The Politically Incorrect Truth About Japan in World War II Part I

Was Japan responsible for World War II in East Asia/Pacific? Here we take a look at the truth, unpopular though it may be, starting with the September 18/Mukden Incident which prompted the Japanese occupation of Manchuria. What really happened and whether the incident itself really mattered.

Пікірлер: 384

  • @noticemesenpai69
    @noticemesenpai693 жыл бұрын

    Someone needs to make a “The Greatest Story Never Told” for the Japanese

  • @rhysnichols8608

    @rhysnichols8608

    3 жыл бұрын

    I 100% agree I’ve always thought about this....there is quite a lot of revisionism on japan but it’s mostly written in Japanese....but yeah we need both sides of the story

  • @noticemesenpai69

    @noticemesenpai69

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@rhysnichols8608 which is why most Americans don’t know any of this shit

  • @noticemesenpai69

    @noticemesenpai69

    3 жыл бұрын

    @moonshine 2 but yet now that Asians are successful they’re told that they’re closer to white people than black

  • @noticemesenpai69

    @noticemesenpai69

    3 жыл бұрын

    @moonshine 2 China hasn’t been good for blacks, I see Japan with some mixed people though

  • @noticemesenpai69

    @noticemesenpai69

    3 жыл бұрын

    @moonshine 2 Africa and China aren’t on good terms. China looks down on black people

  • @user-co5ri6dp3c
    @user-co5ri6dp3c2 жыл бұрын

    This fact must not be forgotten. The Japanese saved more than 6,000 Jews. In addition, Polish (765 people), India, Indonesia, Myanmar, Cambodia, Malaysia, South Korea. When Japan is defeated, it becomes a Russian or Chinese colony and is sent to Siberia. It is not known in the first place?

  • @PsyBurst
    @PsyBurst6 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your education. from Japan.

  • @PsyBurst

    @PsyBurst

    6 жыл бұрын

    Thank you very much. There are many people who are not good at foreign languages ​​in Japan who receive higher education in their mother tongue and can not concretely concrete. However, there is a record in our country. There are a lot of operators and lobbyists from China and Korea in our country. They are drawn to professors such as university professors and bureaucrats, and there are present conditions that they make textbooks with their reasons. By carefully examining the primary materials and the first-class historical materials of Japanese and Chinese texts, it is clear which one is lying and which is the historical revisionist. For example, there are almost no scholars who refer to "Old Tang Book" (Kutousyo) by China and Korean scholars. Regarding the history of Northeast Asia, you will be able to discover more precise facts by visiting the books of Mr. Okada Hidehiro, Miyawaki Junko, Ezaki Michiro, Mr. Mitsuru Kurayama. I am sorry for my poor English. I made such a comment with the desire to stop slandering injuries to my fathers, including my grandfather. If your eyes pollution has occurred, I was disappointed.

  • @PsyBurst

    @PsyBurst

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Zen Kuroi It's difficult to understand what you want to say. Imagine your shock should be made by facts and records. Can you imagine our shock of being insulted by the forgery of the ancestors?

  • @millabasset1710

    @millabasset1710

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@PsyBurst You guys were the only noble side of WW2. Britain and Russia started WW2, the United States was rationalizing and looking for a reason to get involved. Germany also backstabbing Japan and arming Chinese Nationalist during the late 30s. I will gladly take a 2019 Japanese Empire with GEACPS over the disgusting CCP. You should be proud though, standing up to the United States when no one else would.

  • @PsyBurst

    @PsyBurst

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@millabasset1710 Thank you for your warm reply. The Greater East Asia mutual prosperity zone has already been realized in ASEAN. We Japanese are living with ASEAN people and respecting each other and wishing for mutual prosperity while living together under the rule of fair law. I have heard that the current US government's attitude toward CCP is already consensus among American establishments. The two meetings of Vice President Pence are accepted by people with Japanese culture and intelligence as a sign of the United States' determination. Unfortunately, the current Japanese government has become confused and has not been able to keep pace with the United States. This is because the disturbance is severely caused by internal affairs affected by domestic CCP. Also, the current Japanese people are less aware of Japanese subjects, and there are many people who live like insects with the aim of daily food and the immediate money. Although it was true that the communism was invaded during the Second World War and there was a confusion as it is today, the quality of the Japanese people further deteriorated after the war. Thoughtful Japanese Emperor's subjects continue to act according to the ancient conscience of Japan, but the fact that the Japanese masses are no longer Emperor's subjects, but only mere citizens, makes us desperate and void. It is also true that we are suffering while feeling that. Please forgive me if there is a discrepancy due to language differences. My English is not very good. I think I have rare information and awareness about the current state of Japanese political economy. Of course, I know only what I know. I would appreciate it if you could talk to me again.

  • @millabasset1710

    @millabasset1710

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@PsyBurst Don't worry about bad english, I'm bad at Japanese :). I do have an interests in Japanese culture and the two Asian countries I want to visit before I die are Japan and India. I do know that you guys aren't big on foreigners though. I can't speak for dead people, but the older Japanese people seemed more tolerant of foreigners than people in Japan today, especially with how everything turned out in the Meiji era, both good and bad. When you read the facts, Japan was defending Asia from communism and Western influence. Had Mao been assassinated and Chiang Kai Shek been killed or better yet, reasoned with, the West would never have touched Asia. You guys also have to deal with Chinese and Koreans constantly reminded you of the past when Japan already paid for crimes it didn't commit. I understand everyone had their dirty laundry in WW2, but there is no proof Japan wanted to conquer the world, people in the US and Europe are seeing that now thanks to the internet. People are like that in the US too my friend, everyone is depressed and living paycheck to paycheck. The government treats honest and hard working people like shit and we're accused of being anti-American for questioning our government.

