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	<title>Comments on: Seoul Prepares for Liberation Day</title>
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	<description>Korea From North to South</description>
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		<title>By: King Baeksu</title>
		<link>http://rokdrop.com/2008/08/14/seoul-prepares-for-liberation-day/comment-page-1/#comment-196625</link>
		<dc:creator>King Baeksu</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 20 Aug 2008 02:33:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://rokdrop.com/?p=9031#comment-196625</guid>
		<description>Chefantwon, you got here about 28 years too late.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Chefantwon, you got here about 28 years too late.</p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: chefantwon</title>
		<link>http://rokdrop.com/2008/08/14/seoul-prepares-for-liberation-day/comment-page-1/#comment-196558</link>
		<dc:creator>chefantwon</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 19 Aug 2008 21:16:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://rokdrop.com/?p=9031#comment-196558</guid>
		<description>Why don&#039;t the police put the water cannons on high and spray those idiots down the street? 

My word, protestors should be quite easy to take care of. Toss in a few CS canisters, hit them with the high pressure water and gather them up. If they hit you, use the batton as a fulcrum and bar the arm. They will either submit or end up breaking their own arm. Have any arrested pay a fine that increases with each offense. Get arrested more than 2 times and they will stop as their backers will be running out of money.

Just my 2 cents.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Why don&#8217;t the police put the water cannons on high and spray those idiots down the street? </p>
<p>My word, protestors should be quite easy to take care of. Toss in a few CS canisters, hit them with the high pressure water and gather them up. If they hit you, use the batton as a fulcrum and bar the arm. They will either submit or end up breaking their own arm. Have any arrested pay a fine that increases with each offense. Get arrested more than 2 times and they will stop as their backers will be running out of money.</p>
<p>Just my 2 cents.</p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: King Baeksu</title>
		<link>http://rokdrop.com/2008/08/14/seoul-prepares-for-liberation-day/comment-page-1/#comment-196393</link>
		<dc:creator>King Baeksu</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 19 Aug 2008 09:09:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://rokdrop.com/?p=9031#comment-196393</guid>
		<description>Hi Kalani, thanks very much for your in-depth observations. I wonder if the progressive media ever ask Kang Ki-gap how he feels about getting paid to protest by taxpayers, since the liberals have been boycotting the National Assembly for the past three months essentially over this stupid beef issue.

I also wonder if these people are so concerned about mad-cow disease why they are not equally concerned that Korean cattle ranchers also feed their stock animal-parts, making them highly susceptible to BSE? According to what I have read in the Korean media, downer cows here are underreported by Korean cattle ranchers due to fears of what might turn up in tests.

On Aug. 5th I saw a member of the Anti Lee Myung-bak Daum cafe violently kick and hit a haraboji in Chongno-3-ga at about 11pm. He was actually bragging about it and reenacting it to the other members of the cafe a few minutes later.  This past weekend, I saw this same individual -- a short stocky man of about 45 wearing narrow black-frame glasses -- at Chogye-sa laughing and talking with the protest organizers holed up there. Since the Anti Lee Myung-bak cafe spear-headed the candlelight vigils right from the start, I would really like to know who this guy is, since he is no doubt tight with the organizers, but of course I was not about to start asking him questions when I saw him at Chogye-sa given his violent nature. In any case, I wonder how the high-school girls who attended the early rallies feel about being duped by people who like to kick and hit senior citizens, preaching about &quot;democracy&quot; and &quot;freedom of speech&quot; all the while.

