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It's the same B.S. story that Koizumi feeds the media everytime he visits Yasukuni Jinja.Captain Japan wrote:I really wonder how she came to make this conclusion: lose a war and prosperity will be yours.
cstaylor wrote:It's the same B.S. story that Koizumi feeds the media everytime he visits Yasukuni Jinja.
cstaylor wrote:To complete her comment: lose a war to the right country and prosperity will be yours.Captain Japan wrote:lose a war and prosperity will be yours.
Only to FT flaks who waste their time interviewing grandchildren of war criminals. What did he expect her to say? "Yeah, Gramps was a real bastard! The Allies should have hung him twice".Captain Japan wrote:Ah, but she's got cred, man.
I've read recently that far-right parties are on the rise again, especially in the economically depressed former East Germany.vir-jin wrote:I can see some similarities to Germany coming to terms with the past. "unfair" and "but..." and " we didn't personally"
but...
cstaylor wrote:I've read recently that far-right parties are on the rise again, especially in the economically depressed former East Germany.vir-jin wrote:I can see some similarities to Germany coming to terms with the past. "unfair" and "but..." and " we didn't personally"
but...
FT.com Article wrote: Crown Restaurant, Palace Hotel, Tokyo
2 x sliced apple with oyster
2 x haricot bean soup
1 x wrapped fillet of lamb
1 x grilled sea bream
selection of petits fours
1 x coffee
1 x milk tea
Total: Y14,000
GargoyleTS wrote:do they give a recap of every meal they buy for an interview like that?
GargoyleTS wrote:See, this is why being American sucks now. I only expect lies from the media and that I will have to check foreign sources in order to discover where the truth lies.
The press expects too much freedom now I think. They report only what they want to report instead of being a watchdog for the people's freedom.
Jerks.
Mulboyne wrote:
The lunch guest is supposed to be topical. Remember the FT has been running articles for a while now about growing nationalism in Japan so showing Tojo in all her blinkered glory suits their agenda.
Maths Dude wrote:Also, in war truth is always the first casulty. I don't know if that dude was a war criminal, it's all a matter of opinion if you ask me. If he is a war crim, then isn't America? They butchered the indians, and nuked the japanese. Maybe it's better to let the past go hehe.
devicenull wrote:Nope, America won it's wars, or got out of them if they turned unwinnable.
Chie Yamaguchi wrote:Sir, With reference to David Pilling's Lunch with the FT article "Let Japan's sleeping gods of war lie" (FT Weekend, February 19-20): I have no idea how English people react to Yuko Tojo's way of thinking about the second world war. But I think her beliefs are the biggest problem in modern Japan, as so many Japanese young people still think about the second world war in the way she does.
Accordingly, no one feels responsible what we (Japanese) did during the war. But I say that even if Ms Tojo's beliefs are true, we Japanese have somehow to escape this mindset otherwise we will never be happy or a real country. I remembered that Junichiro Koizumi visited Yasukuni shrine last year. At the time Japan was is in the midst of argument about sending the Japanese military to the Iraq war.
I was really surprised at Mr Koizumi visiting the shrine. I think all Japanese are more like ghosts. They are still living in the time of the second world war. I think Japanese politics should have a slogan similar to New Labour's in the UK - Japan is working, do not go back! Sadly, it is impossible to discuss the subject with Japanese people. It is still taboo.
Someone had to hang for 10+ million dead in Asia, and since the Emperor was off the table...Maths Dude wrote:Also, in war truth is always the first casulty. I don't know if that dude was a war criminal, it's all a matter of opinion if you ask me. If he is a war crim, then isn't Amerika? They butchered the indians, and nuked the japanese. Maybe it's better to let the past go hehe.
They lost when they changed tactics. In the early days of the Pacific War, the Japanese relied on offense and surprise to take enemy positions. Their two fatal mistakes were:devicenull wrote:Japan lost and was a shitty military force that relied on savagry.
Sir, With reference to David Pilling's Lunch with the FT article "Let Japan's sleeping gods of war lie" (FT Weekend, February 19-20): I have no idea how English people react to Yuko Tojo's way of thinking about the second world war. But I think her beliefs are the biggest problem in modern Japan, as so many Japanese young people still think about the second world war in the way she does.
Accordingly, no one feels responsible what we (Japanese) did during the war. But I say that even if Ms Tojo's beliefs are true, we Japanese have somehow to escape this mindset otherwise we will never be happy or a real country.
I remembered that Junichiro Koizumi visited Yasukuni shrine last year. At the time Japan was is in the midst of argument about sending the Japanese military to the Iraq war.
I was really surprised at Mr Koizumi visiting the shrine. I think all Japanese are more like ghosts. They are still living in the time of the second world war. I think Japanese politics should have a slogan similar to New Labour's in the UK - Japan is working, do not go back!
Sadly, it is impossible to discuss the subject with Japanese people. It is still taboo.
Chie Yamaguchi, Romford, Essex RM6 4EJ, UK
cstaylor wrote:They lost when they changed tactics. In the early days of the Pacific War, the Japanese relied on offense and surprise to take enemy positions. Their two fatal mistakes were:devicenull wrote:Japan lost and was a shitty military force that relied on savagry.
- Improper security protocols for communication (responding with code words to America's uncoded communications... AF for Midway Island)
- Tying themselves down into fortified positions on captured islands with no real air support
Both of those mistakes came from underestimating the Allied military.
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