검찰에서 고발할지도 모르니
진위여부부터 파악해 주시오.
일본 신문인 요미우리 데일리에서 발췌한 것인데 진위 여부부터 확인해 주시오.
(에효 겁이나서 이런거 진위여부부터 판명해 달라는 이런 글부터 적어야 한다니...진짜 5공인갑다...민주주의국가 정의에 위배되는 이러한 현실에 개탄스러울 뿐이다.)
아니 일본신문에서도 이렇게 나오는데
이제 지대로 언론 통제 하셨소?
이거 금주내로 기사 안나오면 우리나라 볼장 다봤다.
제 2의 오공시대고
제 2의 한일합방 올지도 모르겠고
제 2의 대한민국 국민의 암흑기 가 오는지도 모르겠다.
아니 어찌 대통령이라는 작자가 출신이 일본 태생이라도 그렇지
대통령신분으로 가서 언론통제고 뭐고 멋대로 하는거 둘째치고
이제 이딴 망발까지 멋대로 하나??
이거 대한민국에서 살아야 되??
아래 내용은 하단 기사 발췌분의 일부 이고 대충 해석한 것입니다.
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Lee has pledged not to seek a new apology from Japan for the use of forced labor and seΧ slaves during colonial rule. He also resumed top-level visits, which had been suspended since 2005 to protest former Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's repeated visits to a Tokyo war shrine.
이명박은 서약했다 앞으로 식민시대의 정신대할머니와 신사참배에 대해서 사과요구를 하지 않겠다고...
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South Koreans seek new relationship with Japan
By HYUNG-JIN KIM
Associated Press Writer

AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- Oh Yeh-sol loves watching Japanese cartoons, eating sushi and drinking sake. She believes that Tokyo's 1910-1945 colonial rule of Korea should be a thing of the past.
"I think it's better to get along with them and pursue exchanges," said Oh, 26, who recently started offering a language exchange program for Korean and Japanese speakers in her Seoul cafe.
With Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso arriving in Seoul on Sunday, many South Koreans, including President Lee Myung-bak, say it's time to look beyond the troubled past and build closer ties with Japan.
People "say Korea and Japan are 'close yet distant countries' but we should be 'close and close' countries," the Japan-born Lee told Aso during a private meeting on the sidelines of a first-ever three-way meeting with China's leader last month. "And Korea is ready to become so."
Lee has pledged not to seek a new apology from Japan for the use of forced labor and seΧ slaves during colonial rule. He also resumed top-level visits, which had been suspended since 2005 to protest former Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's repeated visits to a Tokyo war shrine.
The past, however, has a way of bubbling up.
Lee's overtures took a serious hit in July when Tokyo announced it would recommend that a government teaching manual include Japan's claim to uninhabited islets claimed by both countries.
South Korea recalled its ambassador in Tokyo for three weeks and heightened security near the islets. Activists staged near-daily protests in front of the Japanese Embassy. Many scholars and newspaper editorials demanded Lee toughen policy on Japan.
"Koreans view Japan's claim to (the islets) as its historic aggression," said Jin Chang-soo, a Japan expert at South Korea's Sejong Institute, a policy think tank.
On Tuesday, the dispute threatened to flare up again.
Japan's Yomiuri newspaper reported that Tokyo planned to conduct a maritime research survey in waters between the two countries. The Japanese government denied the report, but South Korea still warned Tokyo against the plan amid media speculation that such a survey could include waters near the islets.
Despite such hiccups, growing economic ties are bringing the two countries closer.
The countries are major commercial partners, with two-way trade reaching $82.6 billion in 2007. About 2.6 million South Koreans traveled to Japan in 2007, while 2.2 million Japanese visited South Korea.
The global financial crisis has bolstered cooperation, with the two countries increasing a bilateral currency swap facility to about $20 billion.
Lee meets Aso on Monday, his sixth meeting with a Japanese leader since taking office 11 months ago. South Korean officials say the meeting will focus on economic cooperation and efforts to stop North Korea's nuclear program. The islets are not on the agenda.
Among Koreans who still harbor strong resentment against Japan are those who were seΧ slaves for Japanese troops during World War II. Many feel that earlier apologies by Japanese leaders have been insincere and are demanding a fresh one.
"They punched, kicked and beat me when I cried and refused to take off my clothes though I was only a 13-year-old girl at the time," said 82-year-old Gil Won-ok. "We don't have many years to live. If we all die, to whom will Japan apologize?"
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젠장 이명박 이를 지지하는 청와대 및 한나라당과 그의 측근
정말 볼장 다 봤다.
아 일이 손에 안잡히네 ㅡㅡ;