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Why Korean Chinese and South Koreans deeply hate each other?

beijingwalker

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Why Korean Chinese and South Koreans deeply hate each other?

It's common knowledge in both China and Korea that ethnic Korean Chinese and South Koreans whole heartedly hate each other, the blood is not thicker than water

 
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Why Korean Chinese and South Koreans deeply hate each other?

It's common knowledge in both China and Korea that ethnic Korean Chinese and South Koreans whole heartedly hate each other, the blood is not thicker than water



China and NK should push all the South Koreans into the Jeju Island like CCP did with the ROC's kuomintang.
 
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Korean Chinese girl mocks South Korea on Tik Tok


Chinese Korean Chinese family travel in S. Korea
Grandma: I don't know what is worth visiting here in South Korea.
Grand daughter: Because South Korea has lots of delicious food..
Grandma: Any difference from what we have in Yanbian?
Grand daughter: Of course, you see there's cold noodles, and Korean barbecu, and Kimchi ric... well... it really doesn't seem to have any difference...
Mother: Clothes in South Korea are cheaper and nice.
Grandma: Did you factor in the cost for the trip?
Grand daughter: Grandma, why are we waiting in this long line?
Grandma: Here they have some free eggs promotion, we need to recover our travel expense a bit, let's get some free eggs.
Local South Korean woman: (In Korean) What a bummer! Coming across a bunch of Chinese.
Mother: (In Korean) What's wrong with we Chinese?
South Korean woman: ( in English) Ha, You Chinese now can speak Korean.
Mother to daughter: Help me, my English is not good.
Daughter: I don't know how to swear and curse in English.
Grandmother: Let me do it, (In English) " We came to your country with respect and you should treat us as equal with respect, shame on you!"
Daughter to Mother: Wow, don't know Grandma can speak English so well.
Mother: You grandma used to be an English teacher.
Grandmother: Let's leave, I don't want to stay in such an uncivilised country.
Grand daughter: Grandma.. how about the free eggs..
Grandma: I prefer our Chinese eggs.
 
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After a Korean Chinese watching S.Korean TV claiming China's "cultural appropriation" and stealing Korean national dress.

South Korean politicians and activists criticized what they called China's "cultural appropriation", after a woman appearing to be wearing Korean traditional dress appeared among those representing China's different ethnic groups during the opening ceremony of the Beijing Winter Games.
 
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Aren't Korean Chinese originate from NK while SK is SK? I seem to remember seeing a pic somewhere comparing facial features of NK and SK ppl. NK girls look naturally prettier than their SK counterparts! It's the same in Japan the northern girls from Hokaido look much sexier and prettier than their Tokyo or Southern counterparts.

Anyways, I think most of the hate the same as why North Vietnamese hate Southern Vietnamese and vice versa. Judging by the looks of NK and SK girls, I'd dare say they are two separate ethnic groups...
 
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Aren't Korean Chinese originate from NK while SK is SK? I seem to remember seeing a pic somewhere comparing facial features of NK and SK ppl. NK girls look naturally prettier than their SK counterparts! It's the same in Japan the northern girls from Hokaido look much sexier and prettier than their Tokyo or Southern counterparts.

Anyways, I think most of the hate the same as why North Vietnamese hate Southern Vietnamese and vice versa. Judging by the looks of NK and SK girls, I'd dare say they are two separate ethnic groups...
Korean peninsula is very small, I don't think there is much difference, and I have some Korean Chinese friends and almost all of them have families in both North and South Koreas.

Korean Chinese in Yanbian ethnic Korean autonomous region in NE China

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Welcome To Yanbian, China’s Flourishing “Third Korea”

Sometimes called the "third Korea," the Yanbian Autonomous Prefecture plays a particular role in the complicated relationship between China and the two Koreas: This Chinese territory in the Jilin province, a bit larger than Belgium, is home to a significant population of Korean origin whose presence dates back to the Qing dynasty. At the end of the 19th century, the empire decided to regulate the colonies of Korean farmers, hoping to block Russian progress. They now represent a major part of the 2 million Chinese of Korean origin. And thanks to their dynamism, they have turned Yabian into one the most urbanized regions in northeast Chinese. More than half of the 800,000 residents of Yanji, the capital of Yanbian, has a Korean background.

A mini Seoul

Since the policy of openness launched by Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping in 1979, Yanbian has prospered thanks to its relationship with South Korea. Chinese-Korean families started very early sending their relatives to work in the Yanbian's factories and services, and most of those who live in Seoul’s Chinatown are Chinese people of Korean origin. Korea's economic success in the 1990s and the popularity of South Korean culture in China drove the most dynamic of these migrant workers to return to Yanji and open restaurants and businesses, turning the autonomous region into a mini Seoul on Chinese soil. As for the young Chinese-Korean graduates from Yanbian, major Korean companies with established factories on the Chinese Shandong coast aggressively recruit them.

On the other hand, the proximity with North Korea is a source of frustration and false hopes for Yanbian residents: The border is still a dead end, as there is only a handful of much-regulated frontier posts between China and North Korea. The Tumen River, narrow and shallow, remains the crossing point for most North Korean refugees. Dandong, the large Chinese border city to the west, serves as the main logistical corridor for cross-border business.

But Cui Zhehao, a Chinese-Korean economist from the University of Yanbian, says the special North Korean economic zone of Rajin-Sonbong, on the other side of the border, has suffered less from the deterioration of relations between China and North Korea than the rest of the country. "North Koreans are trying to make Rajin-Sonbong adopt a Chinese model and, for that, they depend on the presence of the Chinese and its economic support," he says. "As for China, it needs an access to the ocean. So, on both sides, there are many reasons to cooperate."

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Why Korean Chinese and South Koreans deeply hate each other?

It's common knowledge in both China and Korea that ethnic Korean Chinese and South Koreans whole heartedly hate each other, the blood is not thicker than water

Why Korean Chinese and South Koreans deeply hate each other?
Why Korean Chinese Taiwanese and South Koreans deeply hate everyone?
 
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Changbai Mountain ( Paektu Mountain) is a sacred place for both China and Koreas, Koreans believe this is the birthplace of their nation, in China, it's also believed to be the birthplace of Manchu people.

Changbai mountain is the border mountain between China and North Korea, which is not reachable for South Koreans frome North Korea's side, so millions of South Koreans travel to China to pay worship to their nation's sacred birth site and climb the mountain from the Chinese side.

 
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South Koreans are very xenophabia even against their own flesh and blood, which makes even Koreans not from S.Korea find hard to adpat.

This guys is a Korean Chinese, he and his family, despite becoming South Korean citizens and living most of most of their lives in Korea, their allegiance is still always with China

 
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First Tibetans, and then Uyghurs, probably very soon US and western media would claim that China locks up millions of ethnic Koreans and Mongols in "concentration camps" and post "picture evidence" of the camps, like this one...

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All Chinese ethnic groups are highly identify with China, no matter how hard the west tries to drive a wedge between us, it will never work.
 
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More than 20 years ago, when China was still relatively poor, Koreans had a special sense of superiority towards China, just like a former servant who became richer with a new master and lived a better life than the previous master.

In 1999, I read a book written by Chinese Koreans who settled in Japan. The title of the book was called Ugly Koreans. In this book, it was said that when Koreans called Koreans in China and Koreans in Japan, the nouveau riche mentality of Koreans was mixed with the slave mentality to the extreme.

Koreans refer to Koreans chinese as their dung fellows . The Koreans japanese are called fellow money.

The Koreans in China are poor, and the Koreans call them dung. The Koreans in Japan are rich, and the Koreans call them rich.
 
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