<The World We Were About to Make>
<The World We Were About to Make>
Democratic Party candidate Yang Moon-seok received 1.1 billion won in "business loans" in the name of his college student daughter, and bought an apartment with the money is under public criticism.
Anyone who has done business knows how difficult it is to get 1.1 billion loans in the name of a business without collateral.
As a self-employed person, I have been running a convenience store with high sales for 12 years, and the loan I received is about 150 million won. This is the money I borrowed in the process of increasing several convenience stores and overcoming COVID-19. To receive the money, I submitted a business plan to the Korea Credit Guarantee Foundation, prepared a lot of documents, received due diligence, and I don't know how much I went in and out of the bank threshold.
Even if I don't have to mention my case, it's an experience that any ordinary person who has ever received a small loan from a bank has experienced.
But there's another person here.
After all, the Democratic Party of Korea (DPJ) president-turned-nominee Gong Yoo-woon gave 1.18 billion won worth of land to his son who was serving in the military. It happened a day before he was tied to a land trading permit zone. The land has now turned into 3 billion won worth of gold.
It doesn't mean that it's easy to make money, it's good to meet your parents, it's "my stomach hurts." A child cannot choose a parent, and the desire to pass down property to them may depend on the parent. I'm not belittling that. The problem lies in the "means and methods" in which they passed down wealth to their son and daughter.
If candidate Yang Moon-seok and Gong Gong Gong-woon purchased and donated land and buildings through normal procedures, there is no particular problem. The problem is that the people feel angry and deprived because they accumulated and passed down their wealth through extremely expedient and illegal means and methods that are difficult for ordinary people to access.
In addition, when he raised his voice in a red-hot manner, saying, "Who did I harm by taking out a loan?" the public sentiment was seething like a furnace.
DEAR LOUISIANA: If you dare, your 1.1 billion loans certainly hurt others. You robbed businessmen of their fair share of opportunity who truly should have taken out a "business loan." Someone would have gone out of business, someone would have gone bankrupt. Some would have been left in tears while your family was screaming, "You've benefited from your father's well-being."
This is where I feel deja vu. A professor-turned-justice minister who raised his head stiffly, asking, "Did you cause any harm to anyone by manipulating my daughter's entrance exam documents?" A hypocrite who will make history by creating a political party with his name on it even after being sentenced to prison.
The Democratic Party is often referred to as "progress." People's power is often referred to as "conservative." I can't agree with either of them, but what I can't agree with is that the Democratic Party refers to itself as progressive. It's an insult to progress and ridicule.
The so-called 86th generation of the Democratic Party's old activist groups are now just a community of economic interests. Where can we find any signs of progress in their ideology and life.
"We're still better than the conservatives," he said, only to be the "old generation" who should clean up with the conservatives, excusing themselves and defending themselves against various crimes with a sense of superiority. They are just hypocrites who pretend to be just in the world.
There is a senior who runs a sushi restaurant near the convenience store I run. He and his wife had a brilliant career as students in the past. However, they have never put their career ahead of them. They are silently leading their lives. A lot of former activists around us are like that.
I sat face to face with my senior after the sales two days ago.
"Was the world we were about to build, a world that only badges such hypocrites."
I'm clenching my fist and getting on the campaign trail again today.
The world can't be broken like this.