Archive for February, 2008
“Soldier” Brags of Torture, Rape & Murder
Posted by Guy on February 27, 2008
Posted in Soldier, empire, murder, rape, torture | Comments Off
Collective Punishment
Posted by Guy on February 19, 2008
Rotten Eggs for Rape
Every time a US marine or military personnel breaks the “rules,” some hotter than *@&% local people play holier than thou [our sons would never rape Ryukyuan women (!) see: A Word for ...] and get out of their depth to mete out “collective punishment” to Caucasian foreigners—judge, jury, executioner and all. Gacuette’s punishment last week was a kg of rotten eggs sold to him by a witch who runs the chicken factory farm up the road!
It doesn’t make a little bit of difference that Gacuette’s little ‘uns eat the same eggs and they could get seriously ill, or that their mother is Japanese. There are no moral values, social ethics, or rules of conduct. The traditional perceptions of good and bad, or right and wrong don’t apply in Japanifik. Some of the folks here are just an emotional, unprofessional, unpleasant bunch of losers!
This is a clarion call for foreigners living in Japan, but much worse news for the Japanese because many more Japanese are working abroad than foreigners living here.
Posted in Collective Punishment, Japan, Ryukyuans, US military, clarion call, foreigners in Japan, losers, moral values, 日本 | Leave a Comment »
PM Fukuda: A “Philosopher!”
Posted by Guy on February 19, 2008
A Confucian, or just an old crocodile crying?
Gacuette is almost certain Prime Minister Fukuda must be a “philosopher!” Fukuda expressed anger over the arrest of a U.S. Marine for alleged trespassing, following the alleged rape of a 14-year-old girl by another Marine.
Fukuda, as if he has been in a “drunken slumber” since 1945, asked ‘what’s happened’ with U.S. Marines?
Well, Einstein, try a tour of duty in [Korea, Vietnam, Afghanistan,] Iraq … Or better still, lest you’ve forgotten the Japanese are still Asians, try this for size:
US soldiers are trained to murder, rape and torture Asians—you’ll excuse them if they blur the line between “friend” and foe every now and then.
Then again, Fukuda couldn’t possibly risk blowing a big hole in the Okinawan economy, could he? Otherwise, why not confine the US military personnel to their bases 24/7 to prevent them harming the people?
It is, of course, politically inexpedient [syn: suicidal] for the “elite” LDP to send the US military packing.
Related reading:
Learning to be a Lean, Mean Killing Machine, By Sgt. MARTIN SMITH, USMC, ret.
Posted in Fukuda, Japanese girls, LDP, US Marine, asians, rape, torture | Leave a Comment »
Japan Loses the War!
Posted by Guy on February 10, 2008
The Whaling War
Once again Japan has lost the war, the Whaling War! And she has lost it in the traditional Sun Tzu style to a single photograph!
The credit must surely go to the carnivorous political dinosaurs that warp the Japanese national psyche for “safekeeping” in the 19th century time dungeons. Without the aid of the old gatekeepers Japan’s defeat is never guaranteed!
Once again they started a saga that Japan couldn’t have finished, thus confirming her position as the bête noire of the league of nations sitting right at the top of the white man’s hate list. The ridicule that permeates the global arena comes as a free extra!
Racism
Most everyone’s image of Japan is the ubiquitous stereotypical Japanese female “student” who leads a promiscuous lifestyle overseas, or “fucks like a rabbit,” in local parlance. [Heaven knows the average promiscuous Japanese girl couldn’t reach anywhere even close to the height of sexual promiscuity claimed by the average promiscuous North American, North, West and Eastern European, Australian, or even the fuzzy Moroccan female!]
When a Fijian thug urinates on a couple of Japanese girls instead of targeting, say, the French passengers sitting across the isle, he is not just insulting two defenseless women flying abroad, he is insulting an entire nation by confirming the racist, anti-Japanese discourse.
Unsurprisingly, Japan’s defeat in the Whaling War must also conform to that image: A naive high school girl in her puberty with her pants around her ankles caught “fornicating” outside the school gates by the local “gendarmes” – the pissant countries of New Zealand and Australia, both with diabolic human rights records and appalling environmental policies to match.
And, of course, they’d want their beer money [or shall we call it carcelage, bakshish, perquisite, douceur, bribe, hush money, blackmail, extortion …] to keep things under wraps!
Japan’s Mortal Sin
Japan’s mortal “sin”results from her people’s fear-induced mental and moral paralysis that prevents them from creating an intelligent, functioning and benevolent political system that could command respect from other nations without having to resort to aggression or militarism.
Continued …
- Japan’s research whaling now facing problems at home
- Political folly
- Carrying the can while other countries whale with impunity [as morally repugnant as whaling is!]
- Moral vacuum
- A ruling class unfit to rule
Posted in Japan, Japan national psyche, Japanese politics, Sun Tzu, japanese women, whaling, 孫子兵法, 日本, 良心 | Leave a Comment »
Canada, Racism, Genocide, and the Bomb
Posted by Guy on February 3, 2008
Could the United States have dropped the A-bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki if Canada had not supplied the uranium?
Canada, Racism, Genocide, and the Bomb
Is Canada any less guilty of the most egregious crime against humanity?