Disgusting and utterly pathetic.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi Kalani, thanks very much for your in-depth observations. I wonder if the progressive media ever ask Kang Ki-gap how he feels about getting paid to protest by taxpayers, since the liberals have been boycotting the National Assembly for the past three months essentially over this stupid beef issue.</p>
<p>I also wonder if these people are so concerned about mad-cow disease why they are not equally concerned that Korean cattle ranchers also feed their stock animal-parts, making them highly susceptible to BSE? According to what I have read in the Korean media, downer cows here are underreported by Korean cattle ranchers due to fears of what might turn up in tests.</p>
<p>On Aug. 5th I saw a member of the Anti Lee Myung-bak Daum cafe violently kick and hit a haraboji in Chongno-3-ga at about 11pm. He was actually bragging about it and reenacting it to the other members of the cafe a few minutes later.  This past weekend, I saw this same individual &#8212; a short stocky man of about 45 wearing narrow black-frame glasses &#8212; at Chogye-sa laughing and talking with the protest organizers holed up there. Since the Anti Lee Myung-bak cafe spear-headed the candlelight vigils right from the start, I would really like to know who this guy is, since he is no doubt tight with the organizers, but of course I was not about to start asking him questions when I saw him at Chogye-sa given his violent nature. In any case, I wonder how the high-school girls who attended the early rallies feel about being duped by people who like to kick and hit senior citizens, preaching about &#8220;democracy&#8221; and &#8220;freedom of speech&#8221; all the while.</p>
<p>Disgusting and utterly pathetic.</p>
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		<title>By: Kalani</title>
		<link>http://rokdrop.com/2008/08/14/seoul-prepares-for-liberation-day/comment-page-1/#comment-196288</link>
		<dc:creator>Kalani</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 19 Aug 2008 00:55:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://rokdrop.com/?p=9031#comment-196288</guid>
		<description>Scott, I read that editorial and the first thing I did was laugh.  It claimed no one was read their Miranda rights...geez, when did American laws start being applied in Korea?  Second, unless something has changed since I last woke up, the Korean system is that you are guilty until proven innocent and your only &quot;right&quot; is to not talk during questioning (like the KBS Prez did). I think they can hold you without charges for 48 hours -- but I&#039;m not sure of this point.  Anyway after  that Miranda line, the editorial went down hill.

The Hankyoreh asserts: &quot;After using a water cannon mixed with coloring at the 100th candlelight demonstration August 15, police arrested about 150 people simply because they were covered in the coloring.&quot;  Based upon the video clips of the initial assault to clear the roads, it is easy to dispute this statement.  However, later on it gets a bit cloudier as the police were basically leaving the protestors alone on the sidewalks to chant and heckle the police.  It was only when the protestors tried to move onto the streets again that they were rushed and arrested.  

From watching the internet TV, it was rather obvious that the police did NOT want to arrest anyone.  They simply wanted them to go home and stop bothering them.  However, the kids wanted to play. 

Sometimes, the police would also rush the sidewalks, but only after the protestors started throwing objects at them and were warned to disperse.  The police moved down the streets with shields up over their heads to protect themselves from the flying objects and then rushed the sidewalks.  The people had plenty of time to leave, so those that remained were NOT innocent bystanders.  

The claims that there were plainclothes police in the crowds is true as substantiated by photos of them hauling off protestors in the progressive media. Though I can&#039;t prove it, I believe that the police rushed the sidewalks to extricate their plainclothes policemen who were arresting the protest leaders on the sidewalks.  After these leaders were gone, the protest was effectively over by 10:30 and all the rest was noise.

Some of the video clips of this protest are below that disprove many of the statements of the Hankyoreh article.  Some really foul language from both sides are heard. 

http://www.tagstory.com/video/video_post.aspx?media_id=V000227190

http://www.tagstory.com/video/video_post.aspx?media_id=V000227230

http://www.tagstory.com/video/video_post.aspx?media_id=V000227196

I mentioned before here that the back packs were used but I didn&#039;t see them -- but upon reviewing the video clips I saw what they were doing and the tactics they were using.  

Both water cannons were using a low-pressure fan spray pattern in a high arc to cover the entire street -- but no danger to people.  This was more for intimidation and to disperse the crowds.  There was no liquid tear gas added to the mixture.  The dye consistency seemed to be much thicker than the previous jello orange used last time as seen in a clip of the pools of dye flowing down the street. (NOTE: Later on an EMPTY street, a video clip captured the water cannon used on high-pressure stream, so this capability still exists.)  

The police were not chasing people as their intent was to simply clear the streets. Even Kang Ki-gap had run for cover. Kang Ki-gap was caught in this spray and was seen in the clips running like a wet rat to get off the streets to escape police. 

