JapanifiK

The Boards of Education are toxic cesspools of sex crimes, history lies and the deliberate dumbing down of Japan. They must be disbanded and replaced with an acceptable system that gives the kids a chance!

Archive for the ‘Korea’ Category

The Other Victims of GW Bush’s War Racket

Posted by Guy on September 3, 2008

First you heard about the so-called victims of ‘Friendly Fire,’ now come the victims of ‘Friendly Rape’

Story Highlights

  • Official: “My jaw dropped” after women described rape, sex abuse in military
  • Hearing prompts allegations of “cover-up” after top Defense official doesn’t show
  • Mom of slain pregnant soldier: Victim shouldn’t have burden to “generate evidence”
  • Woman describes rape: “He still comes after me in my dreams”

GW Bush Military’s Comfort Women?

WASHINGTON (CNN) – July 31, 2008 – A congresswoman said Thursday that her “jaw dropped” when military doctors told her that four in 10 women at a veterans hospital reported being sexually assaulted while in the military.

Lance Cpl. Maria Lauterbach said she was raped by a fellow Marine. A Marine has been charged in her death.

A government report indicates that the numbers could be even higher.

Rep. Jane Harman, D-California, spoke before a House panel investigating the way the military handles reports of sexual assault.

She said she recently visited a Veterans Affairs hospital in the Los Angeles area, where women told her horror stories of being raped in the military.

“My jaw dropped when the doctors told me that 41 percent of the female veterans seen there say they were victims of sexual assault while serving in the military,” said Harman, who has long sought better protection of women in the military.

Twenty-nine percent say they were raped during their military service. They spoke of their continued terror, feelings of helplessness and downward spirals many of their lives have taken since.

We have an epidemic here,” she said. “Women serving in the U.S. military today are more likely to be raped by a fellow soldier than killed by enemy fire in Iraq.

As of July 24, 100 women had died in Iraq, according to the Pentagon.

In 2007, Harman said, only 181 out of 2,212 reports of military sexual assaults, or 8 percent, were referred to courts martial. By comparison, she said, 40 percent of those arrested in the civilian world on such charges are prosecuted.

Defense statistics show that military commanders took unspecified action, which can include anything from punishment to dismissal, in an additional 419 cases.

But when it came time for the military to defend itself, the panel was told that the Pentagon’s top official on sexual abuse, Dr. Kaye Whitley, was ordered not to show up despite a subpoena.

Lauterbachs mother, Mary Lauterbach, right, says her daughters rape allegation was virtually ignored by the military.

Lauterbach's mother, Mary Lauterbach, right, says her daughter's rape allegation was virtually ignored by the military.

I don’t know what you’re trying to cover up here, but we’re not going to allow it,” Rep. Henry Waxman, D-California, said to the Defense official who relayed the news of Whitley’s no-show. “This is unacceptable.”

Rep. John Tierney, the panel’s chairman and a Democrat from Massachusetts, angrily responded, “these actions by the Defense Department are inexplicable.”

“The Defense Department appears to be willfully and blatantly advising Dr. Whitley not to comply with a duly authorized congressional subpoena,” Tierney said.

An Army official who did testify said the Army takes allegations of sexual abuse extremely seriously.

“Even one sexual assault violates the very essence of what it means to be a soldier, and it’s a betrayal of the Army’s core values,” Lt. Gen. Michael Rochelle said.

The committee also heard from Mary Lauterbach, the mother of Lance Cpl. Maria Lauterbach, a 20-year-old pregnant Marine who was killed in December, allegedly by a fellow Marine.

Mary Lauterbach said her daughter filed a rape claim with the military against Marine Cpl. Cesar Laurean seven months before he was accused of killing her. Video

“I believe that Maria would be alive today if the Marines had provided a more effective system to protect the victims of sexual assault,” she said.

In the months after her daughter filed the rape claim, she said, the military didn’t seem to take her seriously, and the onus was on “Maria to connect the dots.”

