常識知らずで世界知らずの馬鹿な事を言ってる在日がいるんだけど http://academy3.2ch.net/test/read.cgi/english/1092535888/l50 Is anyone else sick of the poor coverage on JTV? Fair play to those Japanese athletes who have worked their socks off and acheived a feat that none of us writing on this board will ever achieve. I don't want to take anything away from them, but the coverage of the games on JTV has been insulting and rude to other countries. The Japanese media completly misundertstand the meaning of the Olympic Games. What about love of sport for its own sake or sport as a vehicle for bringing countries together. All I see in the media here, both TV and printed media is "nippon, gambari nippon, nippon kachimashita". The focus on japan is absolute! It's as if the rest of the world doesn't exist! When Japan wins a medal you can't see the flags of the other countries when the three athletes are on the podium. Typical Japan! Small minded, nationalistic and very naive.
>1 you have the weirdest taste. well, I know it's because YOU have a chinky face. It's obvious that blonde guys are the hottest. What's so good about those ugly guys with flat face and extremely shor legs?
http://www.time.com/time/asia/news/magazine/0,9754,108848,00.html Joji Obara was born in 1952 to an impoverished Korean family in postwar Osaka. His father had been a scrap collector, then a taxi driver who worked his way into owning a fleet of cars and a string of pachinko parlors from which he amassed a fortune. Obara, then known by his Korean name Kim was asked to pen a farewell sentiment in his junior-high class yearbook, he wrote: "Upbringing is more important than family name." Obara's company reportedly became a front for the Sumiyoshi yakuza—branded Japan's second-largest organized crime syndicate by the national police—who kept him afloat by employing him as a straw man for their money-laundering operations.
Korean mothers who gave birth in U.S. held September 14, 2004
LOS ANGELES ― In an apparent crackdown, U.S. authorities have arrested 10 Korean mothers who traveled to the United States to give birth so that their babies would be eligible for American citizenship. The women were held on visa violations, charged with having come to the country for reasons other than stated on their entry permits. U.S. immigration authorities also detained a Korean broker operating here and charged the person, who was not immediately identified, with arranging the trips for the mothers-to-be.
September 16, 2004, 5:21 PM EDT Korean man held for sex trafficking Hyun Goo Kang, 40, was ordered held without bail after his arraigment in Brooklyn federal court on a four count indictment accusing him of obstruction of justice, kidnapping, peonage and sexual abuse.