Boston College Magazine Front Row
Boston College Magazine Front Row
  • Видео 282
  • Просмотров 77 160

Видео

Bible in American History
Просмотров 1036 лет назад
Bible in American History
Big Story/Little Story: A Reading and Conversation with Mark Singer
Просмотров 486 лет назад
Big Story/Little Story: A Reading and Conversation with Mark Singer
On Law and Globalization
Просмотров 946 лет назад
On Law and Globalization
From Sports Writing to Fiction Writing with Mike Lupica
Просмотров 2066 лет назад
From Sports Writing to Fiction Writing with Mike Lupica
Laura Kasischke: Presented by Poetry Days
Просмотров 6466 лет назад
Laura Kasischke: Presented by Poetry Days
Gender and Class Exclusion in the Pursuit of African-American Educational Justice
Просмотров 786 лет назад
Gender and Class Exclusion in the Pursuit of African-American Educational Justice
A&S Deans Colloquium March 31, 2014
Просмотров 276 лет назад
A&S Deans Colloquium March 31, 2014
DINNER WITH STALIN and Other Stories
Просмотров 776 лет назад
DINNER WITH STALIN and Other Stories
Strong, My Love: A Poetry Reading
Просмотров 1026 лет назад
Strong, My Love: A Poetry Reading
Nursing Ethics
Просмотров 3276 лет назад
Boston College Magazine Editor Ben Birnbaum moderates a panel discussion with Martha Jurchak, Ph.D. ’96, executive director of the Ethics Service at Brigham and Women’s Hospital; Ellen Robinson, M.S. ’83, Ph.D. ’97, nurse ethicist at Massachusetts General Hospital’s Institute for Patient Care and cochair of the MGH Optimum Care Committee; and Connell School faculty Pamela Grace and Richard Ross...
Lowell Humanities Series with Stuart Dybek
Просмотров 2596 лет назад
Stuart Dybek is the author of five books of fiction including Childhood and Other Neighborhoods, The Coast of Chicago, and I Sailed with Magellan and most recently Ecstatic Cahoots and Paper Lantern, both published in 2014. He has also published two volumes of poetry, Brass Knuckles and Streets In Their Own Ink. His work is widely anthologized and his fiction, poetry, and nonfiction have been t...
"How Do You Find a Job That Doesn't Exist Yet?"
Просмотров 1966 лет назад
"How Do You Find a Job That Doesn't Exist Yet?"
Chambers Lecture Series with George Bodenheimer, ESPN
Просмотров 156 лет назад
George Bodenheimer is an ESPN and cable industry pioneer serving as executive chairman, ESPN, Inc. from January, 2012 through May, 2014 where he provided strategic direction for ESPN’s global business. Prior to becoming executive chairman he served as the company’s longest-tenured president (13 years, 1998-2012) where he led an unprecedented period of global growth. He also oversaw all multimed...
Carroll School Distinguished Marketing Lecture Series
Просмотров 826 лет назад
Laura Gentile, MBA'96, Vice President and Founder, espnW
Last Lecture: Jack Dunn
Просмотров 506 лет назад
Last Lecture: Jack Dunn
"Dangerous Trade: Arms Exports, Human Rights, and the U.N. Arms Trade Treaty"
Просмотров 1566 лет назад
"Dangerous Trade: Arms Exports, Human Rights, and the U.N. Arms Trade Treaty"
2015 Michael B. Kreps Memorial Readings
Просмотров 256 лет назад
2015 Michael B. Kreps Memorial Readings
Lecture by Euny Hong
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.6 лет назад
Lecture by Euny Hong
Revelation and Interreligious Dialogue
Просмотров 3,4 тыс.6 лет назад
Revelation and Interreligious Dialogue
"Race, Class and the Achievement Gap: Policy and Politics"
Просмотров 176 лет назад
"Race, Class and the Achievement Gap: Policy and Politics"
The Lean Startup' and First Steps for the Early-Stage Entrepreneur
Просмотров 1016 лет назад
The Lean Startup' and First Steps for the Early-Stage Entrepreneur
Winston Forum on Business Ethics with Representative Bob Inglis
Просмотров 416 лет назад
Winston Forum on Business Ethics with Representative Bob Inglis
Horizons Critical Dialogue for Increased Understanding: Beyond Epistemological Nationalism
Просмотров 176 лет назад
Horizons Critical Dialogue for Increased Understanding: Beyond Epistemological Nationalism
An Agenda for Catholic Education: Developing Saints and Scholars
Просмотров 1146 лет назад
An Agenda for Catholic Education: Developing Saints and Scholars
Writers Among Us: Thomas H. O'Connor
Просмотров 516 лет назад
Writers Among Us: Thomas H. O'Connor
Educational Excellence and Equity: Educational Attainment for Latinos
Просмотров 486 лет назад
Educational Excellence and Equity: Educational Attainment for Latinos
Beyond the Empire of Jim Crow: Race and Foreign Policy in the Post Civil Rights Era
Просмотров 7886 лет назад
Beyond the Empire of Jim Crow: Race and Foreign Policy in the Post Civil Rights Era
Deep Impact: A Journey in Physics
Просмотров 256 лет назад
Deep Impact: A Journey in Physics
A Postmodern Christian Ethics of Peace
Просмотров 206 лет назад
A Postmodern Christian Ethics of Peace