“The victim should not have the burden to generate evidence for the command,” Lauterbach told the Subcommittee on National Security and Foreign Affairs. “Maria is dead, but there will be many more victims in the future, I promise you. I’m here to ask you to do what you can to help change how the military treats victims of crime and to ensure the victims receive the support and protection they need and they deserve.”

Another woman, Ingrid Torres, described being raped on a U.S. base in Korea when she worked with the American Red Cross.

“I was raped while I slept,” she said.

I was raped while I slept.

Ingrid Torres said she was attacked on a U.S. base in Korea: "I was raped while I slept."

The man who assaulted her, she said, was a flight director who was found guilty and dismissed from the Air Force.

Fighting back tears, Torres added, “he still comes after me in my dreams.”

The Government Accountability Office released preliminary results from an investigation into sexual assaults in the military and the Coast Guard. The GAO found that the “occurrences of sexual assault may be exceeding the rates being reported.”

At the 14 installations where GAO administered its survey, 103 service members indicated that they had been sexually assaulted within the preceding 12 months. Of these, 52 service members indicated that they did not report the sexual assault,” the GAO said.

The office found that the military and Coast Guard have established policies to address sexual assault but that the implementation of the programs is hampered by an array of factors, including that “most, but not all, commanders support the programs.”

“Left unchecked, these challenges can discourage or prevent some service members from using the programs when needed,” the GAO said.

Tierney said, “what’s at stake here goes to the very core of the values of the military and the nation itself.

“When our sons and daughters put their lives on the line to defend the rest of us, the last thing they should fear is being attacked by one of our own.” (Copyright: the author or news agency. )

Related Links

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Posted in Hiroshima, Korea, okinawa, rape, war | Tagged: , , , , , , , | 4 Comments »

Words of the Day: Stop Japan Aggression!

Posted by Guy on August 29, 2008

Japanese plans for regional supremacy must be thwarted at ANY cost!

Once again, the inherent violence in Japanese culture poses a present and serious threat to the safety of its neighbors and rest of the world. The world community must NOT allow Japan to re-militarize.


Emperor Akihito prepares to greet the crowd on his birthday on Dec. 23, 2004. Photo by Philbert Ono. Originally uploaded by en:User:Photojpn.org

Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts.


Yasukuni Shrine, Tokyo — by en:user:jpatokal

GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts.

Early Shōwa era [From Wikipedia]

Emperor Shōwa dressed as commander of the Imperial General Headquarters

During the first part of the Showa era, according to the Meiji Constitution, the Emperor had the “supreme command of the Army and the Navy” (Article 11). Hirohito was thus legally supreme commander of the Imperial General Headquarters, expanded in 1937 and by which the military decisions were made.

The primary sources such as the “Sugiyama memo”, and the diaries of Fumimaro Konoe and Koichi Kido, describe in detail the many informal meetings the Emperor had with his chiefs of staff and ministers. These documents show that he was kept informed of all military operations and frequently questioned his senior staff and asked for changes.

According to historians Yoshiaki Yoshimi and Seiya Matsuno, Hirohito authorized by specific orders, transmitted by the Chief of staff of the Army such as prince Kan’in or Hajime Sugiyama, the use of chemical weapons against Chinese civilians and soldiers. For example, he authorized the use of toxic gas on 375 separate occasions during the invasion of Wuhan in 1938. [2] Such weapons were also authorized during the invasion of Changde[3].

According to historians Akira Fujiwara and Akira Yamada, Hirohito even made major interventions in some military operations. For example, he pressed Sugiyama four times, on January and February 1942, to increase troop strength and launch attack on Bataan. [4] On August 1943, he scolded Sugiyama who could not stop the American advance on the Solomon Islands and asked him to consider other places to attack. [5].


