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"Yoshiaki Yoshida, chairman of
DHC Corporation, known as a Japanese cosmetics company, made hateful remarks about Koreans very repeatedly. He accused South Koreans of "
チョン" on DHC's official Instagram, the word "チョン" is known as a racist hate word Koreans. On April 9, 2021, he said, "Korean race is easy to recognize because of its characteristic name, protruding jaw shape, narrow mouth, and above all, the back of the head is a cliff"."
Okay, seems like a bit of a stretch to have an entire category for something one guy said.
"His hate speech against Koreans is considered similar to the Nazi's anti-Semitism investigation."
The problem is, Japanese media rarely report on the Japanese people's anti-Korean racism. I will replace it with a better source than Ohmy News within two days. (Ohmy News is not a blog.) / DHC broadcasts anti-Korean, and Namuwiki/Korean Wikipedia and other South Korean wikis classify them as anti-Korean companies.
Mureungdowon (
talk) 02:39, 3 March 2023 (UTC)reply
okay, well, until then, I will remove the section in question. you can recreate it when you have better sources.
Tdmurlock (
talk) 02:50, 3 March 2023 (UTC)reply
it's just another referring to same story about a single guy. A fleeting controversy caused by a quote from a single man doesn't deserve a section per WP:UNDUE.
Tdmurlock (
talk) 03:06, 3 March 2023 (UTC)reply
Anti-Korean sentiment in Japan (section) has incorrect translations.
I don't have an account and I don't know the rules or process. Maybe someone better versed can handle this.
The Japanese 嫌韓 does not translate to "hate of South Koreans", it translates to "Anti-Korean Sentiment". This is wikipedia's definition, as found here:
/info/en/?search=Anti-Korean_sentiment
Which links to this:
https://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%AB%8C%E9%9F%93 in the Japanese wiki. Also searching here:
https://jisho.org/search/%E5%AB%8C%E9%9F%93 shows this definition.
At the same time, the kanji 嫌日 has no meaning in Japanese - but it is presented here as meaning "Hate of Japanese" in Japanese.
Strong opposition. Your argument is a deliberate distortion. "反韓" (반한) and "嫌韓" (혐한) are different. In South Korea, "反日" (반일) exists, but "嫌日" (혐일) NOT exists.
Mureungdowon (
talk) 04:26, 29 April 2023 (UTC)reply
In Japan, South Korea's anti-Japanese sentiment is not called "嫌日". Even in Japan, South Korea's anti-Japanese sentiment is called "反日". South Koreans all know that "反日" and "嫌韓" are completely different meanings that cannot be considered the same racism. The former means opposition to Japan and the latter means hating South Korea.
Mureungdowon (
talk) 04:32, 29 April 2023 (UTC)reply
In particular, in the case of Japanese Wikipedia, the fact that there are many
hate speech is also shown in the article "
Japanese Wikipedia" in English Wikipedia. Japanese Wikipedia is so politically right-wing biased that it denies the
Asian Holocaust. Articles related to South Korea in Japanese Wikipedia are very biased and unneutral.
Mureungdowon (
talk) 04:51, 29 April 2023 (UTC)reply
Can someone who is not a Korean nationalist address this?
114.167.177.58 (
talk) 07:37, 29 April 2023 (UTC)reply
You're off the point and criticizing me. South Korean media analyze that South Korea's "反韓" (반한) and Japan's "嫌韓" (혐한) are completely different. In Japan, you can see that anti-American sentiment is not called '嫌美' but called '反美'. There is no article "
嫌日" in Japanese Wikipedia. There are "
反韓" and "
嫌韓" articles individually in Japanese Wikipedia. Do you really think that "反韓" and "嫌日" should be translated equally as "anti-Korean sentiment" and "anti-Japanese sentiment"? Really?
Mureungdowon (
talk) 08:36, 29 April 2023 (UTC)reply
This is proof that "反-" and "嫌-" are also distinguished in Japan. If they both translate into English as "anti-Korean sentiment", they cannot explain the violence stemming from Japanese racist superiority that never exists in South Korea's "anti-Japanese sentiment". "嫌日" (혐일) does not exist in South Korea at all, whereas "嫌中" (혐중, hating Chinese) exists in South Korea, and the term is used to some extent in South Korean media.
Mureungdowon (
talk) 08:36, 29 April 2023 (UTC)reply
If you can read Korean, read this article in the South Korean Wiki. Even Tsushima Island, where South Koreans often go on tours, hate speech and hate crimes are common. I've never seen news that South Koreans committed these hate crimes against Japanese in South Korea.
#Mureungdowon (
talk) 08:52, 29 April 2023 (UTC)reply
It was the Japanese editors who translated "[Manga ]Kenkan[ryu]" (嫌韓) into "Hating Korean", and I only took it from the
Anti-Korean sentiment article. You are a Japanese nationalist, you deny the unique racial hatred of Koreans in Japanese society, which you never do to Japanese in South Korean society.
Mureungdowon (
talk) 08:45, 29 April 2023 (UTC)reply
Contested deletion
This page should not be speedily deleted because... it has relevant information to racism/xenophobia in Japan about Korean throughout history, but I agree that there is some biasness that needs addressing. --
ValenciaThunderbolt (
talk) 16:14, 19 May 2023 (UTC)reply
The request for speedy deletion does not have to do with the content of the article (you are free to recreate this article after it is deleted), but because pretty much all of the article was created by
Mureungdowon in violation of their block. The reason why articles created by sockpuppets are speedily deleted is to discourage ban evasion. :3
F4U (
they/it) 20:35, 19 May 2023 (UTC)reply
@
Piotrus Rough translation of the banners in the first image: 竹島奪還 "Reclaim/recapture
Takeshima" (Korean: Dokdo); 日韓断交 "Break-off/Cease Japan-Korea Relations". The text on both banners is reversed due to the direction of the wind.
The second image is more difficult; I can't zoom in enough to read all the characters. White text at the top reads 韓流追放 "Expel/Banish the Korean wave". Can't make out the red text below it well enough to attempt. The three points with icons next to them, I would say are likely: "Don't watch Korean TV" (with an implication that includes Fuji TV); "Don't buy the sponsors products"; and "Don't (listen to/believe) the lies (ウソ)"?. But I can't clearly make out the kanji in the fine print in each of those points or in the main print of the third point.
Editors like
Hijiri88 or
Nishidani would have a better translation than mine, and I would bow to their wisdom. -
Rotary Enginetalk 23:17, 27 October 2023 (UTC)reply
Related ja wiki article: anti-korean demonstration