November 3, 2009

How South Koreans feel about Americans

From the NYT;

Today, the mix of envy and loathing of the West, especially of white Americans, is apparent in daily life.

The government and media obsess over each new report from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, to see how the country ranks against other developed economies. A hugely popular television program is “Chit Chat of Beautiful Ladies” — a show where young, attractive, mostly Caucasian women who are fluent in Korean discuss South Korea. Yet, when South Koreans refer to Americans in private conversations, they nearly always attach the same suffix as when they talk about the Japanese and Chinese, their historical masters: “nom,” which means “bastards.” ...

Ms. Hahn said that after the incident in the bus last July, her family was “turned upside down.” Her father and other relatives grilled her as to whether she was dating Mr. Hussain. But when a cousin recently married a German, “all my relatives envied her, as if her marriage was a boon to our family,” she said.

The Foreign Ministry supports an anti-discrimination law, said Kim Se-won, a ministry official. In 2007, the U.N. Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination recommended that South Korea adopt such a law, deploring the widespread use of terms like “pure blood” and “mixed blood.” It urged public education to overcome the notion that South Korea was “ethnically homogenous,” which, it said, “no longer corresponds to the actual situation.”

But a recent forum to discuss proposed legislation against racial discrimination turned into a shouting match when several critics who had networked through the Internet showed up. They charged that such a law would only encourage even more migrant workers to come to South Korea, pushing native workers out of jobs and creating crime-infested slums. They also said it was too difficult to define what was racially or culturally offensive.

“Our ethnic homogeneity is a blessing,” said one of the critics, Lee Sung-bok, a bricklayer who said his job was threatened by migrant workers. “If they keep flooding in, who can guarantee our country won’t be torn apart by ethnic war as in Sri Lanka?”

Generally speaking, rescuing your country from conquest and then garrisoning your troops there for half a century to prevent another war doesn't make you popular. The French loved us when we owed them a favor for the Revolutionary War, but us bailing them out in two 20th Century wars has reversed their feelings. Thus, President De Gaulle kicked American troops out of France in the 1960s, which probably helped turned down the emotional temperature.

My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer

81 comments:

  1. Underachiever11/3/09, 2:19 PM

    Benjamin Franklin said, "He that has once done you a kindness will be more ready to do you another than he whom you yourself have obliged."

    Because of cognitive dissonance, doing someone a favor increases how much you like them.

    ReplyDelete
  2. "Because of cognitive dissonance, doing someone a favor increases how much you like them."

    I don't think it's merely cognitive dissonance. If you feel like you "owe" someone, that person has power over you. If someone "owes" you, you have power over them.

    Think about it this way: whose phone call are you going to return, the guy you owe $1000 or the guy who owes you $1000?

    ReplyDelete
  3. The USA should send its troops home. Let S.K. fend for itself. It has twice the North's population and a GDP 40 times bigger.

    ReplyDelete
  4. "...recently married a German, “all my relatives envied her, as if her marriage was a boon to our family,” she said."

    I don't think they would had said the same thing if she married some guy from africa.

    So, if evolution is what drives human differences. Why would some asians(and there are many asian women & men) like to marry some guy from europe. I mean, his genes are not as adapted for the korean climate, as a native born korean, or even maybe someone from the equator.

    How does this makes sense from an evolutionary point of view? Wouldn't evolution dictate that she would not want someone from europe or anywhere else but her own ethnic stock?

    ReplyDelete
  5. This is somewhat misleading.

    White Americans are very much at the top of the foreigner/non-Korean heirarchy over there. Though the rowdy bar hopping GIs and some of the sketchy American English teachers have a bad rep and this spills over sometimes to the rest of the US expat community.

    Also I believe the polling data shows that a majority of Koreans are favorable to the US and to Americans.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I'm sure others have hit this by now, but how did you pass up the differential treatment in Ms. Hahn's family depending on whether the outbreeder took up with a German or a Pakistani? Those silly Koreans, so damn unpredictable!

    ReplyDelete
  7. I spent 16 months as a GI in Germany and I can assure you that American soldiers are not good ambassadors. It's no wonder the Koreans feel as they do.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Soldiers -- late teens, early twenties macho males whose IQs tend to be sub-average -- tend not to make good cultural ambassadors.

    ReplyDelete
  9. What's going to happen if North Korea collapses? Then South Korea will really be in for a deluge of migrant workers-with no ethnic homogeneity arguments to protect them

    ReplyDelete
  10. Soldiers -- late teens, early twenties macho males whose IQs tend to be sub-average -- tend not to make good cultural ambassadors.

    Ahh, some good condescension. While I don't disagree that youg folks in general don't always make great ambassadors and many of the GIs over there are macho (many of the toops are combat arms: infantry, armor, cannon cockers, etc.), they're definitely not sub-average IQ.

    First, the combat arms (except gun bunnies who serve the guns, not the observers/fire direction guys) tend to get the brighter lot. And GIs are most likely above-average compared to the rest of the populace, as the military is one institution that still tests IQ for admittance.

    Put a like number of a similar age cohort of civvies in general- or even just college students- over there with money to burn and high pressure jobs, and you'd probably see a whole lot worse.

    ReplyDelete
  11. huh. i heard the exact same things about south korea in 2006 from some guy living there. he said on the television they put up numbers comparing south korea to other nations and then they get upset and throw a fit that south korea is not the best, blaming it on everything and everybody else.

    must be where they get their emotional ammunition for all their well organized, frequently staged riots.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Steve, you occasionally make these posts as part of your argument that foreigners hate us, and that therefore we should withdraw our defense commitments. This is a bit childish, as though we should expect every other country to react to Americans or to our government with the same bonhomie one might imagine a GI would have received in an English pub in 1945. I don't see anything in the article that confirms any sense that Koreans "hate" Americans, other than an unsupported allegation that Koreans refer to us disparagingly.

    1) South Koreans are aligned with us, and if nothing else the success of South Korea is an effective argument for many reasons right-wingers ought to support, as they are religous Christians, prosperous through free enterprise, and have immunity to multiculturalism. Furthermore, they did prosper without the premature introduction of democracy.