Soldiers parading before the Showa Emperor Hirohito on Shirayuki

Most of the imperial interventions were made by direct orders such as the crushing of the rebellion during the February 26 Incident. Only in rare moments of special importance, decisions were made in Imperial council. The Imperial government used this special institution to sanction the invasion of China, the Greater East Asia War and to end the war. In 1945, executing the decision approved in Imperial conference, Emperor Showa for the first and last time directly ordered via recorded radio broadcast to all of Japan, as his last role as commander-in-chief, the surrender to United States forces. (Quoted from Wikipedia.)

References

  1. Peter Wetzler, Hirohito and War, University of Hawai’i press, 1998, p.3
  2. Yoshimi and Matsuno, Dokugasusen Kankei Shiryo II, Kaisetsu, 1997, p.25-29, Herbert Bix, Hirohito and the making of modern Japan, 2001, p.361.
  3. Daniel Barenblatt, A plague upon Humanity, HarperCollns, 2004, pp.220-221
  4. Fujiwara, Shōwa tennō no ju-go nen senso, 1991, p.135-138, Yamada, Daigensui Shōwa tennō, 1994, p.180, 181, 185
  5. Herbert Bix, Hirohito and the making of modern Japan, 2001, p.466,citing the Sugiyama memo, p.24
  6. Norimitsu Onishi (October 20, 2007). “A Japanese royal known for talking up a storm“, International Herald Tribune.

Posted in Hiroshima, Japan, Japanese, Korea, murder, okinawa, politics, rape, war, 日本 | Tagged: , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Time for apology and reparation to Filipino women

Posted by Guy on August 23, 2008

Even when they’re all dead, they won’t go away!

Filipino women seek Japan’s apology for WWII rapes

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — Two dozen elderly Filipino women and their supporters protested outside the Japanese Embassy in Manila on Friday demanding a clear-cut apology and compensation from Tokyo for wartime sexual slavery.

Japan has acknowledged its troops forced women into front-line brothels across Asia during World War II, and its leaders have apologized.

But last year, many surviving “comfort women” were outraged when then-Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said there was no proof the women were coerced.

“The Japanese government should publicly apologize and put in history how the women were abducted and forced to serve in the comfort women system,” said Rechilda Extremadura, head of a group called Lila-Pilipina that has documented 174 cases of Filipino women who were forced into wartime brothels. About 100 women remain alive.

“This is a war crime,” Extremadura said. “But the Japanese government continues to be deaf.”

Former Filipino comfort woman Piedad Nobleza, 86, holds slogans during a demonstration outside the Japanese Embassy in suburban Manila on Friday Aug. 15, 2008. Elderly Filipino women and their supporters demanded Tokyo's clear-cut apology and compensation for wartime sexual slavery by Japanese troops. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila). Source: Inquirer.net. Image may be subject to copyright.

Virginia Villarma, 79, said she was victimized between 1943 and 1944. “We can never forget what they did to us. Until now, it’s been a wound in our chest.”

The Japanese Embassy in Manila refused to immediately answer a request for comment and asked that questions be e-mailed.

Tokyo has generally refused to pay damages to individuals for the war, saying the issue was settled between governments in postwar treaties. Japanese courts have rejected a number of lawsuits brought by former sex slaves.

Related Links:

Posted in Hiroshima, Japan, Japanese, Korea, comfort women, murder, okinawa, politics, rape, the Philippines, war, 日本 | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Since when breaking the law is a crime in Japan?

Posted by Guy on August 23, 2008

Democracy English Japanese Style!

NHK criticized for airing ‘government PR’

THE ASAHI SHIMBUN

Japan Broadcasting Corp. (NHK) concealed the fact that its subsidiaries were paid to organize symposiums that were aired and withheld the identities of sponsors of many of the events, including government ministries.

About 10 such programs, worth up to 30 million yen per symposium, were aired on NHK channels- a public broadcaster.

Japan’s Broadcast Law requires NHK, which is financed from fees paid by viewers, to remain impartial and refrain from showing programs that represent the interests of a specific person or group—including the government. More…

But hey, when you can violate the traffic laws with impunity, why not the Broadcast Law?

