Hot Topics | |
---|---|
puargs wrote:Man, that's like asking me to "seriously consider" the invasion of Vietnam. Yes, I'll totally do that. And while we're at it, here's your reparations money. Now I hate you even more.
puargs wrote:Hehe, seriously though. Sorry if I pissed you off, it wasn't my intent to offend.
Nobukatsu Fujioka wrote:Japan has not dodged any responsibility for peaceful relations. The general public seems to be ignorant of the fact that Japan has faithfully met, negotiated, and fulfilled rigorous demands on all war-time reparations. Negotiations for post-war reparations started in 1951 and continued until 1977. In all, 54 treaties and agreements were concluded.
Coming Soon
puargs wrote:OOOOOOOOOOHHHHH... No, no, no... I meant reparations money from descendants of slave owners to descendants of slaves for "past infractions" in the US.
Reparations
Buraku wrote:If you ask me China-Japan ties should be much closer and would be if it were not for the governments denial of sex slaves, Koizumi visits to a war criminal Shrine and governor Ishihara referring to whites and Asians using horrible racial terms that are only by radical-rightwingers & racists.
h22chen wrote:Another side note: Then wouldn't the Japanese population in turn blame the US for all their problems since during WW2 many Japanese cities were carpet bombed or incinerated.
Mulboyne wrote:h22chen wrote:Another side note: Then wouldn't the Japanese population in turn blame the US for all their problems since during WW2 many Japanese cities were carpet bombed or incinerated.
Kyodo via Yahoo: Hiroshima group to hold 'tribunal' over U.S. A-bombings on Japan
A civic group in Hiroshima launched a committee Sunday to prepare a "people's tribunal" to try a former U.S. president and others involved in the development of and decisions to drop atomic bombs on Japan in 1945.
The committee, made up of about 30 academics, lawyers and civic group members, plans to kick off "the Peoples' Tribunal on the Dropping of Atomic Bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki" in December 2005, following the 60th anniversaries of the bombings on the two Japanese cities, next Aug. 6 and 9 respectively, committee members said.
...Some lawyers will help organize a group of prosecutors and will try the defendants including late U.S. President Harry Truman, Henry Stimson, then secretary of war, other key White House officials who decided to use the atomic bombs, and Gen. Leslie Groves, Robert Oppenheimer and other scientists who were closely involved in developing the bombs, they said. A group of judges will examine the case based on international law and hand down a "ruling" in early 2006.
goldenboy_ge wrote:In some way I agree with ya and in some... I don't buddy.
Would u like to bomb Germany again?
Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 4 guests