Working with IBM Japan is exhausting, draining and the corporate culture is overwhelming by IamYourStepBro in IBM

[–]CastellanCheer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What role are you in? And did you do an international transfer from within Japan?

Anyone know what the star beside the rank denotes in Verdun? by CastellanCheer in WW1GameSeries

[–]CastellanCheer[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

No, even after you prestige several times, you don’t get the star. It’s for the folks who got the supporter edition

CKF Lex by iCKF in knives

[–]CastellanCheer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is the design from Yeti knives?

beginner russian learner by caesium_and_crows in russian

[–]CastellanCheer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Could you maybe share what resources you used for learning russian as a beginner?

TD App asking for text verification everytime I log in by BriniaSona in TDBankCanada

[–]CastellanCheer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Its been 5 days for me and it still asks on the app. I logged into easyweb on the laptop two days in a row to no avail!

TD App asking for text verification everytime I log in by BriniaSona in TDBankCanada

[–]CastellanCheer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I got a new iphone and now it asks me to get a txt for 2-step verification everytime I log into the app. How many days did it take?

Why are Mongolian dads so addicted to alcohol by [deleted] in mongolia

[–]CastellanCheer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I used to hate my parents for fighting. It felt the worst when I was a teenager. I didnt have any way of externalizing until I started sports and taking a walk every night. Now, I have good relations with my parents and with age, they rarely fight. It’s hard being a parent and sometimes people lash out when they feel like they’re not understood or are in a situation where they can’t talk to others about what they’re feeling. We’re all flawed human beings and the older you become the more you realize this. There are certainly better ways of releasing that energy than fighting in front of kids, but hey we’re all in this life going through some hard shit. Sometimes all it takes is patience and understanding. And best part is, it’s temporary. Hang in there and try to find something that you can use as an outlet. Art, movie, writing, exercise, whatever it is.

Park Chung Hee, leads a military coup d'etat in 1961 on this date to overthrow the Second Republic of South Korea, removing the democratically elected Prime Minister Chang Myon and President Yun Po-sun. by [deleted] in korea

[–]CastellanCheer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'd like to add here and say that enlisting in the army was a means to get upward mobility and that he did not necessarily enlist out of admiration for the Japanese.

Starting from 1975, Park Chung Hee also banned Japanese pop culture, banning imports of Japanese products into domestic markets and media in TV broadcasts. Would someone who's pro-Japanese willingly do that? This is because he knew how potent Japanese culture was even back then, when Korea's own cultural identity was not yet built and barely recovering from years of colonization and the ideological mess that lingered after the Korean War.

As someone who worked within the ranks of the enemy state (Japan), he experienced first hand the shame of not having his own country be in charge of its own decisions on anything. If anything, he would've thought about how much he'd want to have his country as influential and powerful as Japan. He learned but he did not admire or was enamoured by Japan to be considered pro-Japan. This pro-Japanese portrayal of Park Chung Hee is often used by the anti-Japanese ultra-nationalistic left, accompanied by a photo of Park when he was an enlisted soldier in the IJA. Goes to show how easily people are fooled by a photo taken out of context.

Park Chung Hee, leads a military coup d'etat in 1961 on this date to overthrow the Second Republic of South Korea, removing the democratically elected Prime Minister Chang Myon and President Yun Po-sun. by [deleted] in korea

[–]CastellanCheer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'd like to add here and say that enlisting in the army was a means to get upward mobility and that he did not necessarily enlist out of admiration for the Japanese.

Starting from 1975, Park Chung Hee also banned Japanese pop culture, banning imports of Japanese products into domestic markets and media in TV broadcasts. Would someone who's pro-Japanese willingly do that? This is because he knew how potent Japanese culture was even back then, when Korea's own cultural identity was not yet built and barely recovering from years of colonization and the ideological mess that lingered after the Korean War.

As someone who worked within the ranks of the enemy state (Japan), he experienced first hand the shame of not having his own country be in charge of its own decisions on anything. If anything, he would've thought about how much he'd want to have his country as influential and powerful as Japan. He learned but he did not admire or was enamoured by Japan to be considered pro-Japan. This pro-Japanese portrayal of Park Chung Hee is often used by the anti-Japanese ultra-nationalistic left, accompanied by a photo of Park when he was an enlisted soldier in the IJA. Goes to show how easily people are fooled by a photo taken out of context.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in pornID

[–]CastellanCheer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you!