Related Links:

Posted in Hiroshima, Japan, Japanese, Korea, murder, okinawa, politics, rape, war, 日本 | Tagged: , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Only when they don’t fear you!

Posted by Guy on August 23, 2008

8 Teens arrested over robberies

THE ASAHI SHIMBUN -

Eight teenagers have been arrested in Ome, western Tokyo, in connection with a string of robberies targeting “people who look weak,” including two mentally disabled people, police said Friday.

The suspects, including six third-year junior high school students, took a total of 93,000 yen in cash as well as cellphones in seven robberies during the six months through June. The six victims were between 13 and 20 years old.

Police quoted the two leaders of the gang as asking, “What is wrong with bullying those people?”(IHT/Asahi: August 23,2008 )

http://www.asahi.com/english/Herald-asahi/TKY200808230055.html

Posted in Hiroshima, Japan, Japanese, Korea, murder, okinawa, politics, rape, war, 日本 | Tagged: , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

A Haiku for Fukuda

Posted by Guy on August 19, 2008

A Haiku dedicated to ailing PM Yasuo Fukuda

frozen “gyoza”
death sting
cover-up Beijing
tintinnabulation of treason!

Posted in Japan, Japanese, Korea, okinawa, politics, war, 日本 | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

People Mean Nothing to Japanese Govt

Posted by Guy on August 9, 2008

In the previous post Houston, We Have a Problem! the author asked two simple questions:

  • Is the Foreign Ministry in Japan a foreign interest entity?

  • What about the welfare of Japanese people?

First Poisonous Gyoza, then Leaky Nuke Sub. What next?

Here’s the answer:

China behind ‘gyoza’ cover-up

THE ASAHI SHIMBUN – August 9, 2008

At Beijing’s request, the Fukuda administration withheld public disclosure of a poisoning outbreak in China involving frozen “gyoza” dumplings, Foreign Minister Masahiko Komura said.

“There’s nothing wrong with what we did,” Komura declared Thursday in an interview with The Asahi Shimbun and other media.

China’s Foreign Ministry informed the Japanese Embassy in Beijing in early July that several Chinese people fell ill in June after eating pesticide-tainted gyoza made by Tianyang Food, according to Komura.

The products had been recalled after Japanese consumers became sick from eating imported Tianyang Food gyoza products last December and in January.

Japanese media only learned this week about the incident in China.

According to Komura, Beijing asked Tokyo not to disclose the matter on grounds an investigation was under way and that revealing the information would hinder it. Chinese officials promised to provide more details as the investigation progressed.

In Japan, the information was shared only among officials at the prime minister’s office, the National Police Agency and the Foreign Ministry.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda told reporters Thursday that he was informed of the poisoning case in China around the time of the July 7-9 Group of Eight summit in Hokkaido.

Fukuda met with Chinese President Hu Jintao on the sidelines of the G-8 summit, and Komura held talks with Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi in Singapore in late July.

Komura said the officials discussed, with the new information in mind, speeding up collaborative police investigation efforts.

Yukio Hatoyama, secretary-general of the main opposition Minshuto (Democratic Party of Japan), criticized the government’s handling of the problem.

“Shouldn’t the government have insisted on disclosing the fact, even if China asked it to cover it up?” he asked at a news conference Thursday.

“The government is so weak-kneed, and from the way it has handled the situation, we can’t call it a government that shares the mind-set of consumers.” (IHT/Asahi: August 9,2008 )

Related Links:

Posted in Hiroshima, Japan, Japanese, Korea, Nagasaki, murder, okinawa, politics, rape, war, 日本 | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Houston, We Have a Problem!

Posted by Guy on August 7, 2008

Is the Foreign Ministry in Japan a foreign interest entity? What about the welfare of Japanese people?

U.S. says submarine leaked radiation in 3 Japan ports

TOKYO (Reuters) – A U.S. nuclear-powered submarine which has steadily been leaking a small amount of radiation for over two years stopped at three Japanese ports, as well as Guam and Pearl Harbor, the United States and Japan said on Thursday.

