In September 2021, the University of Pennsylvania in the United States should jointly launch an investigation of three Korean students with three articles and six academic documents at the joint name of 4,000 students.
Three months later, Penn announced that it had "decided to expel two of the Korean students after the efforts of foreign affairs and academics."
The expulsion of two cheating international students still requires "foreign affairs efforts"?
It turned out that the uncle of the two international students was South Korean Minister of Justice Han Dongxun, who put pressure on Penn through foreign affairs after the incident, and the third international student who was not expelled was the daughter of the South Korean Minister of Justice, on the grounds that "** was not submitted".
After this battle, the keyword "Koreans like plagiarism" soared on the hot search on major platforms, and some people calculated that "95% of college students in South Korea have a history of plagiarism and cheating", and the reputation of "plagiarism republic" has spread far and wide.
How much do Koreans love to plagiarize and cheat?
Let's put it this way, in 2014 alone, South Korea had an Olympic champion and more than 60 experts and scholars were exposed for plagiarizing academic achievements, and in the same year, it was also revealed that Kim Myung-so, a candidate for the Minister of Education, Seoul Tae-yeol, a professor at Seoul National University of Education, ** Chief of Staff, and Moon Dae-sung, a member of the National Assembly, were also exposed.
If I say that Koreans have a habit of plagiarism and cheating, Xi they have been cultivated since childhood, are many people not believing it?
In 2020, ten well-known universities in South Korea were exposed to students cheating collectively, including more than 700 of the 988 candidates from Chinese universities and foreign universities, 91 Inha University medical school students were caught cheating on the spot, and some students at Hanyang University even openly recruited ** gunmen online and so on.
Just imagine, university exams can be cheated with such fanfare, and there will only be more cheating in primary and secondary schools, "95% of Korean college students have cheated experience" Although there is no actual statistics, but the honor of "plagiarizing the Republic" is well deserved in South Korea.
There has been this Xi since childhood, and Koreans who grow up naturally do not feel anything wrong with plagiarism, so the culture of neighboring countries has been "borrowed" by Koreans, especially China, from history and culture to traditional skills, almost copied by South Korea from beginning to end.
Forget it, the Koreans also in turn falsely claim that "China is copying South Korea", which has changed from "copying" to "stealing", and the key is to steal nondescriptly, for example, South Korea's self-proclaimed "world's largest Confucian Museum", the plaques in the two rooms in it are written "Xueerzhai" and "Shi Xi Zhai", I thought that Koreans had read the "Analects", and used "Xuezhi Xi Shizhi" to represent that one room is "Xue Xi room", and the other is "Wen Xi room", and as a result, one is a tea room and one is a storage room.
There is also the Buddhist culture of South Korea, as early as the 90s of the last century, there were Korean scholars who claimed that "Buddhism originated in South Korea and spread to India through China", and several Korean monks were forced to come forward to clarify: "This is not what we said".
You know, the moral monk known as the "ancestor of Korean Buddhism", or in China's Jiangxi Kaiyuan Temple apprenticeship to learn Buddhism (the fifth generation of the sixth ancestor Huineng's grandson), after studying for 37 years back to the Korean Peninsula, it was found that there are 9 Buddhist sects on the peninsula, 8 of which are from Huineng Zaichuan**, after the permission of Kaiyuan Temple, it was merged and renamed the current South Korea's largest Buddhist sect "Jogye Sect". Bulguksa Temple, Korea's No. 1 scenic spot, was also built in imitation of the architectural style of Kaiwon Temple.
However, under the guidance of ulterior motives, Korean Buddhism often makes "deviant" behaviors, such as the "double cultivation religion" founded by Korean monks, a total of 500 underage girls were violated (more than 100 reports were ignored);A number of Korean monks were arrested for gambling (released on the same day);The great monk of South Korea is suspected of falsifying academic qualifications and assaulting female monks (resignation);The thousand-year-old temple was set on fire by a drunken Korean monk (fined 500,000 won), and there were even absurd acts such as a Korean monk who revealed that he "fell in love with an ostrich".
