Tochak waegu (), or To-wae for short, is a South Korean political insult primarily used by South Korean leftists against South Korean conservatives perceived to be pro-Japanese. Tochak waegu is similar to the terms maegukno () and minjok banyeokja ().
Some South Korean scholars argue that defending the policies of the Empire of Japan or promoting historically revisionist views of Imperial Japan should be criminalized. According to them, such measures would have the same legitimacy as the criminalization of Neo-Nazism and Holocaust denial in European countries.Shin Dong-kyu ed. (2016). The logic of Holocaust Negationism and Comport Women of the Empire of PARK Yuha: Challenge against Collective memory and emotion through unhistorical narratives. Korea Institute of Science and Technology Information. However, no such legislation has been introduced in South Korea to avoid restricting freedom of speech.
In South Korean politics, liberals and leftists tend to characterize conservatives as "pro-Japan," while conservatives often label liberals and leftists as "pro-Pyongyang" (or Jongbuk). Given South Korea’s history under Japanese colonial rule, being "pro-Japan" is often associated with "fascism" () or the far right, while being "pro-Pyongyang" is linked to Juche faction () or the far left. As a result, South Korean politicians, particularly liberals, equate Tochak Waegu with the far right.
A column in the JoongAng Ilbo, a moderate conservative news outlet, criticized the term Tochak Waegu, comparing it to a liberal version of McCarthyism. This view was challenged by Hong Se-hwa in an article for the left-wing news outlet Hankyoreh, where he argued that the term represents "government-led nationalism" () rather than left-wing nationalism. He also criticized right-wing Japanese nationalism and what he described as a "hostile symbiosis" between the two nationalisms.
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