Japan was notified by the United States last week that the nuclear-powered USS Houston had been leaking water containing a small amount of radiation, but was told at the time that it was unclear when the leak had started.

A statement from the U.S. government on Thursday said the Houston had been leaking radiation from June 2006 to July 2008.

During that time, the Houston docked at the Japanese ports of Yokosuka, 45 km (30 miles) southwest of Tokyo and in the southern island of Okinawa, as well as at Sasebo, 980 km (610 miles) southwest of Tokyo, the U.S. statement said.


The Leaky USS Houston (SSN-713), a Los Angeles-class submarine. They say it is “safe!” USS Houston was launched on 21 March 1981 sponsored by Barbara Bush, wife of then Vice-President of the United States George H. W. Bush. Houston was commissioned on 25 September 1982. (Wikipedia)

Both the U.S. and Japanese governments said the radiation leak was too small to cause harm.

“We do not think that the amount of leakage would have any impact on humans or the environment,” a Japanese foreign ministry official said.

The Houston may have also released a small amount of radioactivity into Pearl Harbor in Hawaii and Guam, the U.S. statement said.

The radiation leak is a fresh blow for Tokyo and Washington, which has been planning to station a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier in Japan, the only nation in the world to have suffered nuclear attacks.

Local residents and civic groups expressed concern over the deployment of the USS George Washington after a fire on the nuclear-powered warship in May. They called for more information about that fire.

Japan said the Houston’s radiation leak would not have any impact on the plan to deploy the George Washington at Yokosuka.

“The United States assures strict procedures and prevention systems for nuclear-powered warships coming into port, and Japan is also checking the radiation levels 24 hours a day,” the foreign ministry official said.

The Houston radiation leak caused a big media stir in Japan last week, with the foreign ministry criticized for failing to disclose the leak promptly to the government and the public. (Reporting by Yoko Kubota; Editing by Paul Tait). Copyright the author or respective news agency.

If radiation leaks were a bad thing, why would USS Houston be leaking for 26 months?

Related Links:

Posted in Hiroshima, Japan, Japanese, Korea, Nagasaki, military, okinawa, politics, war, war racket, 日本 | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Earthquake? Don’t Let Them Know You’re a Foreigner

Posted by Guy on July 24, 2008

Pedestrian Crossings Aren’t a Part of Japanese Culture!

The crossings are there because other countries have them. You are no safer on a pedestrian crossing in Japan than jaywalking on a German Autobahn. The only difference is the German drivers are less insane.

This morning the stakes were much higher than usual. Gacuette crossed the road to leave the waste paper at the designated collection point. On the way back, he raised his arm like the school children are taught to do when crossing the road.

He had only taken the first step when a car coming towards him sped up noticeably, instead of slowing down. It became a “fight or flight” situation; however, as it was a Wednesday morning, the author decided to let the car go first.

Wednesday mornings are never good times for being run over by a car on a pedestrian crossing.

But wait a moment, how could this be? Mustn’t they let you go first when you raise your arm? The author always does. Suddenly it downed on him that he was wearing his gaijin style hat. Still, that was too aggressive, even by the Japanifik standards.

After an Earthquake, Don’t Let Anyone Know You Are a Foreigner!

Later in the afternoon, Gacuette heard about the magnitude 6.8 Tohoku earthquake. He had always wanted to write a few lines about the quakes in Japan, and today was as good time as any. Here’s what he discovered among other information:

[Quoted from Wikipedia]

The 1923 Great Kantō earthquake struck the Kantō plain on the Japanese main island of Honshū at 11:58 on the morning of September 1, 1923. Varied accounts hold that the duration was between 4 and 10 minutes. …
Marunouchi after the Great Kanto Earthquake

The quake was later estimated to have had a magnitude between 7.9 and 8.4 on the Richter scale, with its epicenter deep beneath Izu Ōshima Island in Sagami Bay. It devastated Tokyo, the port city of Yokohama, surrounding prefectures of Chiba, Kanagawa, and Shizuoka, and caused widespread damage throughout the Kantō region. …