    2) South Korea is in one of the most strategically important parts of the world -- you might argue about Afghanistan, but maybe you have heard of Taiwan, China, North Korea or Japan? Haven't events in these countries had a major influence in the course of the events of the last century? Don't they maintain the potential to influence the course of the next one?

    3) Even if the opinion of rank-and-file Koreans was anti-American, which I don't see any evidence for, it's the opinions of the elites which matter. Does American public opinion have anything to do with our foreign policy?

    4) Of course, there will be some resentment against the power and wealth of the United States. Don't confuse envy with opposition.

    5) Has the South Korean state taken actions that are inimical to the United States? I don't think so.

    ReplyDelete
  13. "So, if evolution is what drives human differences. Why would some asians(and there are many asian women & men) like to marry some guy from europe. I mean, his genes are not as adapted for the korean climate, as a native born korean, or even maybe someone from the equator."

    Well, what Evolution forgot to account for was the invention of modern technology in the form of being able to travel vast distances. Just kidding.

    Evolution doesn't "plan things out" ahead of time. Evolution only makes use of that which works. And that which does not, those individuals die off. So if modern travel allows Korean women to meet Euro men and breed, the offspring will be what they are and will live or will die. If they live, they'll likely breed. If they die, they die.
    Since Korean women, for most of humanity's existence, had no access to Euro men, whether or not the offspring of such union would more or less fit, more likely to live or die, was never an issue that evolution has operated on.

    ReplyDelete
  14. I tend to agree with SGOTI. 20-year old soldiers may be bad for America's image, but 20-yo ESL teachers are worse. (20-yo i-banksters would be a total PR disaster, but fortunately most of them are in Hong Kong or Tokyo, not Seoul).

    Any kid will do something royally stupid once or twice, especially when he's far from home. But the ESL teachers don't have superior officers to chew them out and make them scrub latrines with a toothbrush.

    The famously-polite Japanese are so fed up with stupid American civilians holding Halloween parties on subway trains that they went out and held a protest about it:
    http://www.japanprobe.com/2009/11/01/anti-foreign-protests-in-tokyo-on-halloween-night/

    ReplyDelete
  15. nancy pelosi11/3/09, 5:02 PM

    REAL AMERICANS DON'T GIVE A CRAP WHAT THE REST OF THE WORLD THINKS OF THEM.

    they never have and never will.

    bravo i say.

    it's only the continent hopping trans-nationalists who are obsessed with (mostly elite) opinion in other countries. ny times readers might give a damn about a s. korean suffix denoting bastard status for certain foreigners.

    anyway this ponzi economy is going to crash and OOPSY DAISY those troups on the 38th parallel are going to be returning stateside soon.

    by the way steve why don't you revisit that sick WORLD POLICE movie by the south park geniuses from 2002. nice little time capsule there encapsulizing our national insanity.

    ReplyDelete
  16. douchbag:
    Why would some asians(and there are many asian women & men) like to marry some guy from europe. I mean, his genes are not as adapted for the korean climate, as a native born korean, or even maybe someone from the equator.

    I hope you're not confusing Korea (temperate central-europe-type climate) with Vietnam (tropical).

    ReplyDelete
  17. France taking a back seat at NATO and asking US forces to leave France has a lot more to do with the fallout from the Suez operation than it does about French disquiet about their debt to the US.

    Britain & France decided to slap down an uppity Arab state - Egypt - and the US told them to desist. One of those events where certain parties are allowed to conduct themselves in one way and others are held to a different standard.

    Its often forgotten that Israel also took part in the attack on Egypt - the last time the unsinkable aircraft carrier was used in support of a western operation. Something America's greatest ally has never done for the US.

    Not surprisingly the French werent happy and the rift that followed has a lot do with that. Otoh the Brits decided to suck it up.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Douchbag wrote
    "So, if evolution is what drives human differences. Why would some asians(and there are many asian women & men) like to marry some guy from europe. I mean, his genes are not as adapted for the korean climate, as a native born korean, or even maybe someone from the equator."

    Obviously you've never been to South Korea. Seoul in winter is on average much colder than London. So by your theory, someone from Europe would be better adapted to Korea than someone from India or Africa.

    ReplyDelete
  19. Generally speaking, rescuing your country from conquest and then garrisoning your troops there for half a century to prevent another war doesn't make you popular.

    Well, don't forget those big news stories that came out a year or so ago, revealing that during the first few weeks of the Korean War, American troops and S.K. forces under their overall command had massacred approximately 100,000 Korean civilians, mostly refugees or families "suspected" of having Red sympathies. These harsh secrets had been kept from the public eye for an entire half-century, but were apparently widely known or believed among lots of ordinary Koreans.

    I'm no great expert on WWII, but I don't think the Nazis massacred anything like 100,000 total civilians in Western Europe during all their years of military occupation.

    Presumably, the Nazis were therefore pretty peeved at all the nasty things the Western Europeans said about them after Liberation...

    ReplyDelete
  20. Professor Mumbo11/3/09, 6:32 PM

    "In 2007, the U.N. Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination recommended that South Korea adopt such a law, deploring the widespread use of terms like 'pure blood' and 'mixed blood'."

    I remember when the U.N. made that same recommendation to polar bears.

    ReplyDelete
  21. The Koreans can think whatever they want about us over there in Korea.

    The most important thing is that they remain over there in Korea and do not immigrate over here to North America.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Yet, when South Koreans refer to Americans in private conversations, they nearly always attach the same suffix as when they talk about the Japanese and Chinese, their historical masters: “nom,” which means “bastards.”

    We have a bigger problem closer to home, with "Americans" in positions of power who openly refer to us as "racists", by which they mean "subhuman".

    ReplyDelete
  23. "RKU said...

    I'm no great expert on WWII,...."

    Apparently.

    ".....but I don't think the Nazis massacred anything like 100,000 total civilians in Western Europe during all their years of military occupation."

    They easily killed that many. And why are you exluding eastern, central, and southern Europe?

    ReplyDelete
  24. Harry Baldwin11/3/09, 9:26 PM

    “Our ethnic homogeneity is a blessing,” said one of the critics, Lee Sung-bok, a bricklayer who said his job was threatened by migrant workers.

