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(Recommended)Popular Videos : [Vox] 일본 속 북한 이야기

 

This time, I will review the popular YouTube videos.

These days, even if it's good to watch on YouTube, sometimes people skip it or don't watch it if it's too long.

When you watch Youtube, do you scroll and read the comments first?

To save your busy time, why don't you check out the fun contents, summary, and empathy comments of popular YouTube videos first and watch YouTube?

(Recommended)Popular Videos : [Vox] 일본 속 북한 이야기

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qBfyIQbxXPs

 


 

Playtime Comments : [Vox] 일본 속 북한 이야기

Ja*****:
7:23 "what if there was an osama bin laden memorial school in the US? how would you feel?" I get where these Japanese people are coming from...

Ma********:

8:24 :No parallel in the contemporary world.










































Hitler: ARE YOU CHALLENGING ME?!


Br*****:
11:37 “Ultra-nationalist” and “kindergarten” are two words I never thought I’d hear in the same sentence

Ja*****:
7:40 the menu tags on the wall looks so tempting

Ju******:

5:09 Sauce: Megumi


So***************:
10:55 I think I saw that in Age of Empires II.

Mu******************:

5:11



whut anime is this?


Ja****:
0:12 we all see that seat on the train right?

Fi***************:
12:10 This here says everything

ni******:

6:40 Actually, you cannot tell whether a sudden change in funding occured in 2006 from a graph that only starts in 2006. It might just as well be a continuing downward trend that had been going on for decades. Also, it should probably be put in relation to total school funding: What if spending for all schools decreased, regardless of ethnicity? (e.g. due to the global Great Recession)
(The next segment clearly supports the conclusion - but this illustration alone doesn't support it.)


 


 

Top Comments : [Vox] 일본 속 북한 이야기

Ju****:
It’s like putting a Cuban school backed by the Castros in Florida

Ro************:

I’m sure those kids would be REALLY disappointed if they found out the truth about a country they never lived in but are supposed to praise...


M*:

“Old men have to stand on the streets to protect the children.” Ok but every Japanese elementary school does that.


De*********:

I don't understand how it's even acceptable to teach kids to pledge allegiance to some other country while they and their parents were born and raised in Japan. Teaching them Korean language and culture is great but I don't get why they even have the pictures of the NK leaders in the school, neither why do they have to respect them.


Vi********************:

"how if they build osama bin laden memorial school in the US?"

yo, thats hard


ik***************:
"Preserving" Korean culture while answering all the questions in fluent Japanese.

F:
These guys are deluded. North Korea won't care to nuke em along with the rest of Japan. They're only needed to maintain a presence.

Yu*****:
What's interesting is that they were interviewed in Japanese not korean

Mr*********:
Now this makes me wonder what stops them from moving to their lovely country.

Za*******:

how can you cry in happiness when you know the land on which you are putting foots bleeds with the worst atrocities anyone can imagine....!!!
i don't understand, i hate my country just 'coz the poor class is not taken care by the our govt.


Aa******************:

The most powerful weapon of north korea is brainwashing.


on****:

It's exactly like funding Osama bin Ladin school of worship with state funds. Well said.


Ma***************:
I remember once reading about western nationals spying for soviet union in their homelands because of the ideological reasons in a book by Wiktor Suworow (former GRU agent). According to him, they were called "shiteaters" and widely hated by soviet agents working with them. The reason was, that those people lived they comfortable lives in the west, but helped the soviet regime because of their false image of the living conditions inside the USSR.

Those North Koreans living in Japan have no idea what is happening behind the border. They only know their own imaginative image of it. That's both sad and dangerous.

홍지********:

Just gives us some information and we'll make you guys rich, healthy South Koreans. : )


ga******:
I’d get it more if they were teaching about South Korea... but the North?

OO*:
Poor kids, they don’t know any better.

