Monday, April 13, 2015

Inseparable Link between Animal Slaughter and Anti-Japan Education in S. Korea 動物虐待と反日教育・火病 と不可分の関係

Koreans brutally slaughter animals (dogs, pheasants, pigs, etc. as imaginary Japanese) whenever they express their anger over something deceptively unfair to them. Their acts are classified as “somatization disorder” peculiar to the Korean race. It is often referred to as 火病 pronounced “Hwabyeong” in Korean language, literally meaning “fire angry”.
It is also defined as “a culture-bound syndrome” many of the Koreans show whenever they confront the situations they perceive to be unfair regardless of what realities unequivocally suggest.

Anti-Japan education is compulsory and at the same time mandatory in South Korea, a newly born state whose national policy is to pursue anti-Japan as it was created on August 15, 1948 by U.S. while strongman General Douglas MacArthur was busy driving a wedge into an internationally recognized amicable unity of Japan and Korea under the 1910 Japan-Korea annexation (during 35 years of which both had cordially and harmoniously shared the same destiny) with Syngman Rhee (who later became the 1st chieftain of South Korea) handpicked by U.S. president Truman, thereby creating an anti-Japan stronghold.

Beheaded Japanese Akita Dogs (as their imaginary enemy) displayed at anti-Japan demonstration
Japanese Akita Dogs better known for "Hachi" in an American film, starring Richard Gere



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