The Legacy of C.D. Howe
by KIM PETERSEN [Originally published in The Dominion, April 5, 2005]
It is fortunate that the use of the bomb should have been upon the Japanese rather than upon the white races of Europe. ~ William Lyon Mackenzie King (uncensored diaries)
Few Canadians know of Canada’s link to Little Boy, the so-christened uranium bomb that exploded over Hiroshima, and Fat Man, the plutonium bomb that devastated Nagasaki. Not only were Japanese citizens expendable in the nuclear holocaust, but the “Canadian Genocide Machine” (see Robert Davis and Mark Zannis, Black Rose, 1973) wreaked long-lasting damage on the Original Peoples in the Arctic.

The first shipment of Uranium is transported on Sahtu
(Great Bear Lake) in 1931. Photo: Public Archives
Sahtu (Great Bear Lake) is the ninth largest lake in the world, famed for its record-size lake trout and Arctic graylings. The Sahtugot’ine (Dene First Nation of Sahtu) have traditionally carried out a subsistence livelihood following their food, mainly caribou and the fish, seasonally around Sahtu. A thriving community of 650 has settled in Deline. Previously called Fort Franklin after an English explorer, Deline means, “Where the water flows,” in the Slavery language.
The uranium mine was developed by the Canadian government to satisfy US needs for the World War II effort to construct an atomic bomb. From 1942 to 1960, the Sahtugot’ine worked at the mine in Port Radium, unknowingly polluting their massive freshwater resource and irradiating themselves. In the early 1960s, the danger became apparent. The Sahtugot’ine workers started to die from lung, colon, and kidney cancers — diseases previously unknown to them.
Cindy Kenny-Gilday is a Sahtugot’ine who has worked on the issue of uranium contamination of lands and people around Sahtu. About the lethal legacy of uranium mining, she stated in 1998:
Deline is practically a village of widows, most of the men who worked as laborers have died of some form of cancer. The widows, who are traditional women were left to raise their families with no breadwinners, supporters. They were left to depend on welfare and other young men for their traditional food source. This village of young men are the first generation of men in the history of Dene on this lake to grow up without guidance from their grandfathers, fathers and uncles. This cultural, economic, spiritual, emotional deprivation impact on the community is a threat to the survival of the one and only tribe on Great Bear Lake.
Declassified documents reveal that the danger from uranium was known during the mining operation. However, neither the Canadian nor US governments saw fit to make known the health dangers. The Sahtugot’ine were sacrificed for an effort that ultimately slaughtered hundreds of thousands.
“In my mind, it’s a war crime that has been well hidden,” said Kenny-Gilday. “We were the first civilian victims of the war.”
Canada and the Bomb
In 1930, Gilbert LaBine discovered uranium near Sahtu, but he shut down the mine at the outbreak of World War II. In 1942, Minister of Munitions and Supply C.D. Howe told LaBine to reopen the mine and instructed him: “Get together the most trustworthy people you can find. The Canadian government will give you whatever money is required. … And for God’s sake don’t even tell your wife what you’re doing.”
Hundreds of Canadian scientists collaborated with allied scientists on the atomic bomb program, for which Canada supplied the uranium and heavy water. Canada also had representation on the Combined Policy Committee that administered the atomic bomb program. Canada’s Howe was among the committee members who approved the use of the bomb on Japan.
On 6 August 1945, B-29 bomber Enola Gay dropped [Little Boy] on Hiroshima, a city of 343,000, killing 100,000 people immediately and leveling the city.

Hiroshima City After the Bomb. Photo source: ibiblio.org
In 1998, six members of the Sahtugot’ine went to Japan to commemorate the victims of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, an atrocity that some Sahtugot’ine unwittingly had a hand in, a role they now regret.
Canadian Genocide Machine
On 22 March 1998, community evidence was presented to the Canadian government alleging “prior knowledge and ongoing complicity in the environmental crime” suffered by the Dene First Nation of Deline. Chief Raymond Tutcho said:
We, the Dene, have been subjected to over 60 years of horrible injustice because of apparent national interests. Our people have paid for this with our lives and the health of our community, lands, and waters. We have set out a ‘Plan for Essential Response and Necessary Redress.’
The six-point plan called for immediate crisis assistance, a comprehensive environmental and social assessment, full public disclosure, clean-ups and monitoring, acknowledgment of government responsibility, and community healing and cultural regeneration.
Tutcho’s call saw the formation of the Canada-Deline Uranium Table (CDUT) in 1999, which was charged in 2002 with putting together an action plan “to describe, scope and recommend studies and activities that, when completed, will provide information necessary to enable the CDUT to make informed decisions about long-term management of Port Radium site and any ongoing health requirement …”
Cathy Mackeinzo, manager of the CDUT, stated that “the community, leaders and community, had agreed to work with the federal government to address joint issues.”
“At that time people thought it was a good process,” she said. “It’s working out to date.”
A final report, due for completion in March 2005, has since been extended to June. Danny Gaudet, chief negotiator of the CDUT confirmed that no special treatment of radiation-afflicted people been undertaken “other than developing assessments of high risk patients.”
In response to the over “60 years of horrible injustice,” without compensation, without health treatment, and without an environmental cleanup, Mackeinzo admitted that there was “a lot of outstanding grieving” in the community and that she was only speaking in her managerial capacity.
The Deline Uranium Team’s November 2004 newsletter suggests frivolity. The newsletter detailed how 15 Deline community members and four CDUT staffers flew over for a tour of the mine, had a cup of tea, enjoyed the view from above, and felt “tired but satisfied” afterwards. While some speak of action, the noxious environmental and health risks linger.
Howe is eponymously memorialized by a right-wing think tank, but his name is also linked to enormous suffering.
FAIR USE NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed for research and educational purposes.
Posted in Canada, Genocide, Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Racism, the Bomb, uranium | Leave a Comment »
