朝鮮人店主、黒人少女の頭を後から撃ち抜き処刑、LAで大暴動起きる、燃やされたのは朝鮮人が店主の店ばかり http://www.courttv.com/archive/casefiles/rodneyking/ the killing of Latasha Harlins, a black teenager, by a Korean grocer. The Korean grocer operated a store in the worst part of South Central. The grocer thought she was shoplifting. She wasn't and a fight began and she knocked the grocer down and she was killed with a shot to the back of her head. Now that was a big story to black people in South Central and it was covered in the Los Angeles Times, the trial was, but the story really never had any national impact. There were an awful lot of events that could've been triggers for a riot and that served to remind black people that there wasn't much justice for them. The Latasha Harlins killing was on videotape. It was an in-store videotape and it was grainy and the police seized it so it wasn't shown over and over again. http://hcs.harvard.edu/~yisei/issues/spring_92/ys92_6.html Ice Cube attempts to expose the alleged bigotry of Korean merchants in the ghetto through the same medium: explicit rap. "Black Korea" is his portrayal of the conflict between blacks and Koreans in the ghetto, his iteration of the black voice crying out against Korean misconduct. http://www.coreanism.org/content.cfm?cat=articles&file=grace One of the reasons for the L.A uprisings was because Soon Ja Du, a Korean American liquor store owner, killed Latasha Harlins, an African American girl who Soon Ja Du had thought was going to steal a bottle of orange juice. Even, if Latasha Harlins were stealing a bottle of orange juice, it still doesn't mean the owner of the store has to shoot the person in the back of the head. You can replace a bottle of orange juice, but you can never replace someone's life
15歳の黒人少女を無実なのに万引き呼ばわりして、頭を後から撃ちぬいて処刑して、黒人を怒せ事実上LAの暴動を引き起こしたのが在LA朝鮮人。 有名LAラッパのIce Cubeも歌詞が「朝鮮人は死ねよ、消えろよ、俺達の街から出て行けよ」と言う、 Black Koreaと言う曲を出してる程だからね。 NYTimesに粘着して無理矢理日本海の表記を止めさせ、その結果NYTimesは記者個人メールアドレスの公開を止めたり、 コロンビア大に歴史が捏造されてるとか文句言ったりして、あっちこっちで我物顔して、反感を買って嫌われてるんだよ。
http://english.chosun.com/w21data/html/news/200409/200409190018.html The foundation, along with the U.S. Department of Education, is giving mass support to the “Asia for Educators” website established within the homepage of Columbia University. The site supports and publicizes certain distortions of Korean history, such as justifications of Japan's colonial rule of Korea, to teachers and educations teaching students around the world.
http://hcs.harvard.edu/~yisei/issues/spring_99/feature1.html Earlier this year, poet Amy Uyematsu gave a reading of some of her work as part of the Asian American Studies "This Shame Called Joy." The poem explores the poet’s emotions about the killing of Latasha Harlins, a fifteen-year old Black girl, by Soon Ja Du, a Korean American store owner, over a carton of orange juice in a Los Angeles store: "This lust I cultivate for the ordinary,/the juice of an orange tasting more exquisite/than I ever remember,/cannot be separated from the brutal/death of a child who only wanted/ to drink from the same fruit. " Soon Ja Du claimed that she had shot Latasha Harlins in self-defense after the girl had attacked her, but the store videotape showed that she had shot Latasha in the back of the head as the girl walked away from their brief altercation over some orange juice. The entire incident outraged the Black community in Los Angeles and helped to pave the way for the Los Angeles rebellion of 1992, or what Korean Americans call Sa-I-Gu. After Uyematsu read the poem, it became clear that certain students, in particular, Korean American students, objected to it.