    Ah, thankfully we are blessed with the really high-minded Koreans like Harold Koh, whose parents immigrated here to escape the turmoil of their homeland. As a Yale law professor, Harold worked tirelessly to secure refugee status for every last Haitian who wanted to float over here in an inner tube or leaky fishing boat. Harold Koh, now an Obama legal advisor.

    ReplyDelete
  25. None of this matters - South Korea is already effectively extinct:

    List of countries and territories by fertility rate
    en.wikipedia.org

    South Korea, UN, 2000-2005: 1.24
    South Korea, UN, 2005-2010: 1.21

    South Korea, CIA, 2000: 1.72
    South Korea, CIA, 2008: 1.20

    ReplyDelete
  26. The most important thing is that they remain over there in Korea and do not immigrate over here to North America.

    I can't claim to know tons of Koreans, but ALL of the dozen or so I've known since childhood (i.e., Koreans who've been raised in the US) have married whites - even the Korean guys. There probably isn't a single other non-white ethnic group nearly as likely to assimilate into US culture as the Koreans. And, ahem, they do it better than certain white ethnic groups, too.

    As for Koreans in Korea? They're living in one of the world's most densely populated countries. You'd expect them to go a little crazy.

    None of this matters - South Korea is already effectively extinct

    It also has a population density of 1,260 people per square mile, nearly twice as high as Great Britain. The difference? South Korea's not allowing itself to be overrun by foreigners. SO I don't think the place is going to be running out of Koreans anytime this millenium.

    ReplyDelete
  27. Middletown Girl11/3/09, 10:27 PM

    I suppose South Korea is facing the same issues that Western nations faced decades ago. Difference is Western nations confronted them from a position of strength and guilt. They were the richest/most powerful countries in the world--and confident and conscientious enough to come to terms with their 'historical crimes'. South Korea is now a developed country but has always been a politically weak country--occupied by Japan, and then wedded to great powers like USSR, Red China, or the USA. So, Koreans may still feel that they are a colonized people. (Japanese feel this way too in some way as though Japan had been under Western imperialist pressure since Matthew Perry's ships arrived.) Also, Koreans are less likely to feel guilt as they've never conquered and/or enslaved other peoples, nor had a sizable enough minority in their midst--like blacks in the US or Jews in Poland. Even when they are nasty and vicious, Koreans may see everything through prism of victimhood and powerlessness. In this sense, they share something with blacks and Jews whovealways insistdc on their victimhood and suffering--even when blacks burn down cities or even when Jews raze Palestinian homes. But, the difference between Koreans and Jews/blacks is that Korean problems are limited to Korea whereas black and Jewish politics and agenda have global import and repercussions.

    On the other hand, it could well be that Korea might follow in the footsteps of the West. The article suggests a generational conflict between older people who knew and grew up in a homogeneous Korea and a younger generation hooked to globalism via internet and pop music. Of course, there could be conflicts among young people too: the prosperous globe-trotting liberal/intellectual/yuppie types and those who've fallen through the cracks and feel resentful about having to compete with 'dirty' foreigners.

    I'll bet Koreans are like Chinese and Indians in sending many of their students to the West. This means that the educated elite in South Korea will come under greater influence of 'multi-culturalism' and 'progressive' ideas. They may be more eager to please and win respect from foreigners than be sensitive to the passions and prejudices of their own people. Since East Asians are followers than innovators, their social policies may well follow the Western model for both good and ill. A more tolerant and open-minded society is certainly better, but when the DIVERSITY CULT takes over, big trouble ahead.

    The article suggests that Koreans aren't necessarily against race-mixing but have mixed feelings about it. They feel superior to some races, inferior to others. They feel resentful toward the 'superior', contemptuous toward the 'inferior'.
    Or, maybe the main issue isn't racial superiority/inferiority but racial comfort. Perhaps for many insecure or anxious Korean people, their Korean identity is all they have--their country isn't just a nation-state but more like a big family living in one big house in which foreigners can only be bothersome guests if they stick around for too long. Since Korean society/culture is all they know, many Koreans could be annoyed and threatened by having to deal with funny, strange, and/or weird foreigners(who don't know the rules inculcated in all Koreans from childhood). In the non-individualist East, one can(or must) lose oneself in the larger culture/crowd. But, when a unified and common culture--as in Korea or Japan--dissipates, one is surrounded by cultural strangers and forced to assert oneself individually--like people in NY or LA. Problem is East Asians were not raised to think or act that way. Some cultures are more comfortable with individuality; others are not. For a people accustomed to a stricter sense of social place, decorum, and hierarchy, the prospect of a society where people must be individuals judged by his wits and personality may be distressing. Sheep don't want to forced to behave like wolves. In MERRY X-MAS MR LAWRENCE, Tom Conti says Japanese went crazy because they are an 'anxious people'. Maybe, Koreans too.

    ReplyDelete
  28. Anon:"None of this matters - South Korea is already effectively extinct"

    Yes, that is what happens to every single nation which becomes overurbanized and overpopulated. Almost half of Koreans live in Seoul or its metro area...

    Also, it is worth noting that almost half of Koreans profess no religion.

    ReplyDelete
  29. Mark writes: "You'd expect them [South Koreans] to go a little crazy."

    Well, when South Koreans go crazy, they really go crazy. I mean they do not muck around with half measures. This South Korean policeman, in 1982, had an argument with his live-in girlfriend, so, failing to score an outright victory in that conflict, he went out and exterminated 56 people:

    http://www.nytimes.com/1982/04/29/world/around-the-world-south-korean-shootings-lead-minister-to-resign.html

    ReplyDelete
  30. GM and Chrysler go bankrupt, while Hyundai thrives, as broke U.S. taxpayers pick up the tab for the defense of rich South Korea from impoverished North Korea. Need another definition of insanity?

    ReplyDelete
  31. @Mark "South Korea's not allowing itself to be overrun by foreigners."

    http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2009/08/06/2009080600243.html

    1.1 million (~2.2% of the population) as of August. Maybe not "overrun" yet, but within spitting distance of some of some Western European destinations like Finland. And more importantly, the number of foreigners is growing fast: doubled in three years.

