Sorry, your oppa’s problematic : Korean mens’ misogyny talk of the internet (VIDEO)

SEOUL, Sept 1 — With the recent exposé on the latest deepfake porn Telegram chat room in South Korea, more women have been sharing their stories online about Korean men.

The latest has been a screencap of a post where an unnamed Korean man complained that women should have the sense to ‘manage’ their menstruation.

In the screencap, a man posted in Korean: “Honestly, isn’t it disgusting and repulsive Korean women can’t even handle menstrual blood? It’s common sense to go to the bathroom when you need to menstruate. It’s shocking that they end up wearing diapers just because they can’t manage that. Or they should at least train themselves like dogs for bathroom use...Tsk!”

Another man’s comment to that was: “Even dogs can be trained to control their bowel movements, so why can’t p***y manage their menstruation?”

Videos have resurfaced including this one earlier this year where a Korean man played a word association game and when prompted with 'feminist' he replied with 'psychosis' and 'projected object' when prompted with 'woman'.

@scientologist

#4B #mysogyny

original sound - Ashley

Korean women activists have also been actively going online, using Google translate to appeal to international social media users to spread awareness about the sex crimes and perceived government's mishandling of them.

Their activism has led to YouTuber PPKKA having his channel demonetised after users worldwide reported his channel for his content which often demeaned women victims of sexual crimes.

Youtuber PPKKa who downplayed the seriousness of deepfake crimes has been demonetized after activists mass reported his channel and trended hashtags on Xhttps://t.co/SMjEqM2cJf

— Hyunsu Yim (@hyunsuinseoul) August 30, 2024

South Korea already has the lowest birth rate in the world, and it has plummeted further this year with the average number of expected babies for a South Korean woman during her reproductive life at a record low of 0.72 from 0.78 in 2022, according to Statistics Korea.