Комментарии

  • @antonius3745
    @antonius3745 12 дней назад

    The Gnostic lie did prevail and created for some parts Christianity.

  • @avnerstein4776
    @avnerstein4776 16 дней назад

    See Jews for Judaism article _The Jesus Narrative In The Talmud_ which doesn't see this (28:26) as the Jesus of Christianity.

  • @magic90015
    @magic90015 28 дней назад

    Kantō Massacre (關東大虐殺, Korean: 간토 대학살) was a mass murder in the Kantō region of Japan committed in the aftermath of the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake. With the explicit and implicit approval of parts of the Japanese government, the Japanese military, police, and vigilantes murdered an estimated 6,000 people: mainly ethnic Koreans, but also Chinese and Japanese

  • @magic90015
    @magic90015 28 дней назад

    Kim Dae Jung was really first president that was elected democratically wise

  • @magic90015
    @magic90015 28 дней назад

    Park chung hee is traitor who did Coup and then became leader. that's why he got assasinated by his follower and also Secret CIA. Not everyone thinks he's great leader he is dictator and Conservative party only thinks he's dictator but he killed and tortured many people. No Muhyun on the other hand doesn't have political power but People still loved him and miss him.

  • @OldPrimate
    @OldPrimate 6 месяцев назад

    "COMFORT WOMEN" Kim Jong-Un has 2k of them currently!!

  • @jordanrichard1173
    @jordanrichard1173 6 месяцев назад

    finally .... pronouncing R properly

  • @a.m.hudson5471
    @a.m.hudson5471 7 месяцев назад

    It's now Christmas of 2023, and I'm thinking of my Dad, who loved Tim Russert. We grew up with MTP...We often joke that Daddy called Mr. Russert home, so that they could discuss the world!! They died about 90 days apart. God bless the Russert family at this, more reflective, time of the year..,t..ake care, all !

  • @Bondmanproductions
    @Bondmanproductions 7 месяцев назад

    To me it was always amazing to see a guy like him where he can be super serious and Professional in an interview and the next thing you see he has a terrific sense of humor and loves to laugh

  • @user-yu8cg7lz2h
    @user-yu8cg7lz2h 7 месяцев назад

    best button techniquev for an irishman god bless joe hooray.

  • @brendanewberry
    @brendanewberry 7 месяцев назад

    I read Luke Russert"s book that included grieving about his dad. Thank you for this interview. Wish we still had Tim drilling down to the core issues with our leaders.

  • @user-qf8ej2yd4f
    @user-qf8ej2yd4f 8 месяцев назад

    In a bestseller book on "Anti-Japanese Tribalism", Lee Young-hoon introduced : The culture of lying in South Korea is widely known internationally. In 2014 alone, 1,400 people were accused of perjury, a figure considered 172 times higher than in Japan. Taking population into account, the crime of perjury per capita is 430 times higher than in Japan. The number of false accusations or false charges is said to be 500 times higher, that is, per capita, 1,250 times more than in Japan. It is no secret that insurance fraud is widespread. The total value of auto, life, non-life and medical insurance fraud in 2014 is estimated to have exceeded 4.5 trillion won. A business newspaper reported that it is 100 times higher than in the United States. Various government grants to the private sector are also being taken through fraud, as revealed during the 2018 national audit, 33% of government grants for intellectual property rights were defrauded.... There is currently no way to improve these.