A view of the destruction in Yokohama

Casualty estimates range from about 100,000 to 142,000 deaths, the latter figure including approximately 37,000 who went missing and were presumed dead. …

Damage

Because the earthquake struck at lunchtime when many people were using fire to cook food, the damage and the number of fatalities were amplified due to fires which broke out in numerous locations. The fires spread rapidly due to high winds from a nearby typhoon off the coast of Noto Peninsula in Northern Japan and some developed into firestorms which swept across cities. This caused many to die when their feet got stuck in melting tarmac; however, the single greatest loss of life occurred when around 38,000 people packed into an open space at the Rikugun Honjo Hifukusho (Army Parade Ground) in downtown Tokyo were incinerated by a firestorm-induced fire whirl. As the earthquake had caused water mains to break, putting out the fires took nearly two full days until late in the morning of September 3. The fires were the biggest cause of death.


Desolation of Nihonbashi and Kanda seen from the Roof of Dai-ichi Sogo Building, Kyōbashi.

The Imperial Palace caught fire, but the Prince Regent was unharmed. The Emperor and Empress were at Nikko when the earthquake struck the city, and they were never in any danger. …

Over 570,000 homes were destroyed, leaving an estimated 1.9 million homeless. Some evacuees were transported by ship to as far from Kanto as the port of Kobe in Kansai. The damage is estimated to have exceeded one billion U.S. dollars at contemporary values. There were 57 accountable aftershocks.

Metropolitan Police Office burning at Marunouchi, near Hibiya Park, Tokyo.

Post-quake violence

The panic and confusion created by the earthquake led to numerous false rumors spreading both inside and outside of the affected regions. Japanese newspaper articles carried confused stories, variously reporting the total annihilation of Tokyo, the Japanese cabinet getting wiped out, the entire Kantō region sinking into the sea, the destruction of the Izu Islands due to volcanic eruptions, and a monster tsunami reaching as far inland as Akagi (at the northernmost corner of the Kantō Plain, almost halfway across the width of the country).

The Home Ministry declared martial law, and ordered all sectional police chiefs to make maintenance of order and security a top priority. One particularly pernicious rumor was that ethnic Koreans were taking advantage of the disaster, committing arson and robbery, and were in possession of bombs. In the aftermath of the quake, mass murder of Koreans by vigilante mobs occurred in urban Tokyo and Yokohama, fueled by rumors of rebellion and sabotage. Some newspapers reported the rumors as fact, which led to the most deadly rumor of all: that the Koreans were poisoning wells. The numerous fires and cloudy well water (a little-known effect of a big quake) all seemed to confirm the rumors in the eyes of the panic-stricken survivors living among the rubble. Vigilante groups set up roadblocks in cities, towns and villages across the region. Because people with Korean accents pronounced “G” or “J” in the beginning of words differently, 15円 50銭 (jū-go-en, go-jus-sen) and がぎぐげご (gagigugego) were used as shibboleths. Anyone who failed to pronounce them properly was deemed Korean. Some were told to leave, but many were beaten or killed. Moreover, anyone mistakenly identified as Korean, such as Chinese, Okinawans, and Japanese speakers of some regional dialects, suffered the same fate. …

More than 2,000 Koreans were taken in for protection from the mobs across the region, although recent studies have shown that there were incidents where army and police personnel are known to have condoned or even colluded in the vigilante killings in some areas. … In some towns, even police stations into which Koreans had escaped were attacked by mobs, whereas in other neighbourhoods residents took steps to protect them. …

The total death toll from these disturbances is uncertain … Actual estimates range as high as 6,600 … Three hundred and sixty-two Japanese civilians were eventually charged (for murder, attempted murder, manslaughter and assault), though most got off with nominal sentences, and even those who were sent to jail were later released with a general pardon commemorating the marriage of Prince Hirohito. In contrast, the actual number of Koreans who were charged for crimes during this period were 2 for murder, 3 for arson, 6 for robbery and 3 for rape.

