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#1 |
Radical Centrist
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Cottage of Prussia
Posts: 31,423
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5/11/2006: Memorial at Liaoyuan
![]() This is a Japanese monk, and he is in Liaoyuan, China. He is memorializing some of the actual bones of 10,000 Chinese miners who were brutalized and killed during the Japanese occupation there. In the US, our history lessons go over the Japanese-US war that started in 1941. I can't remember ever hearing about the Japanese war with China that preceded it by four years, and severely weakened Japan's ability to go to full war. Had Japan not been at war with China, not only could it have made the mainland US, but it would have been brutal. The Japanese were such a warlike culture at the time that during the "Rape of Nanking" their army reached China's capital with ease and proceeded to kill about 300,000 civilians and rape 100,000 more. Their main technique was brutalization and they were unfortunately very good at it. To read of these atrocities you wonder how a culture could transform itself, and you wonder how other cultures could even allow it to continue. Now one of the biggest fights between China and Japan are what Japanese history books say about Nanking. I'm hoping it's a case of a culture so embarrassed by its own history that it can't find the words to include in those books. It has to be memorialized, again and again and again, so that you can hope, with education, it never happens again. It continues to happen, yes, but you hope it never happens again in the smarter world. |
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#2 |
Hand-of-Kindness Extender
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 131
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The Sino-Japanese War was a blessing and a curse, like UT said. It is difficult to imagine which is worse, an invasion of China or an invasion of the West Coast. I guess we owe the Chinese, not that that will alter their mindset or ours.
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Abandon all hope, o ye who read my posts |
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#3 |
go ahead, abbrev. it
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Lawrence, KS
Posts: 2,623
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never forget -- Holocaust survivor
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#4 |
Compatriot-at-Arms
Join Date: Jan 2002
Posts: 107
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Wow. This is the first I've heard of this also.
It's amazing that such a small country (in size) could even possibly have a chance at taking something the size of the US or China. Once again, IOTD has just left me without words. Thanks Edit: Oh, and UT, by the way, you might want to mention that there are some disturbing and possibly NSFW pictures on the Wikipedia article. |
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#5 |
Antagonistic Antagonist
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 22
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I read about Japan's war with China in the Tintin graphic novel The Blue Lotus, in which Tintin somehow simultaneously gets caught up in the political crossfire of said war, and runs afoul of an opium trafficking ring. (The poor guy never seemed to run out of bad luck.)
Tintin novels are very cool, if anyone hasn't encountered them. Of course, in the novel, the Chinese are all portrayed as gracious, humble folk; whereas the Japanese are violent, duplicitous, and kinda ugly. I guess that was the political climate of the '40s. |
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#6 |
Professor
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: Houston TX
Posts: 1,857
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My grandfather was in China from about 1902 to 1929 where he served in the Postal Service as a Commissioner. He travelled all over China and Japan as well (my grandmother's mother was Japanese).
I still remember him saying once, "The Japanese are very nice people until they put on a uniform." A whole branch of our family was totally displaced after the invasion of Manchuria but luckily we only lost one in a POW camp. |
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#7 |
Professor
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: Houston TX
Posts: 1,857
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Look here if you have the stomach for it! Doesn't it same strange that we as humans feel we are endowed by God to be the dominant species on earth but no other species kills there own kind the way we do?
http://www.fatherryan.org/holocaust/...apenanking.htm ![]() |
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#8 | |
Slacker
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Brooklyn, NY
Posts: 144
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Quote:
Clearly the killing fields were not all in Cambodia. Last edited by Karenv; 05-11-2006 at 02:16 PM. Reason: show picture |
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#9 |
The future is unwritten
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 71,105
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By the time Japan invaded China they had honed their brutality skills all over Asia.
Korea and Manchuria were training grounds for new troops to practice savagery, away from the homeland, like dragging out the last Queen of Korea, raping her, then dousing her with oil and burning her alive. They treated Americans brutally in Aleutian Islands and Guam, also. This is one of the reasons I bristle when people suggest we should have invaded Japan rather than bomb Hiroshima and Nagasaki. ![]()
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The descent of man ~ Nixon, Friedman, Reagan, Trump. |
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#10 |
erika
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: "the high up north"
Posts: 6,127
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Having lived in China for a total of 4 years, I know my share of Chinese history. It's amazing how savagely the Japanese treated Chinese, this is true. But through history, the Chinese have their own share of brutal treatment both of invaded nations/peoples and of their own. Ever heard of the Great Leap Forward? Greatest famine in human history. Nobody's sure how many millions died, but it was undeniably (well, undeniable to anyone but the Chinese government) more than Hitler and Stalin killed, combined. All caused by the government. And the treatment of the Tibetian and Uigur people, and the destruction of Falun Gong followers, is merciless.
Asia, through history till now, is a brutal, brutal place. Not that Europe isn't... |
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#11 |
Neophyte-in-training
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 3
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“Had Japan not been at war with China, ---- it [could] have made the mainland US”, ????? I always understood that it was a country poor in resources and it's invasion of S.E. Asia and China was also to acquire resources. One might then ask, if they had not acquired the resources elsewhere, could they even have invaded Pearl Harbor? Then again, if someone had assassinated Emperor Hirohito, well, that’s speculation isn’t it? Then again, they likely, not only could have, but also could have succeeded in occupying California, in short order, if they had tried? Hummmm ?
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#12 |
Fuel the body, build the muscle, burn the fat, free the mind
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 27
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What is this smarter world you speak of? Genocide hasn't stopped since, and wasn't invented in the mid-20th century.
"This is one of the reasons I bristle when people suggest we should have invaded Japan rather than bomb Hiroshima and Nagasaki." I would have settled for the conditional surrender offered by Japan.
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There follows an untranslatable play on words with the use of local idiomatic expressions. |
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#13 | |
The future is unwritten
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 71,105
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Quote:
Japan did not offer conditional surrender. They did put out some feelers through unofficial channels, but with their track record of lying right up until minutes before Pearl Harbor, nobody in their right mind would trust them. Their heinous behavior during the previous 30 years dictated unconditional surrender.....nothing less. ![]()
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The descent of man ~ Nixon, Friedman, Reagan, Trump. |
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#14 | |
Guest
Posts: n/a
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Quote:
Were they written in crayon? ![]() |
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#15 | |
I think this line's mostly filler.
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: DC
Posts: 13,575
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Quote:
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_________________ |...............| We live in the nick of times. | Len 17, Wid 3 | |_______________| [pics] |
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