The Hankyoreh claim that innocent bystanders were hit by the spray is plausible, EXCEPT that in the videos the sidewalks were empty.  Only the people I call the &quot;support elements&quot; (non-violent protestors) had not vacated the sidewalks, but they were backed-up against the storefronts.  The spray did splash the sidewalk areas as seen by photos of parked along the street covered with dye spots. 

As the riot police moved up they confronted the hardliners standing their ground on the streets.  One could see the police with the dye-back packs.  The dye in the backpacks appeared to be a stronger mix than the spray from the water cannons as shown by photographs.  In each squad in the front ranks, there were three police with back packs to mark people, one police photographer to document, and the rest were to haul off the protestors.  There were no batons or shields that I saw as this was a suppression mission to haul away the die-hard protestors.  
  
The hard-core fighters like Hancheongryeon and some of the older guys from the activist NG0 groups (anti-war, unification and anti-WTO farmers) were standing their ground in the streets -- and were simply swarmed over and hauled off.  It was not a solid wall of protestors as seen in the past, but only small separated groups.  The police were using a method to split them into small segments and then surround and arrest them.      

The accusations in the Hankyoreh article about &quot;innocent&quot; bystanders being arrested because of paint is cloudy.
 
In one of the video clips, an old man with paint on him complains that he was an innocent bystander and the real heckler ran away and the police sprayed and caught him.  Possible...but he was being escorted from the STREETS to the sidewalk where he was released.  Innocent bystanders were not in the streets.  Also look at the sly grin he gives at the end, like a kid just getting away with a lie.  (NOTE: This is the same smile that the UDP politician gave after he claimed he was assaulted by the police -- until a video clip from a bystander showed he was lying.) 

In another clip a two young girls are heckling the police as the police are moving away.  After some really foul-mouthed exchanges, the girls taunt the policeman with a dye backpack with threats of violence.  The policeman &quot;come on&quot; and the girl moves in to attack him.  For her effort, she gets a blast of dye in her face and starts screaming like a stuck pig -- suddenly being transformed into a helpless school girl who has been violently attacked.  I wondered when I saw this I wondered if the NGO grousp provide &quot;ham acting&quot; lessons for all their supporters. 

The bottomline is that the Anti-US Beef fiasco is dead.  The activists are floundering to try to find a cause.  Ridiculous accusations are flying everywhere.  The Jogye Order is trying to make this into a religious thing.  But the again -- the protests are dead.  

The progressive media showed Kang Ki-gap at the head of the protest defiantly facing the police water cannons.  But not one showed Kang Ki-gap fleeing the scene in his stained white hanbok like a rat deserting a sinking ship.  This anti-US beef protest is over -- and was actually over the last time.  

The progressives could only muster 2000-3000 for this protest -- and that is from ALL their groups.  The message is pretty clear.  However, the danger is that small group hit-and-run guerilla tactics -- the type that you saw at Namdaemun (protest and run) -- will catch on as they no longer have the large numbers.  Just be glad that the protest season is just about over.