  • @monicamuramatsu3626
    @monicamuramatsu3626 8 месяцев назад

    It's dangerous to interpret the annexation era based on only one-dimensional historical understanding biased by left. It is important to learn from testimonies how anti-Japanese shamanism has become the axis of South Korea's national ideology and identity. Korean Professor Choe Ki-ho from Kaya University said, "I am 92 years old and I want to tell you the truth" about the annexation period. I was born in 1923. For the sake of South Korea and Japan, I want to tell you the truth. Telling the truth could threaten my life in South Korea, but I feel it is my duty to do so. I lived in Seoul during the annexation period. I also spent some time in Tokyo. In those days, Koreans were more proud to be Japanese than the Japanese themselves. In theaters in Korea, they showed the war news before the movies were shown. For example, if they showed the image of Japan's victory in New Guinea, the Koreans would shout banzai and clap their hands. I loved movies, so I went to theaters in Japan too and the Japanese were calmer. Japanese-speaking Koreans thought positively as "Chinilpa (pro-Japanese)", but in those days more than 90% of Koreans were pro-Japanese. After the war, successive governments in South Korea brainwashed young people with an anti-Japanese upbringing to annoy them. 90% of history education in South Korea is distorted. In South Korean classrooms, our teachers fail to teach how corrupt the Joseon dynasty was in the 19th century and lead their students to believe that the Koreans could have gained independence without the help of Japan. Upon becoming part of Japan in 1910, education, healthcare, industry, and infrastructure in Korea improved dramatically. The foundations for becoming a modern state were laid during the annexation period. However, we were taught in our classrooms by teachers that the annexation of Japan was a setback for Korea's progress. The Joseon dynasty ruined Korean industry, and Koreans who advocated reform were brutally executed. Koreans today yell "brutal Japanese!" "sex slaves!", but the Korean (Yangban) ruling class in the 19th century was far more brutal. The years of the Joseon dynasty were so hellish that they would only be compared to present-day North Korea. There are ongoing controversial conflicts between Japan and South Korea, such as wartime comfort women and Korean male forced laborers. Obviously these have their roots in the Japan-Korea annexation. If you're primarily getting your information on this topic through the mainstream media, whose reporting relies heavily on the mainstream Korean narrative. Just like the testimony of this professor who lived in the annexation era, what we seem to think that the common sense of the world is actually just an invention. We already knew in those days that more than 90% of Koreans were pro-Japanese. We know that 90% of history education in South Korea is distorted thanks to the testimony of those who knew the truth in that era. In my country, the Japanese annexation of Korea has been reported with a very negative image, but we already know that this is not true. For us, when we talk about Japanese imperialism, we have only taken up the negative aspects such as the cruelty of the Imperial Japanese Army. However, how can we learn lessons from distorted and fabricated history? Teaching children a false story?