    Like James said, when Koreans decide to do something crazy, they don't take half measures. And it looks like the South Koreans (or at least their elites) have gone crazy for multiculturalism.

    ReplyDelete
  32. The NYT article is very sensationalized, inaccurate and misleading on many fronts. The piece has been written with a leftist agenda in mind, cherry-picking negative anecdotal incidents to lend credence to its liberal ideology.

    - The historical depiction of Korea as a shrimp squeezed between two giants informing its national psychology: fiction. Japan was always considered a 3rd world power prior to its industrialization. What informs its national psychology is its recent industrialization, national division, pawn of power-politics and legacy of colonization.

    - Repeated invasions by "bigger neighbors": false, and a gross exaggeration. The only bigger power has always been China. Aside from the occasional menace from northern barbarians and pesky Japanese pirates, the region was characterized by relative peace.

    - Korean racism as a function of skin-color: false. Koreans are "classists", not racists in the Western sense.

    - Korean hostility towards foreigners: exaggeration.

    - Koreans calling everyone "bastards": gross mistranslation. "Nom" means "person" or "boy". The level of hostility expressed through it depends on the speaker's tone. Nom is not considered a curse word.

    ReplyDelete
  33. Middletown Girl11/4/09, 12:39 AM

    "Nom is not considered a curse word."

    Can I go to Korea and say "Hey Nom, how are you doing?"

    NYT says it means 'bastard', you say it means a 'person'.
    Both of you can't be right.

    Or, is it a word that can have both positive and negative connotations... like 'dude'?

    Notice one can say "hey dude" in both a friendly and hostile manner, as in 'hey dude, get out of my way' or 'hey dude, what's happening?'

    ReplyDelete
  34. - Koreans calling everyone "bastards": gross mistranslation. "Nom" means "person" or "boy". The level of hostility expressed through it depends on the speaker's tone. Nom is not considered a curse word.

    Yeah, "nom" is very vague and hard to translate. It's not exclusively negative. It can mean something like "guy" and can be used in a positive sense as well. "Person," "boy," "guy," "dude," etc., are all possible translations of the word.

    ReplyDelete
  35. Middletown Girl11/4/09, 12:56 AM

    I have a sneaking suspicion that NYT is just sharpening their ideological knife on S. Korea as a preparation for a bigger assault on China. Many liberal Jews may see China as South Korea on steroids. China is also largely homogeneous, an economic giant growing bigger by the day, nationalistic, 'xenophogic', chauvinistic, male-dominated(despite decades of communist orthodoxy), and a challenge to the liberal Jewish global order. Not only is China much bigger than South Korea, it is politically independent. However South Koreans may feel about Americans, they must know that without US presence in the region as an impartial and generally fair-minded peace-keeper, South Korea will be sandwiched by a non-democratic China with no respect for human rights and a potentially re-militarized Japan which still hasn't face up to its imperialist and war-time deeds. One could argue that the 20th century was an anomaly in Korea's history. Traditionally, for 1000s of yrs, it had been a tributary state of China--albeit more harmonious in this role than Vietnam, which was often at war with China. This changed in the 20th century, with Japan becoming the major foreign power and presence for Koreans in the first half of the century. In the second half of the century, the northern part of Korea became close to USSR while the southern part became close to the US.
    One could argue that Koreans--at least those in the South--never achieved so much economically, socially, and politically(even a working democracy)as under the protection and guidance of the USA in this period. If Chinese power grows and grows and if US withdraws from its 'empire', Korea will return to its traditional role as a tributary state of China.

    And, if Chinese economy keeps developing, Korean companies--auto, cell phones, electronics, computer parts, etc--won't be able to stay ahead of the game. Korean economy will be subsumed into the Chinese, and Koreans will have to play ball with the Chinese to survive. If Japan will have decisive technological and scientific edge over the Chinese for the forseeable future, it's possible that China will overtake Korean technological edge in 10-20 yrs.

    So, critiquing the problems of Korea could really be a roundabout way of bringing attention to the social ills of and ideological problems posed by China. If South Korea, a nation of 45 million is such an unpleasant place despite the wealth it has accumulated, think of the nasty horrors of BIG CHINA whose main ambition is not only to become a giant economic version of Korea, Taiwan, or Singapore but even to become a superpower.

    ReplyDelete
  36. "Nom" is an informal word. Used negatively it could something like "jerk" or "bastard." "Bastard" would probably be the most severe use of the word. "Nom" isn't extreme enough to mean, say, "f*cker" or something.

    Used neutrally or positively it can mean "guy," "dude," "fellow," "chap," "person," "boy," etc.

    The word itself doesn't really have much meaning or content. If one had to narrow it down and be really specific about it, one would just say that it's an informal word meaning "person" that's generally accompanied by an adjective and spoken in a certain tone that conveys that actual meaning.

    ReplyDelete
  37. Middletown Girl,

    Not only is the "nom" translation incorrect, the allegation that Koreans "nearly always" call foreigners "nom" in private is an unfounded presumption by the author.

    I contend that it is categorically false.

    Moreover, if you are familiar with Koreans, you would know that they are more likely to call you "bastard" in front of your face than behind your back.

    ReplyDelete
  38. And, if Chinese economy keeps developing, Korean companies--auto, cell phones, electronics, computer parts, etc--won't be able to stay ahead of the game. Korean economy will be subsumed into the Chinese, and Koreans will have to play ball with the Chinese to survive. If Japan will have decisive technological and scientific edge over the Chinese for the forseeable future, it's possible that China will overtake Korean technological edge in 10-20 yrs.

    For what it's worth, Goldman Sachs recently put out a report arguing that a United Korea (South Korea and North Korea united) could surpass Germany or Japan economically in the next 30-40 years.

    Full PDF of the Goldman Sachs report can be found here.

    ReplyDelete
  39. Yeah, Frenchies are still smarting from the hiding the Wehrmacht gave them in WWII. But then that was payback for WWI which the Germans felt they should have won had the desperate Brits and Frogs not called in the US cavalry.

