Monday, January 20, 2014

Honoring a Murderer

This last Sunday the Chinese Communist bandit government, at the suggestion and with the collaboration of South Korean president Park Geun Hye, opened a memorial hall in the VIP section of the railroad station in the city of Harbin, northwest China (what used to be called Manchuria) to honor Ahn Jung Geun (seen above). The reason he is being honored, and why he is considered a national hero in Korea, is because he assassinated Prince Ito Hirobumi, the first Prime Minister of Japan and one-time Resident General of Japan in Korea. It is outrageous that such a murderer would be honored by two countries, though not surprising given that Red China still honors Chairman Mao who was the biggest mass-murderer in history and it is sickening that South Korea would be so friendly with Red China in this way, coming together over their shared hatred and bigotry against Japan. Korea has Red China to thank for their country being divided, for half of it being a family-owned slave labor camp and for the other half still remaining basically an American protectorate and yet, the South Korean government chooses to hold hands with the blood-stained dictator of China in order to nurse grudges from the first half of the last century against Japan. It is disgusting. There are other individuals in Korean history who were genuine national heroes who could be honored instead rather than heaping praise on a man who did nothing noteworthy in his entire life besides murdering an unarmed and unsuspecting statesman. They should all be ashamed of themselves.

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