In order to justify the names of these monks, South Korea** also led the filming of a movie "Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter and Spring" that "monks also have seven emotions and six desires" to restore the people's respect for Korean Buddhist culture.
In order to justifiably claim that "the Book of Changes is written by Koreans", South Korea founded the "Book of Changes College" in the 70s of the last century, and specially went to Taiwan, China to learn from Xi and then returned to South Korea to imitate a "fortune-telling street", even the decoration style and the façade of the lamp sign are exactly the same, at the beginning of the claim to "learn from a certain master in Taiwan", just a few years later called itself "Korean orthodoxy".
In South Korea, there were once more than 10,000 practitioners engaged in fortune-telling and divination, and there were hundreds of people who were certified by the "I Ching Institute" training, most of whom were "special talents" funded and trained by the chaebol, and the fees were often calculated in tens of millions of won.
Ordinary people who want to tell fortunes can only go to the "fortune-telling street", most of the practitioners are self-taught or beginners, and even some people in the name of "Chinese masters" in South Korea to swagger and deceive, in 2015, South Korea cracked down on an "unlicensed fortune-telling", these people turned to the name of the divination coffee house and the ** restaurant bar to continue to deceive.
I once asked a history teacher at a Korean university for advice on what is the indigenous religion in Korea, and the answer was "shamanism", which is said to be more than 3,000 years old (2,000 years earlier than the birthplace of shamanism) in Mongolia, and although the number of followers has been greatly reduced, it is still the third largest religion in Korea.
However, the shamans I met in Siberia and Mongolia were completely different from the shamans who knew "divination" in Korea, and I would not comment on the shamanism that I thought might have been "invented" by Koreans.
Interestingly, although South Korea claims to have no "state religion" and nearly half of its citizens claim to have no religious beliefs, South Korea has the largest number of religions in the world, with more than 500 registered religions alone.
A friend once asked me, "Which one impressed you the most when Koreans copied Chinese culture?"”
My answer is: "Wedding". This is a "strange wedding" that I have personally experienced, the kind that has been thundered from beginning to end.
Korean weddings also have a tradition of gift-giving, where relatives and friends of the same generation will put the gift money in a white envelope, wish the newlyweds on the front, and write the name or unit of the giver on the back. However, in Asian countries such as Japan and Mongolia, people deliberately avoid blank paper even if they don't use red envelopes when giving gifts, but South Koreans do this.
What's even more shocking is that the Korean elders will also give the juniors a wreath for the newlyweds, with a big paper flower at the top, two banners hanging on both sides, and chrysanthemums and orange blossoms in the middle.
In the lobby of the hotel, everyone thinks this is a newlywed or what?
I went back and checked on the Internet and found that many flower shops in South Korea only rent out two kinds of wreaths for funerals and happy events, and the only difference is that the two curtains hung are of different colors.
It can also be said that Koreans use the same wreath for marriage and funeral.
The most bizarre thing is that I have seen Koreans open a wreath to deliver wreaths, and I have also seen a Korean athlete put ** on a wreath at the wedding scene.
Such cultural Xi, you say that Koreans are "stealing", and stealing is not classy, saying that they did not steal, and they are so familiar.
Last but not least, Koreans are applying to UNESCO for the "mortise and tenon structure" to be a World Heritage Site, and the materials have been delivered, but UNESCO seems to be reluctant to accept the nomination, citing China's listing of the "mortise and tenon structure" as a "national intangible cultural heritage" at the end of the last century.
Koreans have long known that China unearthed 7,000 years ago at the Hemudu site of the "floor" is the mortise and tenon structure, but still want to secretly declare the world heritage, but also painstakingly make 3D analysis drawings and production processes, it seems that Koreans are either stealing, or on the way to steal, when will it end?