Tragic. And Disgusting.

A 41-year-old cattle farmer in Hampyeong killed himself after attempting to beat his Filipino wife and three children to death with a farm implement.

And leave it to the Hankyoreh to connect it with US beef imports.

(HT to Western Confucian)

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31 Comments

  1. Gravatar mateomiguel your flag
    Posted May 7, 2008 at 8:49 am | Permalink

    That’s a tragic story. 14 of his cows died last year to some disease, forcing him to sell the remaining 4.

    That also has nothing to do with beef imports.

  2. Gravatar user-81 your flag
    Posted May 7, 2008 at 8:56 am | Permalink

    “Lee was gentle by nature and a sincere man. He might have done this terrible thing after being discouraged by the news of a full reopening of U.S. beef imports.”

    The Hankyoreh is shameless and so is the mayor his town. I can understand a farmer’s suicide being attributed to hardships caused by a sudden economic downturn, but not a murder-suicide.

    His despair may be economic, but it wasn’t the FTA that infected 14 of his 18 cattle to brucellosis.

    There will be other desperate farmers losing their livelihoods, though. It wouldn’t be a bad idea to establish programs to ease them into other products, like organic beef or something.

  3. Posted May 7, 2008 at 8:57 am | Permalink

    It doesn’t necessarily take beef imports to get an ajossi to fall off the deep end…

    http://www.latimes.com/news/lo.....6394.story

    I am confounded as to why economic difficulties would make any man take it on not just himself, but also his family.

  4. Posted May 7, 2008 at 8:59 am | Permalink

    The short answer is to subsidize Korean beef farmers and aid them into alternative types of farming and/or beef markets where people are willing to pay a higher price, like organic beef per # 2.

  5. Gravatar foobat your flag
    Posted May 7, 2008 at 9:01 am | Permalink

    What a pussy.

    Seriously, what a psychotic pussy.

    wtf did he beat his family for?

    And wtf does that have to do with beef imports? It’s not like he had any fracking cows.

    And only a cattle rancher for ten years?

    The hanky is shit.

  6. Posted May 7, 2008 at 9:12 am | Permalink

    Meh. Not as dreadful as some of the stuff Chosun comes up with.

  7. Gravatar cmm your flag
    Posted May 7, 2008 at 10:12 am | Permalink

    Call me insensitive, but the fewer hanwoo farmers that are around, the better. Just too bad he had to lay into his family too. If we could make them all go away, maybe this whole hubbub would die down.

    @4 Instead of subsidizing them, maybe just give them a nice union job at Hyundai when car exports to the USA pick up as a result of the FTA. Synergy.

  8. Gravatar SomeguyinKorea your flag
    Posted May 7, 2008 at 10:24 am | Permalink

    I don’t see the logic.

    Isn’t the real problem about how farmers are being ripped off? The price of Hanwoo at the grocery story has gone up close to 300% since the ban of US beef. How much of that goes to the farmers?

  9. Gravatar Benicio74 your flag
    Posted May 7, 2008 at 10:27 am | Permalink

    Tragic yes!
    Wish guys who want to end it all would stop trying to take their families with them!

    However, I agree that it’s time to stop subsisizing the local beef farmers.
    50 million are paying for drastically over-priced beef in order to subsidize a few thousand farmers.
    #4 has a good idea of instead of the shopping public subsidizing them, the government set up some kind of special program to help them change their farming or tout themselves as a kind of “specialty beef” for those patriots/nationalists who don’t mind paying for it.

  10. Gravatar VJ your flag
    Posted May 7, 2008 at 10:50 am | Permalink

    It is ironic that the ads to the right of the article are to attract teachers to “Dynamic Korea”.
    “We blame you for everything, but please, do yourself a favor and get over here to teach English to our youngsters.”

  11. Gravatar Baek du Boy your flag
    Posted May 7, 2008 at 12:38 pm | Permalink

    Luckily he failed at killing his family. (after failing at farming livestock, and probably failed at school… notice a trend here).

  12. Gravatar Maximus your flag
    Posted May 7, 2008 at 12:52 pm | Permalink

    Soju… As usual… The guy drinks a lot, wants to prove a point on nationalism, ignores everything else (including the “love” — pause for laughing — for his family), and just does it. Good that the family survived. I hope she is smart and move with the kids to some place else.

  13. Posted May 7, 2008 at 1:04 pm | Permalink

    I stubbed my toe last weekend. Hadn’t done that for quite some time.

    I attribute it to the South Korean government’s decision to fully reopen its market to U.S. beef last month.

    Bastards!

  14. Gravatar slim your flag
    Posted May 7, 2008 at 1:21 pm | Permalink

    Teach these guys to flip burgers if they want to stay in beef.

  15. Gravatar Anton your flag
    Posted May 7, 2008 at 4:49 pm | Permalink

    A mountainous country like Korea simply has no business having a cattle industry. Period.

  16. Gravatar Seth Gecko your flag
    Posted May 7, 2008 at 5:28 pm | Permalink

    #14 - I’m sure there are many on ESL forums that can offer their expertise :)

  17. Gravatar Railwaycharm your flag
    Posted May 7, 2008 at 7:57 pm | Permalink

    The saddest part of this story is some people will take the bait.