Also I think the water cannon mass spraying will continue for any large gathering -- spray over the head in a rain-shower so no abuse can be claimed.  It really isn&#039;t being used to mark the people for arrests -- the backpack dye is doing a good job in this area.  It is marking the protestors so that when they return to their home communities they are going to be singled out as they walk down the streets.  It is easy to be an ass-hole in a mob, but how does it feel when everyone on the subway is looking at you like a pariah instead of a hero.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Scott, I read that editorial and the first thing I did was laugh.  It claimed no one was read their Miranda rights&#8230;geez, when did American laws start being applied in Korea?  Second, unless something has changed since I last woke up, the Korean system is that you are guilty until proven innocent and your only &#8220;right&#8221; is to not talk during questioning (like the KBS Prez did). I think they can hold you without charges for 48 hours &#8212; but I&#8217;m not sure of this point.  Anyway after  that Miranda line, the editorial went down hill.</p>
<p>The Hankyoreh asserts: &#8220;After using a water cannon mixed with coloring at the 100th candlelight demonstration August 15, police arrested about 150 people simply because they were covered in the coloring.&#8221;  Based upon the video clips of the initial assault to clear the roads, it is easy to dispute this statement.  However, later on it gets a bit cloudier as the police were basically leaving the protestors alone on the sidewalks to chant and heckle the police.  It was only when the protestors tried to move onto the streets again that they were rushed and arrested.  </p>
<p>From watching the internet TV, it was rather obvious that the police did NOT want to arrest anyone.  They simply wanted them to go home and stop bothering them.  However, the kids wanted to play. </p>
<p>Sometimes, the police would also rush the sidewalks, but only after the protestors started throwing objects at them and were warned to disperse.  The police moved down the streets with shields up over their heads to protect themselves from the flying objects and then rushed the sidewalks.  The people had plenty of time to leave, so those that remained were NOT innocent bystanders.  </p>
<p>The claims that there were plainclothes police in the crowds is true as substantiated by photos of them hauling off protestors in the progressive media. Though I can&#8217;t prove it, I believe that the police rushed the sidewalks to extricate their plainclothes policemen who were arresting the protest leaders on the sidewalks.  After these leaders were gone, the protest was effectively over by 10:30 and all the rest was noise.</p>
<p>Some of the video clips of this protest are below that disprove many of the statements of the Hankyoreh article.  Some really foul language from both sides are heard. </p>
<p><a href="http://www.tagstory.com/video/video_post.aspx?media_id=V000227190" rel="nofollow">http://www.tagstory.com/video/video_post.aspx?media_id=V000227190</a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.tagstory.com/video/video_post.aspx?media_id=V000227230" rel="nofollow">http://www.tagstory.com/video/video_post.aspx?media_id=V000227230</a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.tagstory.com/video/video_post.aspx?media_id=V000227196" rel="nofollow">http://www.tagstory.com/video/video_post.aspx?media_id=V000227196</a></p>
<p>I mentioned before here that the back packs were used but I didn&#8217;t see them &#8212; but upon reviewing the video clips I saw what they were doing and the tactics they were using.  </p>
<p>Both water cannons were using a low-pressure fan spray pattern in a high arc to cover the entire street &#8212; but no danger to people.  This was more for intimidation and to disperse the crowds.  There was no liquid tear gas added to the mixture.  The dye consistency seemed to be much thicker than the previous jello orange used last time as seen in a clip of the pools of dye flowing down the street. (NOTE: Later on an EMPTY street, a video clip captured the water cannon used on high-pressure stream, so this capability still exists.)  </p>
<p>The police were not chasing people as their intent was to simply clear the streets. Even Kang Ki-gap had run for cover. Kang Ki-gap was caught in this spray and was seen in the clips running like a wet rat to get off the streets to escape police. </p>