    ReplyDelete
  40. Reply to Anon;

    "South Korea is one of the most strategically important countries in the world"...

    S.K. is of no strategic importance to America at all.

    ReplyDelete
  41. For whatever it's worth, a Korean student once commented in my class that young Koreans are told if they produce offspring with non-Koreans, their children are more likely to be retarded and/or physically deformed.

    ReplyDelete
  42. ""Nom" is an informal word. Used negatively it could something like "jerk" or "bastard." "Bastard" would probably be the most severe use of the word. "Nom" isn't extreme enough to mean, say, "f*cker" or something.
    Used neutrally or positively it can mean "guy," "dude," "fellow," "chap," "person," "boy," etc...."

    It's probably a little like "Sport."

    ReplyDelete
  43. In recent years, there seems a trend to report all the negative feelings of Koreans toward Americans. Two things I can attest to in the past 8 years (within this window of negativism):
    1-Korean war vets honored by Korean immigrants at a Korean culture celebration.
    2-Chants of Korea-USA when the Korean soccer team guaranteed the advance of the US soccer team during the world cup held in Asia 8 years ago.
    What is the chance of any other nation on earth chanting the name of another during their advance in a sporting event?

    ReplyDelete
  44. My brother was an MP in Korea and has a wealth of anecdotes about the place. He told me that the Koreans have a well-earned reputation for "going postal" and that there were numerous instances of Korean soldiers running amuck with their M-16s while he was over there. My favorite story though was the one told to him by an MP captain. Seems this captain was driving thru Seoul with a Korean officer in a brand-new Jeep (this was the 70s)when a motorbike zoomed out of an alley and they struck it full on (Koreans often dashed in front of American military vehicles in hopes of getting an injury settlement). The driver of the bike sailed over the Jeep and ended up unconscious on the street. The Korean officer stopped the Jeep, walked to the front to survey the damage, uttered a Korean obscenity and threw the motorbike up on the sidewalk. He then walked to the rear of the Jeep, kicked the unconscious motorbike driver and then dragged him up on the sidewalk. After they resumed their journey, the American asked him if they ought to call an ambulance. The Korean officer replied: "all taken care of."

    ReplyDelete
  45. Leif the Unlucky11/4/09, 8:49 AM

    SGOTI wrote: Put a like number of a similar age cohort of civvies in general- or even just college students- over there with money to burn and high pressure jobs, and you'd probably see a whole lot worse.

    That already exists. The Foreign English Teachers (ESL teachers). Several tens of thousands of Westerners teach English in South Korea. It is mostly white males. The average age is probably about the same as the U.S. soldiers there.

    Most Americans are basically unaware of the ESL industry in Korea, and they assume that the only way Koreans have any exposure to Americans is through the U.S. military presence. In fact, the downsized USFK presence is much less significant than the ESL presence these past 15 years. The 25,000 soldiers are on-base most of the time, are highly concentrated in certain areas, and are probably a bit fewer in number than the English Teachers now. The ESLers are ubiquitous, in every city and neighborhood, and have daily interaction with Korean children.

    I can tell you from personal experience as a veteran of Korean ESL that there is a sizeable subsection of utter clowns among the white-male ESL teachers. Most who went there to teach were decent people, but enough are such cringeworthy buffoons that it'd make any honest man quite ashamed to be white and in Korea, as we are going to be associated with such people.

    The Korean ESL industry is corrupt, incompetent, crooked, and ugly inside and out, and rakes in billions of dollars. A certain number of apathetic, beer-swilling, lazy, inept, predatory skirt-chasing, white losers just thrive in the system, though. A big part of Korean anti-Americanism can be directly attributed to that type of ESL-'teacher', especially considering the latter's ubiquity. USFKers are mostly out of sight, out of mind; ESLers are everywhere.

    The Korean press bears this idea out. In online forums for the ESL teachers in Korea, those who know Korean occasionally post translations of the Korean-language press. Let me tell you, reading those translations gives a new double-entendre-ish meaning to the phrase "Yellow Journalism". Every few days, the major dailies in Seoul manage to scoop up more shocking news about what a plague on mankind these English teachers are, printing baseless rumors and accusations, blanket statements, unbelievable-testimonials, and basically group-slander.

    If one goes by the Korean press, the average white man is a potential-child-molesting, AIDS-infected, needle-drug-using, potential-rapist, is someone who is in a constant sexual frenzy for Yellow women -- he tricks them into bed, leaving them with multiple STDs then is never seen again, is someone who cannot go 8 hours without getting drunk and is unable to show up to work both sober and non-hungover, who is a petty criminal, who is vulgar and disgusting in his personal habits, who is stupid and lazy, and so on.

    ReplyDelete
  46. Leif the Unlucky11/4/09, 8:52 AM

    None of this matters - South Korea is already effectively extinct:
    South Korea, UN, 2005-2010: 1.21


    Effectively extinct?? That is asinine. Anyone with any cursory knowledge of the country would know that anything above those kinds of TFRs would be a disaster for quality-of-life in Korea. It is small (S.Korea is the size of Indiana), mostly mountainous as is, and [united Korea's] 75million people are way too many for its small available land area. It would be a much more pleasant place to be with something like 25million people total. A few decades of anemic TFRs, eventually recovering to replacement level, would be a boon for the country.


    The most important thing is that they remain over there in Korea and do not immigrate over here to North America.

    Too late. One million are already in Southern California and another million are scattered around the rest of the country.

    ReplyDelete
  47. The west Germans seem to me to be the most anti-American of Europeans - because of the US garrisons and Cold War defense against Communism, not because you helped flatten their country in WW2.

    I think in S Korea's case, if you had saved them then left they would not be so hostile. It does seem to be the garrisons that inspire hatred.

    ReplyDelete
  48. Leif the Unlucky11/4/09, 9:20 AM

    How to explain Korean anti-Americanism?

    I don't think military considerations play too big of a role. But, then, what?

    First, let me preface by saying that the Korean mind is incredibly difficult for us to understand, and any Westerner who claims to understand it fully is probably lying. Many of the white-male miscegenationers who have taken Korean wives, one might think they would learn to understand these people. But according to what I've heard repeatedly from them: they, likewise, have no clue as to what Koreans are ever thinking, even years in. This is something I hear again and again.

