Before Translating the Opening Chapter of Professor Hiroshi Furuta’s Unified Korea: The Poverty of Scholarship Among Alexis Dudden and Others
Published on July 15, 2019.
Before translating the opening chapter of Professor Hiroshi Furuta’s latest work Unified Korea, this piece records the author’s criticism of Alexis Dudden and others, whom the author regards as virtually agents of South Korea.
It sharply discusses anti-Japanese discourse directed at Japan and the Japanese people, the poverty of scholarship behind it, and the possible role of money traps and honey traps.
July 15, 2019.
Although I think that women like them, who do not possess even a fragment of intelligence and are probably deeply immersed in money traps and honey traps, do not even have the ability to understand.
Before translating the first opening chapter of Professor Hiroshi Furuta’s latest work Unified Korea into English.
In particular, Alexis Dudden and others, who are virtually agents of South Korea, will surely come to know from the bottom of their hearts just how poor her scholarship is and how unworthy it is of the name of scholar, and they will no longer be able to walk properly in public.
Of course, they will also painfully realize that the acts they have committed against Japan and the Japanese people, acts that rank among the lowest-class crimes in human history, can no longer be committed at all from now on.
However, that is only if they possess even a fragment of intelligence, and I think that women like them, who do not possess even a fragment of intelligence and are probably deeply immersed in money traps and honey traps, do not even have the ability to understand.