  18. Gravatar dokdoforever your flag
    Posted May 7, 2008 at 9:11 pm | Permalink

    One difference in Korean suicide ‘culture’ seems to be this practice of the man killing the whole family before killing himself. Last year there was that Korean American guy in LA who killed his wife and kids in his van before killing himself. I’m not Korean, but I guess what goes through these guys heads is something like - ‘my family will be destitute without me as family head to take care of them, therefore I’ll end their suffering by taking them out of their misery now.’ Is this generally right? Of course, the wife and kids probably have a very different idea.

  19. Gravatar Austin your flag
    Posted May 7, 2008 at 9:19 pm | Permalink

    Of course you kill the family before killing yourself. Don’t know any other culture that does it the other way around.

  20. Posted May 7, 2008 at 9:43 pm | Permalink

    dokdoforever — Killing the family isn’t unique to Korea. It’s a common deranged — usually, but not always, male — behavioral response to hopelessness. Look up “Family Destroyer”.

  21. Gravatar jtb-in-texas your flag
    Posted May 7, 2008 at 9:54 pm | Permalink

    One wonders whether binge-drinking, gambling, and adultery played a part in this tragedy… because they are more likely relevant than the FTA…

  22. Gravatar Alejandro Marivosa your flag
    Posted May 7, 2008 at 10:00 pm | Permalink

    The whole farmer mystique (in Korea, Japan and the US) is interesting. The notion (for which taxpayers are prepared to pay a whole lot of money) that somehow these people’s jobs are more important and sacred than anyone else’s.

  23. Gravatar dokdoforever your flag
    Posted May 7, 2008 at 10:21 pm | Permalink

    Most industrialized countries were once farming based economies — and farming affected society’s family structure, traditions and culture. Farmers can draw on that tradition to win support for trade protection and subsidies. And maybe even more important, in the industrialized world they have advantages of smallness in overcoming the collective action problem, via Mancur Olsen’s logic. Notice that farmers successfully receive protection (in the US, Japan, EU, etc) only when they are a very small minority of the population. Recently, Vietnam and Thailand, where agriculture takes a larger share of GDP, adopted trade policies penalizing their own farmers by halting rice exports, which force farmers to sell at a lower domestic prices. And Robert Bates writes about primarily rural African countries in the 60s and 70s which taxed their own agricultural exports. So, the preferences Korean farmers enjoy are really just a sign that the country has joined the ranks of the world’s advanced economies.

  24. Gravatar Granfalloon your flag
    Posted May 7, 2008 at 10:35 pm | Permalink

    Wow. They mentioned the US beef imports twice before they mention the attacks on the family at all. Twice afterwards, too. I’m no Edward R. Murrow, but this seems like some shoddy journalism.

    Or perhaps not. Maybe the Hankyoreh got their intended message through loud and clear. And unencumbered by pesky “facts.”

  25. Gravatar dokdoforever your flag
    Posted May 7, 2008 at 11:11 pm | Permalink

    Well, just talked with a real Korean who explained that this tendency for Korean men committing suicide to try to take the family with them was due to the man’s feeling that he “owned” the other members of the family, that they were a part of him. Women in Korea share similar feelings about ‘owning’ their children and thus may try to kill their kids before committing suicide, but they do not try to kill their husbands before the act. So, looks like it has to do with an authoritarian family structure… which is not confined to Korea, as that sick Austrian guy with the basement dungeon demonstrates.

  26. Posted May 8, 2008 at 12:45 am | Permalink

    Although I agree that a frustrated man taking out his family along w/himself is not a uniquely Korean thing I have to say that two of the most shocking incidents two years ago here in Los Angeles did take place in Korean American families. What people were amazed at was that these men didn’t have a history of violence, there wasn’t a home wrecker involved, they seemed upstanding citizens on the surface, etc. I am not Koreanized enough to even begin to understand what’s going on in such an ajossi’s mind.

    Speaking of your point about Korean women taking their children w/them. There was this case in upstate NY where a Korean American lady put her two kids in the SUV and drove off a cliff. Something about thinking that her husband was cheating on her. She died, but luckily her kids survived. Can’t find the link to that incident yet…

  27. Posted May 8, 2008 at 12:52 am | Permalink

    Found it:

    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06.....mp;emc=rss

  28. Gravatar dogbert your flag
    Posted May 8, 2008 at 2:42 am | Permalink

    It’s hardly a Korean phenomenon.

    What is a Korean phenomenon is the instinct to blame it on outside, preferably foreign, forces.

  29. Gravatar stacked your flag
    Posted May 8, 2008 at 11:18 am | Permalink

    Thats because most of the problems originated from President Roh, except they dont realize it because his fuck ups are usually in the news. Their problems seem to come from nowhere ergo the tendency to put the blame on the outside.

  30. Gravatar stacked your flag
    Posted May 8, 2008 at 11:38 am | Permalink

    *aren’t*

  31. Gravatar Railwaycharm your flag
    Posted May 8, 2008 at 1:00 pm | Permalink

    #24…..You have identified “the bait”

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