extracting a price from Japan. 

And welfare and tax-free privileges for the zainichi. 
Reischauer then pushed for a Japan-Korea treaty that forced Japan to pay $500 million for the "Miracle on the Han River," which included everything from steel production to shipbuilding and power plants. 
Japan continued to be considerate to Korea for a long time after that. 
For Roh Tae-woo, Japan gave him Kim Hyon-hui, the Korean jet bomber captured by Japanese embassy staff in Perlen.
She gave a detailed account of the abductions of Megumi and others from North Korea, but Roh Tae-woo was reluctant to give it to Japan, delaying the clarification of the kidnapping for more than ten years. 
Japan has been considerate to the zainichi who have settled in Japan independently, giving them everything from welfare to tax-exempt privileges.
However, although Japan had the right to deport murderers from the country, Roh Tae-woo made a promise to Toshiki Kaifu not to allow murderers living in Japan to be deported either.
Kiichi Miyazawa also thoughtfully co-hosted the World Cup soccer tournament between Japan and Korea.
The tournament was stigmatized as "the world's dirtiest World Cup" because of Korea's corrupt bribing of referees and rough play. 
Taro Aso took pity on South Korea, which was ridiculed by the international community, and recommended Ban Ki-moon for U.N. Secretary-General.
Ban responded to Aso's sympathies by propagandizing at the U.N. to call the Sea of Japan the "East Sea," of all things. 
He also participated in the 2015 China Victory Day Parade in Beijing to express his anti-Japanese attitude.
Junichiro Koizumi gave South Korea the White Country treatment that Japan only gives to clean countries.
The Koreans misused it to resell hydrogen fluoride and other chemicals to North Korea and other terrorist states. 
Blamed for the breach of trust, the Abe administration removed the White Country status and shifted its compassionate policy for the first time.
Koreans, who had always taken compassion for granted, were so shocked that their world was upside down.
Messengers are coming from Korea one after another.
In addition to demanding compensation for the false consignees and that they be restored to the status of a White country, they are also trying to be kind, saying that they will make the Tokyo Olympics a stage for the reunification of the peninsula.
The self-indulgence of the Koreans, with no remorse, is making even the good-natured Japanese weary of the situation.
It is time to think about an Olympics without Koreans.

この記事が気に入ったらサポートをしてみませんか?