<p>The Hankyoreh claim that innocent bystanders were hit by the spray is plausible, EXCEPT that in the videos the sidewalks were empty.  Only the people I call the &#8220;support elements&#8221; (non-violent protestors) had not vacated the sidewalks, but they were backed-up against the storefronts.  The spray did splash the sidewalk areas as seen by photos of parked along the street covered with dye spots. </p>
<p>As the riot police moved up they confronted the hardliners standing their ground on the streets.  One could see the police with the dye-back packs.  The dye in the backpacks appeared to be a stronger mix than the spray from the water cannons as shown by photographs.  In each squad in the front ranks, there were three police with back packs to mark people, one police photographer to document, and the rest were to haul off the protestors.  There were no batons or shields that I saw as this was a suppression mission to haul away the die-hard protestors.  </p>
<p>The hard-core fighters like Hancheongryeon and some of the older guys from the activist NG0 groups (anti-war, unification and anti-WTO farmers) were standing their ground in the streets &#8212; and were simply swarmed over and hauled off.  It was not a solid wall of protestors as seen in the past, but only small separated groups.  The police were using a method to split them into small segments and then surround and arrest them.      </p>
<p>The accusations in the Hankyoreh article about &#8220;innocent&#8221; bystanders being arrested because of paint is cloudy.</p>
<p>In one of the video clips, an old man with paint on him complains that he was an innocent bystander and the real heckler ran away and the police sprayed and caught him.  Possible&#8230;but he was being escorted from the STREETS to the sidewalk where he was released.  Innocent bystanders were not in the streets.  Also look at the sly grin he gives at the end, like a kid just getting away with a lie.  (NOTE: This is the same smile that the UDP politician gave after he claimed he was assaulted by the police &#8212; until a video clip from a bystander showed he was lying.) </p>
<p>In another clip a two young girls are heckling the police as the police are moving away.  After some really foul-mouthed exchanges, the girls taunt the policeman with a dye backpack with threats of violence.  The policeman &#8220;come on&#8221; and the girl moves in to attack him.  For her effort, she gets a blast of dye in her face and starts screaming like a stuck pig &#8212; suddenly being transformed into a helpless school girl who has been violently attacked.  I wondered when I saw this I wondered if the NGO grousp provide &#8220;ham acting&#8221; lessons for all their supporters. </p>
<p>The bottomline is that the Anti-US Beef fiasco is dead.  The activists are floundering to try to find a cause.  Ridiculous accusations are flying everywhere.  The Jogye Order is trying to make this into a religious thing.  But the again &#8212; the protests are dead.  </p>
<p>The progressive media showed Kang Ki-gap at the head of the protest defiantly facing the police water cannons.  But not one showed Kang Ki-gap fleeing the scene in his stained white hanbok like a rat deserting a sinking ship.  This anti-US beef protest is over &#8212; and was actually over the last time.  </p>
<p>The progressives could only muster 2000-3000 for this protest &#8212; and that is from ALL their groups.  The message is pretty clear.  However, the danger is that small group hit-and-run guerilla tactics &#8212; the type that you saw at Namdaemun (protest and run) &#8212; will catch on as they no longer have the large numbers.  Just be glad that the protest season is just about over.</p>
<p>Also I think the water cannon mass spraying will continue for any large gathering &#8212; spray over the head in a rain-shower so no abuse can be claimed.  It really isn&#8217;t being used to mark the people for arrests &#8212; the backpack dye is doing a good job in this area.  It is marking the protestors so that when they return to their home communities they are going to be singled out as they walk down the streets.  It is easy to be an ass-hole in a mob, but how does it feel when everyone on the subway is looking at you like a pariah instead of a hero.</p>
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		<title>By: King Baeksu</title>
		<link>http://rokdrop.com/2008/08/14/seoul-prepares-for-liberation-day/comment-page-1/#comment-196001</link>
		<dc:creator>King Baeksu</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 18 Aug 2008 07:49:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://rokdrop.com/?p=9031#comment-196001</guid>
		<description>Kalani, is this just more of the usual bleating from the Hani, or does this story have potential traction with the wider public?:

