"shuji matsuda" <shuji__matsuda@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:bc959s$h0qn1$1@ID-37799.news.dfncis.de...
> In article <bc4237$ft5$1@nntp.itservices.ubc.ca>,

> $BKQ=U6W(B was an interesting guy.  He was a congressman of Imperial congress
> from 1932 to 1942, as a person born in Korea.
> $B!X(B $B;d$OD+A/@8$^$l$NF|K\?M$H$7$FDk9q5D2q$N5D@/CE>e$K$?$A$^$7$?$3$H$O!";d0l(B
$B8D?M$N8w(B
> $B1I$N$_$G$J$/$7$F!"D+A/Fs@iK|L1$N8w1I$H;W$U$,8N$K!"@'$l0J$FKr3'MM$K8|$/8fNi(B
$B?=>e(B
> $B$2$k0FnF;(B had no Japanized name.  He was the guy who supported
> $B9D9q?CL1$N@@;l(B as a $Bb(B,
a
> Korean activist.

Again, what is your point? By the time WW2 had started, almost a generation
had
experienced the Japanese colonial system. They were raised in it and knew
nothing else. Why should it be surprising that Koreans became active
participants by then?

Coming up with a few examples of successful assimilation means nothing.

BTW...The biggest problem is that most of the people that could have refuted
this
BS with first hand evidence died during the Korean war (2/3 of the
population by many estimates).


Austin