2022년 3월 1일 화요일

The shadow of Chineseism and the future of Korea.

 When I ask Chinese acquaintances why they are so excited about soccer games against Korea several times, most of them have played more than 20 games so far and have never won a single game. However, to be cool, there is nothing to say about soccer because of its lack of skills, but none of the Chinese clearly say that China's defeat is due to its skills. Of course, it can be said that it is because of the unique power of soccer that stimulates the National League, but what is inherent in the hearts of the Chinese so that soccer matches with Korea can become such a great event? In my opinion, I think the honest words that only one Chinese acquaintance said may be the inner thoughts of the Chinese. In their hearts, there are countries that are okay to lose, and in particular, the economic defeat against Korea is humiliating because Korea was a subordinate country to China in the past and is still a country smaller than China's individuality. The fact that the huge and great Chinese people have never won against such a country, which accounts for only one-95th of the land area and has a population of only 45 million, hurts the Chinese people's pride. In other words, in the words of Korea, not any other country, the Korean Peninsula was a subordinate country of China, and if it were not for Japan, it would have been a country that would still remain Chinese territory like Shingang Uigur and Tibet. Many people think they will know the history of Tibet, Shingang Uigur, and Inner Mongolia, so I won't explain it, but Chinese people never think of the Korean Peninsula as a complete foreign country like Britain or the United States. To introduce one episode, I was invited to a luxury restaurant in Hangju when I received language training. You know that China and Korea are originally brothers with one ancestor when a Chinese friend I invited naturally joined the restaurant owner because they are related to the owner of the restaurant. There was a time when we talked in this way and had a war of words because it was ridiculous.(I remember a Chinese friend who was embarrassed by the war of words at the time.) However, there is a serious problem in that the majority of Chinese people feel bad that they now live better than China, distorting the past history as nonsense. No matter how much they explain, they don't try to believe that Korea is a completely different country from China. Many Koreans have the same last name as Chinese, so most Chinese people who don't know much about Korean history misunderstand that Korea is a Chinese country similar to Singapore created by Chinese people thousands of years ago. Many Chinese people think that with the fall of Gojoseon, many Chinese immigrated to the Korean Peninsula and their descendants were Koreans. Therefore, despite the numerous requests of the Korean government, the meaning of the city of the mainstream Chinese Han Chinese people is various, but it also means a city in Chinese.It is said that this is because it implies that "city" in Chinese. In fact, it is only an excuse that it is difficult for many Chinese people to change their city name to Chinese, which China recently changed from Jiujin Mountain, which used to call San Francisco in the U.S., to Seongpurangsisk, similar in pronunciation to Korean to Seoul. For many Chinese people, after the unification of Taiwan, Korea and Vietnam, which were the territory of China in the past...And the fact that many countries in Southeast Asia should be made as in the past is deeply embedded in the heart as a clear historical mission. Their intense desire is that if the merger of territories is difficult, it should be placed at least under the influence of sovereignty or influence. The story of Sojapan and China, which is often heard in conversations with Chinese people about Japan, came from their pride being hurt during the Japanese invasion in the past, but it should be noted that this may actually be used in all surrounding countries except China. The Chinese have a surprisingly strong obsession with territorial issues. They had repeated humiliating territorial assignments under the invasion of Western imperialism in the past 150 years, and now they are re-merging Hong Kong and Macau and leaving only the final task of reunification with Taiwan. The problem is what is next to Taiwan? They call Baekdusan Mountain Jangbaeksan Mountain and regard the entire Baekdusan Mountain as Chinese territory. To be exact, it insists that it is China's territory. When it comes to military issues with the Chinese, China's economy is now the top priority, so all resources cannot be used to expand its military power, but if it grows to some extent, it must surpass the U.S. military power. Many Chinese believe that if there is a war with the United States, the United States will not think of China recklessly, and that someday the day will come when the United States will give in to China. How many people will affirm that it is a dream for China, which has been growing steadily alone amid the Asian economic crisis? And if China has such power, where will it be the first to test the power they have gained? When I accidentally met with the branch manager of a representative group in China and had a conversation, I talked to him about the story that China's remaining agricultural state is good for Korea's peace, but I don't know what will happen in the future. How many people can object to his idea of living in China for nearly a decade and meeting many Chinese people? The biggest problem in my view is that they will have absolute power such as circle, name, and Qing as they aspire, rather than China's undemocratic state, and whether the Chinese will leave Korea as a neighboring country as it is now. In the minds of many Koreans, Japanese rule over 36 years, which ended in 1945, is a strong memory. However, in the past, Korea was actually a Chinese colony, nominally more than 10 times longer than that. Who can say that we don't have to be wary of Japan and China? Like the garlic scandal that China recently showed, I wonder if it would have been so easy to use the coercive force and poem of the ban on Korean mobile phones and polyethylene if it had been similar to other countries outside of Korea.(In fact, the amazing ability of officials from the Ministry of Transportation abroad, who are pushed back by China and cannot negotiate properly, is even more questionable.) While living in China, I often confirm that the secret territorial expansionism inherent in the Chinese people exceeds our imagination, and that they have no intention of giving it up now and in the future. For many Koreans, it is clear that Chinese chineseism (almost in line with Shovinism) is always an object to pay attention to. Since Korea is located too close to China, China's excitement is bound to affect Korea in some form, and no one knows whether it will benefit Korea's future or be a destructive threat. Everyone in Korea should clearly remember that the longest and fiercest fight in our national history was resistance to China's threat of absorption, culturally or militarily.

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