http://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_national/305027.html

I personally did not see the police shooting water beyond the confines of the street so I doubt many ordinary people were hit by the dyed water, especially after police ordered demonstrators to disperse first.

I am also wondering if even if police arrested a few non-demonstrators by accident, did they actually haul them in or just let them go? If they just let them go, what&#039;s the big federal offense?

In any case, I&#039;m just a clueless foreigner, but even for me it was easy to tell who was a demonstrator and who was an ordinary passerby, so I suspect that Hankyoreh is exaggerating once again. It&#039;s amazing how these people are able to drag this thing out seemingly endlessly by hammering the police all the time!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Kalani, is this just more of the usual bleating from the Hani, or does this story have potential traction with the wider public?:</p>
<p><a href="http://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_national/305027.html" rel="nofollow">http://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_national/305027.html</a></p>
<p>I personally did not see the police shooting water beyond the confines of the street so I doubt many ordinary people were hit by the dyed water, especially after police ordered demonstrators to disperse first.</p>
<p>I am also wondering if even if police arrested a few non-demonstrators by accident, did they actually haul them in or just let them go? If they just let them go, what&#8217;s the big federal offense?</p>
<p>In any case, I&#8217;m just a clueless foreigner, but even for me it was easy to tell who was a demonstrator and who was an ordinary passerby, so I suspect that Hankyoreh is exaggerating once again. It&#8217;s amazing how these people are able to drag this thing out seemingly endlessly by hammering the police all the time!</p>
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		<title>By: shattered</title>
		<link>http://rokdrop.com/2008/08/14/seoul-prepares-for-liberation-day/comment-page-1/#comment-195597</link>
		<dc:creator>shattered</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 17 Aug 2008 12:46:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://rokdrop.com/?p=9031#comment-195597</guid>
		<description>The magpie is another symbol of Korea. Most people think that magpies are the same as crows. Well they are in the same family. Weeds and crows. Welcome to Korean.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The magpie is another symbol of Korea. Most people think that magpies are the same as crows. Well they are in the same family. Weeds and crows. Welcome to Korean.</p>
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		<title>By: shattered</title>
		<link>http://rokdrop.com/2008/08/14/seoul-prepares-for-liberation-day/comment-page-1/#comment-195001</link>
		<dc:creator>shattered</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 16 Aug 2008 10:22:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://rokdrop.com/?p=9031#comment-195001</guid>
		<description>&quot;like the type that farmers use to spray insecticides —&quot;

A little bit of irony there, because the Koreans spray the protesters like their &quot;cherished national&quot; weed.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&#8220;like the type that farmers use to spray insecticides —&#8221;</p>
<p>A little bit of irony there, because the Koreans spray the protesters like their &#8220;cherished national&#8221; weed.</p>
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		<title>By: King Baeksu</title>
		<link>http://rokdrop.com/2008/08/14/seoul-prepares-for-liberation-day/comment-page-1/#comment-194988</link>
		<dc:creator>King Baeksu</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 16 Aug 2008 09:37:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://rokdrop.com/?p=9031#comment-194988</guid>
		<description>BTW, my grandfather served in WWII, but none of the demonstrators bothered to say &quot;thanks&quot; to me or my country last night, so I&#039;d just like to say here to anyone who cares: You&#039;re welcome!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BTW, my grandfather served in WWII, but none of the demonstrators bothered to say &#8220;thanks&#8221; to me or my country last night, so I&#8217;d just like to say here to anyone who cares: You&#8217;re welcome!</p>
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		<title>By: King Baeksu</title>
		<link>http://rokdrop.com/2008/08/14/seoul-prepares-for-liberation-day/comment-page-1/#comment-194984</link>
		<dc:creator>King Baeksu</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 16 Aug 2008 09:30:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://rokdrop.com/?p=9031#comment-194984</guid>
		<description>Kalani, that&#039;s a great pic. I noticed that right before the police started the water cannon last night at Namdaemun Market, all the &quot;brave freedom fighters&quot; of Hanch&#039;ongnyon who had lined up in formation at the front ran away into a side alley like little cowards.

You&#039;re never going to overthrow the government if you&#039;re afraid of getting wet. Happy Liberation Day, punks!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Kalani, that&#8217;s a great pic. I noticed that right before the police started the water cannon last night at Namdaemun Market, all the &#8220;brave freedom fighters&#8221; of Hanch&#8217;ongnyon who had lined up in formation at the front ran away into a side alley like little cowards.</p>
<p>You&#8217;re never going to overthrow the government if you&#8217;re afraid of getting wet. Happy Liberation Day, punks!</p>
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		<title>By: GI Korea</title>
		<link>http://rokdrop.com/2008/08/14/seoul-prepares-for-liberation-day/comment-page-1/#comment-194963</link>
		<dc:creator>GI Korea</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 16 Aug 2008 08:18:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://rokdrop.com/?p=9031#comment-194963</guid>
		<description>Sonagi I was just making a joke, however I do think the Taeguki is more appropriate for Liberation Day than the Rose of Sharon.

Kalani that die color is quite a good color to use.  That guy looks like a zombie after getting hit.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Sonagi I was just making a joke, however I do think the Taeguki is more appropriate for Liberation Day than the Rose of Sharon.</p>
<p>Kalani that die color is quite a good color to use.  That guy looks like a zombie after getting hit.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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