Twitter🔥 53 trending score

For people who want to know why Namjoon is the target of a huge hate train: ‼️ Namjoon has becom...

By RM’s Moonchildren
Posted February 18, 2026

Watch the Original

Engagement Metrics

309,586
Views
4,558
Likes
119
Comments
1,314
Shares

About the Creator

RM's Moonchildren is a fan account dedicated to supporting RM (Kim Namjoon), the leader of BTS. The account focuses on defending the artist against online harassment and spreading awareness about fan-related controversies, demonstrating commitment to artist advocacy within K-pop fandom communities.

What's This About?

This post analyzes an escalating international online conflict that originated from a DAY6 concert incident in Kuala Lumpur on January 31, 2026, where Korean fansites were caught breaking camera rules[1]. The dispute evolved into a broader racist conflict between Korean and Southeast Asian netizens, with RM becoming an unintended target of dehumanizing content and racist attacks by some SEA users seeking to attack Korean culture[1][2]. The post advocates for stopping the harassment and emphasizes RM's humanity and mental health, positioning him as a victim in a larger geopolitical online feud rather than an active participant.

🔥Why It's Trending

This content is trending because it addresses an unprecedented cross-continental online conflict that has escalated significantly since late January 2026, with involvement from multiple Southeast Asian nations and coverage extending to television news[1]. The post gains urgency from the timing of the controversy's continued spread and the visible impact on high-profile figures like RM, making it relevant to both K-pop fans and those tracking international digital conflicts.

💡Fun Facts

  • 1The controversy originated from a single incident of rule-breaking at a DAY6 concert, but evolved into what sources describe as 'the biggest inter-Asian online controversy of the year'[1]
  • 2The dispute expanded beyond Malaysia to include unprecedented digital solidarity among Indonesia, Thailand, Philippines, Vietnam, and other Southeast Asian nations against discriminatory rhetoric[1]
  • 3Korean netizens made racist comments mocking Southeast Asian countries' agriculture and economic conditions during the conflict[1]
  • 4The conflict spread across multiple platforms including Twitter/X, Threads, and reached mainstream television news coverage in several Southeast Asian countries[2]
  • 5RM became a target despite having no direct involvement in the original incident, selected as a 'convenient, high-profile symbol' rather than for any actual wrongdoing

📚Read More

← Swipe to see more →