All of those charged with the killings were civilians, despite the fact that some military and police units are now known to have taken part in the crimes, prompting accusations of a cover-up. … On top of this violence, Socialists like Hirasawa Keishichi, anarchists like Sakae Osugi and Noe Ito, and Chinese communal leader, Ou Kiten, were abducted and killed by members of the police who claimed the victims had intended to use the crisis as an opportunity to overthrow the Japanese government.

The importance of obtaining and providing accurate information following natural disasters has been emphasized in Japan ever since. Earthquake preparation literature in modern Japan almost always directs citizens to “carry a portable radio and use it to listen to reliable information, and [not to] be misled by rumors” in the event of a big quake. [Charming!]
[End quote.]

Conclusion:

1. [Caveat lector] Not a lot has changed in Japan since 1923.

2. [General case] If you are foreigner living in Japan, don’t let anyone know who you are afetr an earthquake.

3. [Special case] Don’t wear a gaijin hat, or show your face when you walk on a pedestrian crossing after an earthquake!

Posted in Chinese, Japan, Japanese, Korea, Koreans, murder, okinawa, politics, rape, war, 日本 | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments »

Sad times are returning to Japan!

Posted by Guy on July 20, 2008

Frightening the kids off!

The strategy and focus of action seems to have been shifted from that of directly threatening the author [it didn't work] to intimidating him by frightening his kids off. Yesterday, the kids were nearly run over in a parking lot near their school.

Gacuette called the driver a “f*cking evil bastard.” But he just stood there, looking. The psychopath rather enjoyed the feeling of being superior through naked aggression. The scumbag seemed aroused by the notion of being able to harm other people at will—albeit a 3½ and a 6-year-old kids.

Perhaps Gacuette should change his response the next time!

Have you ever wondered what goes through the minds of psychopaths at that moment when they are about to harm other people? Looked through the war photos for some answers and found this one:


One of the saddest pictures of WWII. Aitape, New Guinea. 24 October 1943. A photograph found on the body of a dead Japanese soldier showing NX143314 Sergeant (Sgt) Leonard G. Siffleet of “M” Special Unit, wearing a blindfold and with his arms tied, about to be beheaded with a sword by Yasuno Chikao. The execution was ordered by Vice Admiral Kamada, the commander of the Japanese Naval Forces at Aitape. Sgt Siffleet was captured with Private (Pte) Pattiwahl and Pte Reharin, Ambonese members of the Netherlands East Indies Forces, whilst engaged in reconnaissance behind the Japanese lines. Yasuno Chikao died before the end of the war.

Have never cared much for the Australians because of what they have done to the Aborigines. But that feeling doesn’t come into the picture. What the author sees in the photo is the image of an extreme psychopath about to behead a man because another extreme psychopath who felt superior to both of them ordered the execution!

Yasuno Chikao didn’t make it, and Kamada was apparently executed for his war crimes. But the author saw both of them united as one reappearing as the psychopathic driver who nearly ran over his kids.

Don’t know how much reparations Japan paid to the family of Leonard G. Siffleet and the millions of other victims who were murdered, raped or injured by the Japanese Imperial Army, but I know it wasn’t enough because it didn’t make the filthy ghosts go away. Japan hasn’t learned a lesson, or else Chikao and Kamada wouldn’t have reappeared in the parking lot on Friday.

So, here’s the deal: Let’s make Japan Pay! Let’s demand that Japan pays a million dollars, or more, for each and every victim of the Japanese Imperial Army Aggression to the victims families, friends or governments, as appropriate. Let’s make Japan “cough up” so much money that it would make Chikao and Kamada to disappear forever. Let’s not allow them to come back ever again!

Let’s Stop the sad times from returning to Japan!

Posted in China, Hiroshima, Japan, Japanese, Korea, murder, okinawa, politics, rape, war, xenophobia, 日本 | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »