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kurogane wrote:I love the schoolboy logic: the US locked up Jpn-Americans, therefore it was okay to kidnap and rape Korean women.
kuromanko wrote:blahhhhhhh....
Takechanpoo wrote:kuromanko wrote:blahhhhhhh....
my guess is that you like to project your personal pathetic experiences in your childhood onto this issue and the other same kind ones.
if so, i strongly recommend you to clearly distinguish between the two, or between personal and public. that kind of viewpoint misleads your judgement ability. otherwise you will be easily dragged into kimchese "poor victim" performances.
Sixteen academic societies—including the Historical Science Society of Japan—said the country must “squarely” acknowledge responsibility for the system of sex slavery, in a move that could add fuel to Chinese and Korean claims of a growing official amnesia ahead of the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II.
Takechanpoo wrote:... j-soldiers suddenly rushed into a village, kidnapped women there and forced them to be whores, ..
Salty wrote:Takechanpoo wrote:... j-soldiers suddenly rushed into a village, kidnapped women there and forced them to be whores, ..
Good to see that you finally admit this is what happened. Except of course, they were never `whores`, but rather were victims of sexual slavery.
Takechanpoo wrote:Salty wrote:Takechanpoo wrote:... j-soldiers suddenly rushed into a village, kidnapped women there and forced them to be whores, ..
Good to see that you finally admit this is what happened. Except of course, they were never `whores`, but rather were victims of sexual slavery.
one sure thing is that you are a grandson or g-grandson of comfort woman
be proud of it
Salty wrote:
I don`t see any possible shame on their part given that they were victims, and obviously no way that any shame could transfer to a subsequent generation. But I don`t see any possible honor on your part - denying what your parents’ generation did. Sick, really.
kurogane wrote:Yeah, I've forgotten too, but I did just remember there's an App for that. Seems a touch heavy to ban him, after all.
Takechanpoo wrote:you guys are generous toward this cogliny the piece of scum.
because this french "proud" hikikomori dude is a mirror of you euro-merican gaijin dudes.
so you guys tolerate this dudes bullshits as if you gently stroke a head of your precious baby boy.
Wage Slave wrote:And doesn't even care about Japan's reputation and honour.
Mike Oxlong wrote:Ah well, at least they probably teach evolution in schools here, eh.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:Mike Oxlong wrote:Ah well, at least they probably teach evolution in schools here, eh.
As a young earth creationist I find that very disturbing.
Two former political leaders who made key apologies over Japan's World War II atrocities said Tuesday that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe should not water down their words when he marks the 70th anniversary of the war's end.
Japanese leaders' war anniversary statements have always been closely watched, and this year's is getting extra attention because it marks the 70th anniversary and because Abe is considered a revisionist.
Former Prime Minister Tomiichi Murayama, who authored Japan's landmark 1995 apology marking the 50th anniversary of the end of the war, advised that Abe "honestly spell out" the country's wartime actions to address growing international concern that he may revise history.
Yohei Kono, who as chief Cabinet secretary in 1993 apologized to victims of Japan's wartime military sexual exploitation, said he wondered whether a new statement by Abe is even necessary. He said a statement to mark the 70th anniversary, if issued, should not backpedal from any of the apologies that Abe promised to inherit from nearly a dozen past leaders.
Many right-leaning politicians have picked over semantics, arguing that private-sector brokers, not the Japanese Imperial military, were the main parties that recruited the victims — thereby playing down the overall responsibility of Japanese authorities.
Kono confronted this, saying the vast majority of the females were forced to work at the brothels against their will, and were typically coerced into the activity through deception and human trafficking.
The denials that the women were coerced have “badly damaged the honor of the Japanese people,” Kono told the reporters who packed the main hall of the press club.
Some people “try to deny what is obvious to everybody, or try to play it down by saying (other countries) have done similar things. I have keenly felt the damage such an attitude has done to the honor of the Japanese people,” Kono said.
Wage Slave wrote:Exactly right, highly principled and worthy of great respect. I hope Mr Abe is listening.
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