자유와 정의의 나라/신학 이야기

POTUS Donald J. Trump is advised not to hold the Republic of Korea in contempt!!!

아우구스티누스 2019. 11. 20. 09:48

President D. J. Trump pays his respects to Japan which waged the Pacific War(1941-1945) against America, whereas he looks down upon the Republic of Korea that is pro President D. J. Trump and pro America, not President Moon Jae-in who has been supported by the Vatican conspiracy for anti-American purposes and the strong pro-North Korea, China and Russia groups.

 

If President Trump is to make out the following facts, he is sure to bring about revolution on recognition on the Korean Peninsula.

 

1. Baekgang war in 663

 

At the outbreak of Baekgang war of the Korean Peninsula in 663, Saimay Tenno(齊明, In office 655-661, 594-661) and her son, the Crown Prince(later Tenjee Tenno 天智天皇, In office 668-672, 626-672) sent troops(over about forty thousand soldiers. Then the population of Japan was about 1 million) and 400 ships for the revival of Baekje defeated by an alliance of Silla and the Chinese Tang Dynasty, In 660.

 

After the war defeat Tenjee Tenno changed the name of a country into Japan and the name Japan came from Baejae that meant だら구다라, the country of the Sun.

 

This facts shows that Japan is founded by Korean.

 

2. The TaftKatsura Agreement

 

The TaftKatsura Agreement between United States Secretary of War William Howard Taft and Prime Minister of Japan (Count) Katsura Tarō on 27 July 1905 that Japan made the Korean Peninsula its protectorate of in the aftermath of its victory in the Russo-Japanese War and The US acquired the Philippines following its victory over Spain in the SpanishAmerican War of 1898.

 

America favored Japan with a smile and slighted Japan’s father land the Korean Peninsula. So the Imperial Japan committed incest in the eye of day.

 

Later Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor showed that Japan was ungrateful bastard.

 

Now Japan will never fail to serve America the same sauce because of extensive bomb damage by the U. S. A

 

3. Homer Bezaleel Hulbert who loved the Korean Peninsula and ran counter to America’s foreign policy.

 

Homer Bezaleel Hulbert(1863-1949) was an American missionary, journalist and political activist who sided with the independence of the Korean Peninsula.


He hurled criticism at Japanese plans to change the Korean Peninsula into a protectorate. In October 1905 he went to the United States as an emissary of Emperor Gojong, to put up a stubborn resistance to Japan’s measures. After returning to the Korean Peninsula in 1906, he was sent as part of a secret delegation from Emperor Gojong to the Second International Peace Conference held in The Hague in June 1907. The delegation of the Korean Peninsula failed to gain a hearing with other world powers, and the Japanese used the Emperor’s actions as a pretext to compel him to abandon his right. Hulbert’s 1906 book, The Passing of Korea, heavily criticized Japanese rule. He was banished by the Japanese resident-general for the Korean Peninsula on May 8, 1907.

 

Syngman Rhee, who was one of his middle school students, became the first President of the Republic of Korea, invited Hulbert back to Korea in 1948. on this trip he developed pneumonia and died. He was the recipient of the Order of Merit for National Foundation by South Korean Government.

 

He is interred at Yanghwajin Foreigners’Cemetery in Seoul. His statue was established in his honor. His tombstone reads“I would rather be buried in Korea than in Westminster Abbey.”