    • @monicamuramatsu3626
      @monicamuramatsu3626 8 месяцев назад

      Let me quote the description of Masanori Mizuma, who is also a famous modern historian in Japan. Korea was not coerced into Annexation. The Japan-Korea Annexation (1910-1945) was requested by the motivated Koreans who desired protection and modernity for their country in the early 20th century. Korean activist Yi Yong-gu, the founder of the political party, namely Iljinhoe, was one of the chief advocators/instigators for the Annexation. The Japanese government received many telegraphs from Iljinhoe, declaring that they were representing and conveying approximately one million people’ voices from every layer of the social hierarchy. Eventually, the campaigns had moved both the Empire of Japan and the Empire of Korea, and the two nations established the Japan-Korea Annexation Treaty of 1910. The Annexation Treaty was neither a violent military invasion of Korea nor Colonization. The utterly underdeveloped, some say uncivilized, Empire of Korea experienced the rapid and radical transformation from primarily agrarian, to a combined economy of agriculture and industry during the thirty-five years Annexation period. In the process, Koreans positively participated in Japan’s stimulus projects and took the initiative in learning skills, and enjoyed the fruits of the outcome. This remarkable modernization and industrialization didn’t occur in any other European Colony. Under the newly modernized economic and social systems, Koreans gained equal opportunities in education, work and welfares as well as prosperity. There is no doubt that the Annexation Treaty laid every pivotal cornerstone for Korea’s significant success in democratization, modernization, and industrialization in the latter part of 20th century, which was known as “The Miracle of Han River (1961-1997).” Since Japan was vanquished by the Allied forces in the World War II (WWII, 1939-45), Korea’s attitude towards Japan abruptly changed from amicable, to haughty, and began to embody the population that the Annexation was the most atrocious and genocidal Colonization, unprecedented in history. The Republic of Korea (South Korea)’ consecutive governments have deceived its people and told lies about the Annexation as an unforgivable and brutal Colonization. The successive Korean governments misused its peoples’ emotion for its own political advantages. On the other hand, the Japanese government had neglected to counteract Korea’s baseless, absurd condemnations, and consequently, Japanese people have been left in an uncertain and opaque position. The decades of Japanese governments’ passive and hesitant weak-kneed diplomacy sent the wrong messages to Korean governments. Subsequently, South Korean politicians understood Japan as a weak and subservient nation to Korea, and this invigorated and encouraged them to make false accusations for its political and economic advantages. Camouflaging their lies and with covert intentions, successive South Korean governments have boldly brainwashed its people to have a vengeful view of the Annexation and Japan. Thus, Anti-Japan Shamanism has become the axis national ideology and identity of South Korea and South Koreans are united on that platform. Many scholars in Japan support this historical perception. The number of scholars who support it is increasing in South Korea as well.

    • @user-pm9yt1mj2p
      @user-pm9yt1mj2p 8 месяцев назад

      The books by Professor Alleyne Ireland and Professor Atul Kohli make clear that the common perception in the West - the Japanese invaded Korea, exploited Koreans and committed atrocities - is a myth.

  • @iot577
    @iot577 9 месяцев назад

    Mc Quaid had his spies planted everywhere. He poked his nose into every facet of irish life. Today's Ireland is a very different country. Brilliant lecture, huge fan of Prof Ferriter.

  • @stevenv6463
    @stevenv6463 9 месяцев назад

    Very informative lecture

  • @EdwardCaffrey22
    @EdwardCaffrey22 10 месяцев назад

    How hot was it on stage?

  • @whisperingpoet4352
    @whisperingpoet4352 10 месяцев назад

    Very good

  • @martincurrid5047
    @martincurrid5047 10 месяцев назад

    Tim Russet,was the most down to earth man, a special man,a Good and holy man,have not watched meet the press since he left us, R.I.P. Tim Russet ,you left this world a Better place.

  • @xyzzy4567
    @xyzzy4567 11 месяцев назад

    Is there anyone more insufferable than Euny Hong?

  • @jeffg6453
    @jeffg6453 11 месяцев назад

    Surprise this video isn’t watch more

  • @chanjupark9283
    @chanjupark9283 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you for sharing this great lecture. :) I am a Korean, and would like to point out a (in my view) misinterpretation regarding the cartoon image from 11:00 or 12:00. The Japanese politician is saying to the Korean people that Japan already gave reparation package to the Korean government. The direct translation could be "You guys need to talk about the individual reparation with the one who already got it from us.(implying Mr. PARK)" In response to the Japanese man's remarks, President PARK, leaning against his own tomb in his old military uniform (implying that he got the power via coup d'état), says to the people that he already compensated the victims by paying victims individually 300,000 KRW. PARK is shrugging off and complainjng that the people is demanding more than they deserves.

  • @kiprushton9916
    @kiprushton9916 11 месяцев назад

    So sad the day you passed I remember that day

  • @colleenpatten3826
    @colleenpatten3826 Год назад

    I'm sure if Tim was still here w/the present day "BS" the media would not be hovering over Trump until he was in jail.

  • @kiprushton9916
    @kiprushton9916 Год назад

    Miss you Tim!

  • @trex1448
    @trex1448 Год назад

    It is some sort of Japanese magic reasoning for Japanese to claim that Japan did nothing wrong and only helped Korea by brutalizing them but Japan already apologized for the things they never did.

  • @doubledragan
    @doubledragan Год назад

    Ridiculous! I’ve never seen such Pro-Albanian SERB-Bashing In my life! I’m just pissed & amazed how much your minds are poisoned.

  • @Cornerforward
    @Cornerforward Год назад

    McQuaid was a fascinating character of bygone Ireland. He played an enormous role in holding Ireland back. A brilliant lecture by Professor Ferriter.

    • @iot577
      @iot577 9 месяцев назад

      McQuaid was akin to a dictator. The government kow towed to him.

  • @cyndyrutherford3816
    @cyndyrutherford3816 Год назад

    STAY VIGILANT BEAUTIFUL SOULS 🙏

  • @rkhandle
    @rkhandle Год назад

    This speaker makes me want to go back to school and get a PhD so that I can learn more about this subject.

  • @bazzermn
    @bazzermn Год назад

    The outside in technique on the right hand is just fascinating

  • @josephl6289
    @josephl6289 Год назад

    Addressing the Judith article, parents rearing their children in a religious context definitely will make them more prone to awe/elevation. So Dr. Haidt, I believe parents are fundamental in that regard.

  • @stormythelowcountrykitty7147

    Very convincing

  • @ntcw
    @ntcw Год назад

    Could have had it in a more comfortable venue. Tim looks miserably hot.

  • @Dechieftian
    @Dechieftian Год назад

    Superb! Simply superb! The post Anglo- Irish Treaty of 1921 period and right up to the German expansionism in Europe staring in 1939 were embryonic for Ireland. Politically, Michael Collins the person most capable of steering Free State Ireland through the turbelent waters had been assasinated in 1922 which was most unfortunate indeed. The potential economic possiblities that may have unfolded with a Collins stewardship were not to be realized. The void that Collins left would only be filled in the waning decades of the fast closing 20th century when the Republic of Ireland would finally find it's sea legs - with thanks in no small part for it's admission to what we know today as the European Economic Community. In addition to the political landscape, the religious landscape went through the same period equally tumultous and gripped in stagnation. John Charles McQuaid and his cadre of spies and busy bodies were instrumental in ensuring the stagnation would continue and the festering pool of discontent would develop into what would eneviatably become a counter movement so strong that the Catholic Church in general and it's fascist leadership in particular - people like McQuaid - would face a very angry and mostly female backlash from which the orgnaization and leadership of the Catholic Church would never recover. Dr. Diarmaid Ferriter talk today on 20th century Ireland - particulary the Catholic Church and it's leadership is both insightful and informing. Thank you.

    • @brianoreilly239
      @brianoreilly239 11 месяцев назад

      In his excellent book 'A Nation and not a Rabble' Dr Ferriter puts paid to the notion that had Collins not been assassinated Ireland would have been a different country. He rightly points out that his difference with de Valera were purely about the terms of the treaty and NOTHING else. On social issues , like de Valera, he was more than likely a conservative Catholic.

    • @Dechieftian
      @Dechieftian 11 месяцев назад

      @@brianoreilly239 I respectfully disagree with Dr Ferriter's conclusion. In my judgement - and I certainly concede that an emminent historian with a life long study of Irish hitory in general and the Civil War in particular would know a lot more of the background detail of these events than I would. However, these judgements and conclusions are at best academic and may not see the depth of feeling and the fabric of character that might be noted by interested lovers of these subjects. The glaring difference for me as we compare DeValera - a man we knew quite well as he was a significant player for certainly the better of the first half of the 20th century - and Collins whose towering presence in Ireland's fight for freedom spanned a mere few decades - of the most turbulent and bloody periods in Irish history. There is much we have to guess at with respect to Collins if we are to compare the two and picking up the glaring dicfference I noted, I will compare the sly, calculating and over cautious DeValera in a one on one session with DLG at No 10 in the Summer of 1921 where there was much discussed but nothing decided or conceded. It is my belief that Mr. DeValera was unable to see the big picture and was - through stuborness - was unable to compromise and was unable to engage a process that might over time be what Collin's famously characterized as a 'stepping stone'. Those same cautious and fearful approach created the 'dead hand' of Irish leadership for most of the 1930's through to the 1960's that both stagnated the economy and starved a young population of opportunities and led to emmigration. By contrast, Collins would have been far more creative in solving the new nations woes and would involve all and sundry as he saw fit. He would cast a wide net to capture as much creativity and knowledge as he could to help him on his quest to make Ireland a great country. He had faith in it's people - he knew them well. He would have used his enormous charm and wit to cajole who he could when it suited his quest. He would have quickly mended the economic ties with Great Britain - as he understood economics - he would have no trouble understanding the critical importance of strong ties with our closest and largest trading partners. He would have drawn Britain closer to the economy of Ireland - instead of pushing them away with tarrifs and stiffling economic policies as was the case with DeValera. On the NI front he would have not allowed the situation to fester and become intractable. I believe Collins would not have played the neutral card in the '39 when Nazi Germany declared war on Poland. I think he would have stood with the Allied powers in defence of democracy and freedom. I'm unsure what the realtionship with the clergy would be but I am sure that he would not have allowed them to interfere to the extent that they did with the politics of the country. In conclusion and in summary, there was a world of difference between the brash young energetic Collins and the staid and egotistical DeValera. The best of what Ireland could have hoped for post - treaty was what Collins could have offered. But, it was men like DeValera who stuffed out that young life of Collins and handed to DeValera a future leadership role in the country that he guided through it's darkest hours - clueless and impotent. There was a mighty difference between the two men. One knew how to save his skin, the other put everyting on the line for a vision and a country that would know no bounds when DeValera would be finally pushed to one side.

  • @opaulamorgan4265
    @opaulamorgan4265 Год назад

    Tim Russet was a "special man." His background, parents (Big Russ), his Jesuit education, as well as his native intelligence, all played a part in the success he achieved.. He never forgot who he was or where he came from. RIP Tim Russet☘️

  • @mai6553
    @mai6553 Год назад

    I never related more to a heart than Brian’s. I was a senior in high school when he came and visited us in creative writing and Brian changed my life. ❤ thinking of him tonight and astonished I never thought to look up a recording of his talks. Thank you SO much for keeping this man’s words alive. ❤

  • @Foggyscotty
    @Foggyscotty Год назад

    toe pic?

  • @Foggyscotty
    @Foggyscotty Год назад

    omg ima act up

  • @Foggyscotty
    @Foggyscotty Год назад

    bro looks cute

  • @frankt7521
    @frankt7521 Год назад

    Brian was a friend of mine in HS and yes we met on a basketball court (Newbridge Road Park). I've googled him many times over the years but for some reason nothing came up, which doesn't make sense. I wanted to reconnect with him and share with him what his act of kindness meant to me; I doubt he ever realized what he was doing or the importance of his act would have on me. I didn't even know what it meant until many decades had passed and I found the time to reflect on my life and the people who passed through it. If any of his family read this, please know that God worked through him that day (September '71... I'm sure God used him many times), early in our HS time together. One small gesture, in hindsight, changed my life. I was so saddened when I heard of his passing a couple of years ago. I wish we could have met up for a beer just one more time so I could thank him. RIP Brian. I hope we will meet again.

    • @mariamadams5088
      @mariamadams5088 10 месяцев назад

      How cool is that? Your message. Thank you for writing it. Real fine.

    • @frankt7521
      @frankt7521 10 месяцев назад

      @@mariamadams5088 Are you related to Brian?

  • @johnbishop8381
    @johnbishop8381 Год назад

    Fantastic interview...thanks for posting! It is important to recognize and realize what a national treasure this man was....and continues to be...through his impactful work, broad perspective, and empathetic outreach. I...and this country...truly and deeply miss this man...all these many years after his untimely passing. May he continue to be a role model for journalists and citizens across the nation.

  • @marinamemmo3564
    @marinamemmo3564 Год назад

    Prof. Adiel Schremer is a professor in the Department of Jewish History and Contemporary Jewry at Bar-Ilan University in Israel and the author of Brothers Estranged: Heresy, Christianity, and Jewish Identity in Late Antiquity (Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2010)

  • @resolute7627
    @resolute7627 Год назад

    could we not provide a Air Conditioner for Tim Russert ?

  • @resolute7627
    @resolute7627 Год назад

    GO BILLS !

    • @marykinsley7422
      @marykinsley7422 Год назад

      Chuck Todd - watch and learn!! Your interviews fall way short!

  • @r.f.ravari374
    @r.f.ravari374 Год назад

    that is one racist african. he must be white.

  • @vmcla
    @vmcla Год назад

    Too bad we can’t hear it. It’s a real shame that an elite university cannot master the audio recording of a simple event. Quite astonishing.

  • @erinundra
    @erinundra Год назад

    Is it possible to find a film clip or lecture on RUclips that's not US made and only gives THEIR perspective.? The whole of RUclips is plastered with US propaganda about how great they are, far from the truth. Not much about a century or so of their warmongering and the millions and millions of people they have wiped out.

  • @kyarib
    @kyarib Год назад

    Korean comfort women also existed in the South Korean army at the time of the Korean War. Nevertheless, Koreans pursue only the criminal liability of the Japanese army but do not mention the crimes of the South Korean army. Koreans are using the comfort women issue as an excuse for injuring the status of Japan. Probably the real purpose of Koreans is to confirm their moral superiority over Japanese and to satisfy their pride. That's why Koreans are indifferent to the dignity of the comfort women who have been victims of the South Korean army.

    • @trex1448
      @trex1448 Год назад

      There were no comfort women in South Korean army during the Korean War.

    • @kyarib
      @kyarib Год назад

      During the Korean War, South Korean troops had comfort women. Instead of reading history books written by Koreans, you should check the historical facts for yourself.

    • @trex1448
      @trex1448 Год назад

      @@kyarib lol you need to read more than Japanese bulletin boards. There were no comfort women in Korean war. There were prostitutes curried by Korean miltary and politicians after the Korea War. Read some books.

    • @kyarib
      @kyarib Год назад

      @@trex1448 The Korean military recruited comfort women during the Korean War. The Korean government called the comfort women for the Korean and U.S. forces "Special Comfort Forces(特殊慰安隊)". This is written in the "Rear Area Military History(後方戦史)" an official record compiled by the Korean Army Headquarters in 1956. Read primary sources of history, not distorted Korean history textbooks. It is also recorded at the time that the Special Comfort Forces(特殊慰安隊) were called "American Army Comfort Women(美軍慰安婦)" and "United Nations Army Comfort Women(国連軍相対慰安婦)" after the Korean War. It is an undeniable fact that the comfort women system existed under the Korean military. Calling comfort women "prostitutes" is contrary to the historical facts of Korea.

    • @trex1448
      @trex1448 Год назад

      @@kyarib lol. The term "comfort women" is a japanese term. It doesnt exist in Korean. Give me a link in English, Korean or from any half decent publication or academic journal. Id be happy to look at it for you.

  • @kyarib
    @kyarib Год назад

    The main problem with Korean history education is that it positions Koreans as one-sided victims of Japan's colonial rule. Koreans at the time were victims of discrimination by the Japanese, and also participated in the colonial governance system by being part of the military and administrative organizations. For evidence of this, check out the biographies of the leaders of the early days of the Republic of Korea. Many of them, including the president of Korea 朴正煕(Park Jung-hee), were involved in the Japanese system of governance during the colonial era. The foundation of the Republic of Korea was laid by people who were trained during the Japanese colonial period in all fields, including the military, police, administration, and education. That is why I cannot agree with Koreans who only emphasize the damage caused by the policies of the Government-General of Korea. There is no doubt that the Chinese were the victims of Japanese militarism. However, it is a distortion of history for Koreans to put themselves in the same category as the Chinese and position themselves as one-sided victims of Japan. I think that is hypocrisy. I don't think that everything the Japanese did on the Korean Peninsula in the past was right. However, Koreans under Japanese rule have both the experience of being discriminated against by the Japanese and at the same time the experience of benefiting from the policies of the state as Japanese citizens. That is why I believe they should be honest about the merits and demerits of Japan's colonial policy.

    • @trex1448
      @trex1448 Год назад

      The existence of turncoats and traitors who help out the invaders or colonizers doesn't mean that the country isn't a onesided victim of colonial rule. Literally every single invaded, country has traitors. This is really stupid thinking.

    • @kyarib
      @kyarib Год назад

      You should not turn a blind eye to the fact that under Japanese colonial rule, the inhabitants of the Korean peninsula were Japanese citizens. All Koreans of the time grew up with compulsory Japanese education, and more than a few studied at Japanese imperial universities and military academies. There were many Koreans like Park Chung-hee (朴正煕) , who was an officer in the Manchukuo army. There was also a Korean named Hong Sa-Ik (洪思翊) who even became a lieutenant general in the Japanese Imperial Army.We should not forget the fact that Koreans were Japanese citizens before 1945, and many of them were involved in Japan's policies of governance as administrative officials, police officers, judges, prosecutors, and military officers. They are by no means exceptional. In this sense, it is a distortion of history to say that some traitorous Koreans cooperated with Japan.

  • @kyarib
    @kyarib Год назад

    During the Japanese colonial period in Korean Peninsula, many Koreans received compulsory and higher education at government expense, and participated in the system of governance with the Japanese as bureaucrats, judges, prosecutors, police officers, and high-ranking military officers. Before 1945, there were many Koreans living in the Japanese Archipelago, and adult males were given the right to vote regardless of whether they were Japanese or Korean. It is shameful for such Koreans to turn their back on Japan as soon as Japan lost the Pacific War to the U.S. and claim that they were one-sided victims of Japan's rule.

    • @user-iz2zo2ex7t
      @user-iz2zo2ex7t Год назад

      Colonization cannot be justified just because the colonized country became modernized or because the subjects got better education. But first of all I can’t agree with Koreans God, more higher education at colonial period. Well, for your information, I’m a Korean who has received 12 years of history education. When our country was colonized, we could not even speak Korean, even though it is our language. If someone spoke Korean, they were punished by armed military police. At that time (1930s-1940s), Koreans needed to change their names to Japanese names. So many people tried to save our language, literature and our historical records with risking their lifes. Do you think this is right? And also, Japan hindered Koreans making higher educational institution. How could you say we can get more high education? So because of these historical facts, your claim isn’t logical at all. At first, the premise was false.By the way, none of the Koreans was able to get fundamental rights that specitied on Constitution of other western countries at that time. Even though the rights of freedom was an most old rights, the Koreans didn’t supposed to get it. We have almost deprived ourselves of our culture. We couldn’t also protect our sovereignty over our country and had to undergo the situation of Japan insulting our royal. And I think you’re not a citizen of a country which was been colonized and not only because of that but, you couldn’t say colonization was good to colonies.

    • @user-iz2zo2ex7t
      @user-iz2zo2ex7t Год назад

      Also it is a false, not a truth that Koreans had a chance to high officials or to get political rights.

    • @kyarib
      @kyarib Год назад

      You have not been taught the truth of history. The Korean government has been instilling a false perception of 創氏改名 in the public. In the early 1900s, the Government-General of Korea asked Koreans to create a new "氏" and never forced them to abandon their "姓. The Korean "姓" is a name for a clan that shares a bloodline, and is separate from the Japanese "氏" which is a name for an individual family. Therefore, Koreans at that time had both Japanese and Korean names, and did not lose their ancestral Korean names. Prior to Japanese rule, only royalty and nobility had access to education in Korea, and they despised Hangul and had little interest in popularizing it among the general public. Compulsory education for children was first implemented on the Korean peninsula under Japanese rule. The Government-General of Korea promulgated an educational decree in 1911, making Korean language a required subject and teaching Hangul to Korean children at government expense. Japanese policy at that time led to the first improvement in Korean literacy among the populace of the Korean Peninsula. It was also the Japanese who first established universities and other institutions of higher education on the Korean peninsula. The predecessor of today's Seoul National University was Japan's Imperial University, where many Koreans received higher education even before 1945. These are something you can understand if you look up the facts for yourself.

    • @kyarib
      @kyarib Год назад

      There were many high-ranking officers from Korean peninsula in the Japanese and Manchukuo armies during World War II. They were not a few special cases. They voluntarily enrolled in Japanese military academies and aimed to rise in the military. Park Chung-hee(朴正煕), who later became president of South Korea, is a concrete example. A Korean named Hong Sa Ik(洪思翊) rose to the rank of lieutenant general in the Japanese Imperial Army. Koreans living in the Japanese archipelago before 1945 had the same suffrage rights as the Japanese if they were adult males. This is because, at that time, people from the Korean peninsula were undeniably Japanese citizens by law. These facts are historical truths that are not written in Korean history textbooks. If you think it is a lie, you can find it out by checking the historical data by yourself.

    • @LightnessofJoy
      @LightnessofJoy Год назад

      You did not live during that era. Koreans were not allowed to speak Korean during Japan’s colonial rule. I had uncles who lived during that era before 1945 who spoke fluent Japanese because of this. Japan was an incredibly oppressive colonial ruler who eviscerated Koreans for their own self interest.