    As someone who has a good deal of non-military experience in the country, I would hazard to guess that Korean anti-Americanism is a number of things: 1) Exaggerated in the foreign press (e.g., NYT), 2) Stemming from anger at sexual-colonialism (white men appear to be "taking" yellow women) [this is a country with a selective-abortion-induced female-shortage as is], 3) Stemming from Korea's bizarre Confucian/feudal culture in which foreigners are basically nonpersons. a series of things inspire bitterness: These Foreigners (whites), who don't even register on the social scale, have vast cultural-power over Koreans today. [English is very very hip; the "double-eyelid", as they call it, is too...and the preponderance of "aesthetic clinics"/plastic-surgeons proves it]. Worse, the bearers of this superior-culture are often seen as low quality people (as in the small number of loser/predatory ESL-teachers), 4) Koreans themselves are -- under the submissive/taciturn/Confucian facade -- fairly unpleasant people and so will complain about anything that is there to complain about. [This is aggravated by the frenetic, workaholic pace of life in that country these days. They are a people mentally and socially mired in the patheticness of feudalist-Confucianism (hence the status-obsession regarding silly international rankings and so on) but amid a hypercapitalist economic background. The truly bizarre and generally negative results of this union magnify any underlying unpleasantness many fold.]

    One thing that is DEFINITELY not the case, in my experience, is the idea that some foreign observers might have that panKorean nationalism animates South-Koreans. Before going to live in the country, I too thought that there was a panKorean identity that animated the anti-American politics. It's only rational to think there is one, in the way there was in 1989-Germany ("Wir Sind Ein Volk"). And it's only rational to think that anti-Americanism would stem from panKorean nationalism: "The American imperialists are keeping us split apart". Strangely, this "just ain't so", as Mr.Twain might say.

    Many Koreans will tell you they absolutely oppose unification. I had a class of very-advanced 9th grade students, all nearly-fluent in English: I asked them to write an essay based on this prompt: "If you could wave a magic wand and reunify North and South Korea today, would you do it?" To my consternation, 5 of the 6 said "No" and proceeded to attack and mock North Koreans in the way Poles mock Germans and vice-versa, said it would be an economic disaster to assimilate them, and so on. These were kids born in the early to mid 1990s voicing these sentiments.

    ReplyDelete
  49. In British (and other) English the term wanker is, as it stands, a term of abuse. In reality it depends who is saying it to whom and in what tone of voice.

    So, in a complicated traffic situation during a profound disagreement over the rules of the road I might find myself shouting "Wanker!" at another driver.

    Otoh I might ring up a dear friend to whom I have not spoken to for some time and say "Alright wanker, how are you mate?"

    ReplyDelete
  50. South Koreans, like much of the West, are in denial.

    They live on the border of a dangerous, unstable, nuclear-armed state run by a megalomaniac with poor judgment.

    The only thing keeping them from being the slaves, of Kim Jong-Il, is American forces, South Korea being unable and unwilling to defend themselves.

    As a practical matter, almost ALL of the flat panel displays, LCD/LED components, and a great deal of other electronic components are manufactured in South Korea. As childishly tempting as it may to simply abandon South Korea to its fate (subjugation by Kim and being essentially starving slaves), the short-term disruption in global supply chains would tip the world into a global recession and likely turn our predicted ten year "jobless recovery" into a twenty year nightmare of 35% unemployment. [Yes I agree that national industrial policy ought to encourage local manufacturing of electronic components and other good things, but it takes years to effect and in the meantime supply shocks like Oil or even LCD/LED components can crash entire industries or economies.]

    ReplyDelete
  51. > GIs are most likely above-average compared to the rest of the populace, as the military is one institution that still tests IQ for admittance. <

    Here. All gun bunnies?

    I wonder who periodically rapes all those Japanese girls...
    *******************************
    You don't reckon that in a population of a million plus (all active futy services) there will be some bad apples?

    I'll see your snark and raise you:

    "The latest Army statistics show a stunning 75 percent of military-age youth are ineligible to join the military because they are overweight, can't pass entrance exams, have dropped out of high school or had run-ins with the law."

    http://www.sphere.com/2009/11/03/70-percent-of-young-americans-are-unfit-for-military-duty/?icid=main|htmlws-main-n|dl1|link3|http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sphere.com%2F2009%2F11%2F03%2F70-percent-of-young-americans-are-unfit-for-military-duty%2F

    Fat, drunk and stupid is no way to go through life, son.

    ReplyDelete
  52. Pissed Off Chinaman11/4/09, 2:19 PM

    Whiskey,

    You once again show your complete ignorance of international issues. South Korea is not doomed at the approach of North Korean forces since the South has:

    1) A much larger economy
    2) Twice the population
    3) An Army of 600,000 soldiers and a larger reserve of civilians with received military training (military service in the ROK is mandatory for obvious reason)

    The importance of the American alliance is that the US will provide air support/superiority in any clash between the two sides. There are only 33,000 American ground troops on the Korean Peninsula. The main purpose of these soldiers is to serve as a trip wire guarantee to activate the American alliance.

    What ever the populace wants, no government in Seoul wants to get rid of these troops and withdrawing them may end up triggering a war unintentionally because it may signal that the US is less committed to the alliance. This also might be the catalyst for the South Koreans to develop nukes. I personally think putting our troops at risk like this is completely stupid and immoral.

    In any future conflict with the Norks, the ROK will prevail, the issue is the cost both economically and in human lives since Seoul is in the range of North Korean artillery (which while obsolete and inaccurate can still inflict tremendous civilian casualties.)

    Oh and one last thing. The PRC is a de facto ROK ally. If the KPA does attack the South, look for the PLA to cross the Yalu....and not in the 1951 sense either.

    ReplyDelete
  53. Pissed Off Chinaman11/4/09, 2:41 PM

    Steve please ignore my last post as I published it in the wrong thread. I meant to publish it in the young people thread.

    ReplyDelete
  54. Middletown Girl11/4/09, 2:49 PM

    Is it true that Koreans believe that electric fans can kill you? How did such idiots create the 13th biggest economy in the world?

    The world makes no freaking sense.

    ReplyDelete
  55. Reply to Whisky:

    Your post was the most idiotic comment I have ever read in this blog.

    ReplyDelete
  56. Middletown Girl11/4/09, 3:06 PM

    If a people can be understood through their movies, Koreans must be among the most unpleasant people on Earth.

    I've been a fan of world cinema, and though I've come to love much of Asian cinema, Korean films pretty much sickened my stomach. Japanese make a lot of disgusting crap too, but they tend to be fantastic and unreal. Mainland China had made some impressive and thoughtful movies. Hong Kong makes breezy quality entertainment movies. Taiwan cinema made some respectable art movies. But, Korean cinema? Socially explicit movies that wallow in cruelty, torture, sadism, self-pity, contempt, rape, abuse of women, abuse of social inferiors, bloody vengeance against the rich and powerful, inferiority complex, superiority complex, anxiety-ridden insecurity masquerading as toughness, performances shot through with ham-fisted mannerisms, pomposity, vulgarity, witlessness, etc.

    The awful Seoul Olymics was typical. When an American girl beat a Korean girl in Tae Kwon Do, they had to wait and wait for the American anthem to be played since Koreans had only prepared the Korean anthem in expectation that Koreas would--or must--sweep the medals. Think of the fiasco in the boxing ring(attack on the New Zealand referee and the in-the-ring protest by a Korean boxer; Two of the longest in-the-ring protest records are both held by Korean; many boxers have been wronged in the ring but had the manliness to walk away with head held up high; Koreans sit on their ass and expect the world to feel pity for them; a bunch of insipid crybabies.) and referee bribing(especially with Roy Jones fight). Koreans wanted to be considered a world-class nation but acted in the most provincial way possible.

    When a Korean skater cheated and lost to Apollo Ohno, the whole country threw a hissy fit. When the dignified Ohno went to compete in South Korea, those dog-eating barbarians(they torture and eat around 3 million a year)jeered and mocked him at every moment. McCarthur once said Japan is like a boy of 13. Korea is like a boy of 8.

    ReplyDelete
  57. Another self-parody from you-know-who.

    ReplyDelete
  58. "Your post was the most idiotic comment I have ever read in this blog."

    Son, that's saying an awful lot.

    Strangely enough though, I do often learn things on this blog; for instance for my full 40+ years of existence, I have always had the sneaking suspicion that something I was being told was not true...Until I read this post:

    "but enough are such cringeworthy buffoons that it'd make any honest man quite ashamed to be white and in Korea, as we are going to be associated with such people...of apathetic, beer-swilling, lazy, inept, predatory skirt-chasing, white losers just thrive in the system...Every few days, the major dailies in Seoul manage to scoop up more shocking news about what a plague on mankind these English teachers...the average white man is a potential-child-molesting, AIDS-infected, needle-drug-using, potential-rapist, is someone who is in a constant sexual frenzy for Yellow women -- he tricks them into bed, leaving them with multiple STDs then is never seen again, is someone who cannot go 8 hours without getting drunk and is unable to show up to work both sober and non-hungover, who is a petty criminal, who is vulgar and disgusting in his personal habits, who is stupid and lazy, and so on..."

    I have to thank you Leif; for all of these years I thought that I was born and raised in New York, I was actually living in Korea!

    (rimshot)

    BTW, they're not calling you guys nom, they're calling you NAM!

    (rimshot)

    You folks from out of town?...you just get in?...you from New York?

    I'll be here all week!

    ReplyDelete
  59. Oh yeah, for the past 13,000 years of human history--up until the last couple decades-- Korea had the same GDP as the black african country Ghana. It wasn't until they became a US colony that they started making amazing progress.

    South Koreans need to worship their gods that we helped them to become rich enough to profess their "racial purity/superiority" because we see how they are when left to their own devices (North Korea)

    ReplyDelete
  60. Pissed Off Chinaman11/4/09, 5:44 PM

    LOL Truth,

    Except for the criminal and disease aspects this sounds a lot like my life during college and law school. Ahhh memories.

    ReplyDelete
  61. You really think S. Korea and Japan cannot handle themselves? Let's not be naive, folks, the U.S. government wants American troops stationed in S. Korea and Japan. N.Korea is just a cover to maintain hegemony in the region with an eye on China. Japan and Korea also help pay for the cost of stationed U.S. troops. They're also big clients for the industrial complex. If troops were brought back, where would they go and who will pay?

    ReplyDelete
  62. Middletown Girl,

    "Is it true that Koreans believe that electric fans can kill you? How did such idiots create the 13th biggest economy in the world? The world makes no freaking sense."

    How smart is the avg. American? What silly supersititions do they hold dear to their hearts? It's just one of those urban legends many people supposedly believe. So what?

    ReplyDelete
  63. Leif,

    - Confucianism is "feudal"? Compared to what? Western Christianity, for instance? Revisit the philosophy of Confucianism and religion of Christianity, then decide which is more "feudal".

    - The "double-eyelid" is a common and natural facial feature indigeneous to E. Asia. It is popularly mistaken by Westerners and even Western educated Asians that the practice is motivated by the desire to look more "Caucasian", but this is incorrect. The E. Asian "double eyelid" and Western eyelid are distinctly dissimilar, needless to say.

    ReplyDelete
  64. Middletown Girl11/4/09, 11:03 PM

    "How smart is the avg. American?"

    Smart enough to know that electric fans don't kill you.

    ReplyDelete
  65. "If troops were brought back, where would they go and who will pay?"

    The private sector . . . and the private sector.

    ReplyDelete
  66. South Koreans are as "racist" and "imperialistic" as any other group in the world; for instance, the South Korean conglomerate Daewoo recently tried to just BUY much of Madagascar for pennies an acre for agricultural purposes because they of course have a major shortage of arable land in their small overcrowded nation; this led to the overthrow of president Marc Ravalomanana in Madagascar earlier in 2009 and the deal didn't happen...yet.

    ReplyDelete
  67. Many Koreans are racist in the classic sense of the term, regardless of classism, and it is cultural and institutional. They directly attach national identity to race, their race is the best at everything, all other races and all other countries are the real reason for all Korean problems. Laughably ridiculous stereotypes of foreigners are common. The media regularly prints anti-foreigner lies, which result in violent protests and, inevitably, random attacks on foreigners.

    Do two separate polls, one testing popularity of foreign countries, the other, unpopularity. The USA will win most popular foreign country. The USA will win most unpopular foreign country.

    Koreans get hit and killed by cars all the time because they do not look where they are going. http://rokdrop.com/2009/09/18/south-korea-continues-to-lead-oecd-in-pedestrian-deaths/

    Read foreign student "in korea" blogs and marvel at how they all tell the same story about Korea. Foreigners who loved Korea and go on later to leave Korea in disgust is shockingly common.

    Incidentally, while I feel not burning desire to defend Japan, the protests against the Halloween ride started out by outright racist lowlife internet forum 2channel scum, some of whom were undoubtedly members of the nativist group that participated in the protest this year. The Yamanote Halloween Ride is a disgrace and embarassment for all foreigners though.

    ReplyDelete
  68. SGOTI

    > Fat, drunk and stupid is no way to go through life, son. <

    On this we agree. I'm 42, thin, and a teetotaler.

    ReplyDelete
  69. Reply to Whisky:

    Your post was the most idiotic comment I have ever read in this blog.


    Actually, that inane post is par for the course for Whisky (alias EvilNeocon, Testing99).

    ReplyDelete
  70. Nosibrul,
    the Brits/French would have lost WW1 without American help. The Germans were f**cked after the battle of the Marne. Thew allied blockade was killing them, slowly.

    WW2, now that is a different story.

    ReplyDelete
  71. Oh yeah, for the past 13,000 years of human history--up until the last couple decades-- Korea had the same GDP as the black african country Ghana. It wasn't until they became a US colony that they started making amazing progress.

    The Ghana GDP thing was used to describe Korea's GDP immediately following the Korean war. Historically, Korean GDP per capita probably wasn't that much different from an average European country's up until the Industrial Revolution. Until the Industrial Revolution, there weren't that large differences in GDP among the various settled, civilized parts of the world, and China and India made up a large share of world GDP.

    No doubt being a de facto colony of the US helped its rapid advancement, though it should be noted that the Korean government defied much of what the USG wanted implemented in Korea in terms of economic and political policies and struck somewhat of an independent path. Many of these policies the USG wanted would have likely been disastrous for Korea.

    South Koreans need to worship their gods that we helped them to become rich enough to profess their "racial purity/superiority" because we see how they are when left to their own devices (North Korea)

    The South Koreans "profess their 'racial purity/superiority'" much less than the North Koreans. The North Koreans may be economically backward, but at least they have maintained their racial purity. This counts for something and is nothing to be scoffed at. Materialism isn't everything. The US has undermined racial purity in South Korea, directly through American GIs, and indirectly through ideological and cultural means.

    ReplyDelete
  72. The North Koreans may be economically backward, but at least they have maintained their racial purity.

    Racial purity?!! pfft. I would rather be a rich half-breed in the West, than a starving North Korean who'd jump at the opportunity to get eyelid surgery.

    And apparently Koreans don't consider Chinese and Japanese the same race. I seriously doubt anyone can distinguish, by sight, a full Korean from a Korean/Japanese or Korean/Chinese.

    ReplyDelete
  73. I've been a fan of world cinema, and though I've come to love much of Asian cinema, Korean films pretty much sickened my stomach.

    Korean films have been quite excellent for the past 10 to 15 years. I haven't found them to be much sicker than the world/Hollywood norm. And they don't really get as extreme as Japanese films can. As far as Asian cinema goes, Korean films have arguably been the best in the past 10 years or so.

    ReplyDelete
  74. "The South Koreans "profess their 'racial purity/superiority'" much less than the North Koreans."

    This of course comes from your firsthand experience with the veritable plethora of North Koreans you've been among.

    ReplyDelete
  75. This of course comes from your firsthand experience with the veritable plethora of North Koreans you've been among.

    I was talking about the North Korean government and what it inculcates among its citizens. Of course I don't have "firsthand experience." Though I do have a relative who spent a year working in North Korea.

    ReplyDelete
  76. McCarthur once said Japan is like a boy of 13. Korea is like a boy of 8.

    I wonder what MacArthur would say of the US today. Hysterical, domineering career woman in her 40s/50s, maybe?

    ReplyDelete
  77. And apparently Koreans don't consider Chinese and Japanese the same race. I seriously doubt anyone can distinguish, by sight, a full Korean from a Korean/Japanese or Korean/Chinese.

    They don't consider them to be of the Korean race, because, well, they aren't Korean. They are aware that they would be a part of a broader East Asian race, but that's not really their concern.

    From my experience with them, I would not be surprised if they were able to distinguish pretty well among them. Certainly better than we could. Koreans and other East Asians have difficulty distinguishing among various white European groups, but that doesn't mean these distinctions don't exist. And physical phenotypes aren't everything anyway.

    Koreans should be able to distinguish and separate themselves from other East Asian groups, as they have for centuries, just as, say, Nords should be able to from Meds, Slavs, etc.

    ReplyDelete
  78. SO I don't think the place is going to be running out of Koreans anytime this millenium.

    You think wrong.

    ReplyDelete
  79. Effectively extinct?? That is asinine.

    asinine
    1: extremely or utterly foolish [an asinine excuse]
    2: of, relating to, or resembling an ass

    Okay, it might be "asinine", but it's also TRUE.

    ReplyDelete
  80. BTW, they're not calling you guys nom, they're calling you NAM!

    better retire, truth, you'll never get a line as good as that again. Well done

    ReplyDelete
  81. "South Koreans need to worship their gods that we helped them to become rich enough to profess their "racial purity/superiority" because we see how they are when left to their own devices (North Korea)"

    You are as nutty as an Afrocentric claiming Greek civilization.

    By making such outlandish claims, you reveal your white insecurity.

    ReplyDelete

Comments are moderated, at whim.