Pl*************:

I-, there are human rights issues everywhere but... I-. That's not even comparable to North Korea.


d0**:
Celebrating their Korean identity and culture: yes

Worshiping a man/ regime that has harmed millions: NO

Ni*******:
North Koreans: /tests missiles close to Japan borders and kidnaps Japanese citizens/

Japanese: /cuts education funding to North Korean school/

North Koreans: /surprised Pikachu face/

Th************:
"ultra-nationalist kindergarten"

Dr***********:
To fear a disease is imminent....but to fear its cure...:: is ignorance

my**********:
I am not of Korean decent but I am curious what would it be like to interview those north koreans and north korean defectors together in the same room.

Fr**:
Video: shows japan
Weebs: starts showing up out of nowhere

Fy*********:
just imagine if there was a Osama bin laden high school in your city

Pr**********:

It's much easier to love North Korea when you live in Japan.


Bi****:

I wonder what they would say if they ever met North Korean defectors


01*******:

It's hard to decide which side is correct. As a Korean American, I feel for these Japanese Koreans, yet I can't fully support them because they praise an immoral regime. Had no idea this issue existed. I want more videos like this.


Sa***********:

I feel so much sympathy for these people. They were born in a country that didn't want them, and their homeland is a place that has no respect for human rights or freedom. What they understand of NK is a superficial benevolent image that is their benefactor. I have no doubt that if they started living there for a while, they would become disillusioned fast and realised how much better they had it in Japan ... but only if they lived as and pretended to be a Japanese citizen. Else, they'd get prosecuted. This is really heartbreaking.


sp********:
Although allowing a separate North Korean school on Japanese soil may seem like the right thing to do, it is a divisive policy that ensures ongoing separation for generations to come. Consider what happened in Singapore when cultural integration was mandated by a series of public housing initiatives. Generations ago, people of different cultures were required to live together in apartment buildings, requiring multicultural cooperation and at least an element of understanding and respect for neighbors. There was no effort to enforce language bans, though most citizens ended up bilingual. Instead of sliding into chaos, Singapore has risen to be considered the least corrupt and most successful city state in the world. Multiculturalism only works when there is a foundation of mutual respect. Often that begins in schools, so children raised in a homogeneous monoculture start out with a major disadvantage. It should never be about 'us' vs 'them'.

se*****:

Vox, I think this is an excellent documentary explaining the complex and hidden issue of Koreans in Japan. Well done and I appreciate it!

But there is an important fact you missed mention why all this happen.
Do you know why Korean community in Japan received money from the North Korea, not from the South Korea, after Japanese Empire fell. And that was the start of this awkward situation and tragedy for the Koreans in Japan. I was curious about it and people who watched this video might have the same question.

During the Japanese rule of Korean peninsula 1910 - 1945, Japan built most of the industrial complex in the northern Korea where there are plenty of natural resources such as hydro power generation, coal, etc. In addition having industrial and military base close to Chinese border made more sense for the Japan in the goal of expanding the empire into China. On the other hand southern Korea was used as an agricultural basis producing mainly rice.
So when the 2nd World War ended, South Korea was much poorer than North Korea up until 1970, thus no extra resources to share with Koreans living abroad for the struggling government of South Korea.

There is one more thing that I would like to mention. Do you know why Koreans in Japan(North Korean citizens) still support and loyal to North Korea?
It's because they have many family members and relatives who lives in North Korea now. During 1955 -1970, many Koreans in Japan emigrated to North Korea lured by the communist propaganda of free education, medical service, and communist Utopia.

The North Korean community in Japan already knows that North Korea is the worst country in the world run by the horrible dictatorship of Kim's family. But when they stop supporting the regime and stop sending money to their brothers and sisters in North Korea, it will definitely make their families and relatives hard to survive.

Following link is a testimony of two Koreans. One male, born in Japan, emigrated to North Korea, escaped to South Korea via China, and the other female, born and lived as North Korean in Japan, living in South Korea now but her brothers living in North Korea.
Sorry the interview is in Korean.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pMC2G7akiiM


 


 

[Vox] We gathered comments about popular videos and looked at them in summary, including play time, and order of popularity.

It's a good video or channel, but if you're sad because it's too long, please leave a YouTube channel or video link and I'll post it on this blog.

 

 

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