  • @parfum9938
    @parfum99386 жыл бұрын

    Fair and square. That is Bushido. That is Japanese.

  • @yellowlanterncore352

    @yellowlanterncore352

    4 жыл бұрын

    Shame Japan didn't win the Pacific War, the US needed to be knocked down a peg, the US was already too massive in the 40s.

  • @yellowlanterncore352

    @yellowlanterncore352

    4 жыл бұрын

    @On U Funny how America became what they rebelled against. In my opinion were much worse than the British Empire. US went to war with a country that had little to no oil left, it wasn't even a fair fight.

  • @yellowlanterncore352

    @yellowlanterncore352

    4 жыл бұрын

    @On U I'm not an expert on Britain's imperial ending. Are you suggesting the British relinquished their power to the US?

  • @yellowlanterncore352

    @yellowlanterncore352

    4 жыл бұрын

    @On U who did the Rothschilds own in Asia?

  • @yellowlanterncore352

    @yellowlanterncore352

    4 жыл бұрын

    @On U Japan fought an uphill battle, lost before the fight even started :(

  • @pablononescobar
    @pablononescobar10 жыл бұрын

    I tend to think that war between the US and Japan was inevitable--like Rome and Carthage, or Britain and France, two great powers competing for influence in the same area, history is to blame rather than any one country's policies

  • @toshitanaka1550

    @toshitanaka1550

    Жыл бұрын

    If the Communists weren’t involved there wouldn’t be a WWII.

  • @pablononescobar

    @pablononescobar

    Жыл бұрын

    @@toshitanaka1550 can’t say I disagree

  • @tom474e
    @tom474e7 жыл бұрын

    Victors write the history books. Neither Japan or Germany was trying to take over the world. Its impossible to militarily conquer the world anyway. What were they gonna do with it even if the could occupy the entire world?

  • @ChinaFullofLies

    @ChinaFullofLies

    5 жыл бұрын

    "Freedom Betrayed- The Secret History of World War Two and its Aftermath" by Herbert Hoover www.reformationsa.org/index.php/history/363-freedom-betrayed Provoking War in the Pacific Freedom Betrayed indicts Roosevelt for instigating the Pacific war as well: His economic sanctions against Japan and shunning of Japanese peace overtures sparked the Pearl Harbour attack and ultimately led to the U.S. atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki - "an act of unparalleled brutality in all American history."

  • @laenasz

    @laenasz

    5 жыл бұрын

    @Comrade Kabo Being unable to and wanting to are different things.

  • @laenasz

    @laenasz

    5 жыл бұрын

    @Comrade Kabo See, China by that time had a population of the size of their entire home continent, approximately between 1.40 - 1.60 times the population of Europe and many resources not yet exploited. Why would you develop a country that will outproduce you and become a threat? Plus, the ones in charge weren't European nations and its leaders anyways, we, the jews, have always dominated affairs and so did control by that time even what you believe to be a -Successful Communist/Socialist State- which the Soviet Union truly wasn't, and instead a corrupt state capitalism dictatorship, and subsequently, the failure of Mao's China to develop into "Chinese Socialism", which is basically an approach to state capitalism, combining a strong market economy with a strong government. The truth is, you've been fooled, and so every single one of you has, except those bastards that anihilated us in camps.

  • @laenasz

    @laenasz

    5 жыл бұрын

    @Comrade Kabo We've tried a lot of systems, and by far, the most effective one is capitalism. I don't think Communism can ever be achieved, because every attempt to do so by itself will be corrupted and fail. Lenin wasn't a saviour, he was a new Tsar, and so was Stalin, or Trotsky if he had suceeded in a coup. And yes, there were classes and different privileges only certain people could adquire, as the Communist Party Memberships and its rank. Not even Neo-Marxists can agree between themselves what has been a communist state in history. And no, massive famine and a big state wasn't a success for the Chinese... that's why they implemented a competitive and strong capitalism to modernize the nation and raise hundreds of millions from poverty. And also it contradicts itself... it will not provide the workers with freedom, but the opposite. As Smith said, I'm not supposed to pay another citizen's welfare and how is charity even what it is supposed to mean when I'm forced to pay it.

  • @laenasz

    @laenasz

    5 жыл бұрын

    @Comrade Kabo Collapsed, but we're still in the Capitalist Era. The Communists have been killing many more than anyone else, destroying culture and countries.

  • @donfortis1261
    @donfortis12615 жыл бұрын

    Former US president Hebert Hoover wrote in his book “Freedom Betrayed”, completed in 1965, as follows: I first visited Korea in 1909, to advise some Japanese Industrialists on engineering matters. The Korean people at that time were in the most disheartening condition that I had witnessed in any part of Asia. There was little law and order. The masses were underfed, under-clothed, under housed and under equipped. There was no sanitation, and filth and squalor enveloped the whole countryside. The roads were hardly passable, and there were scant communication or educational facilities. Scarcely a tree broke the dismal landscape. Thieves and bandits seemed to be unrestrained.

  • @captainvietnam9941

    @captainvietnam9941

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Schlomo Shekelbergtransgenderstein Pretty sure it's the opposite since Japan annexed Korea in 1910

  • @user-er6oi9jz2n

    @user-er6oi9jz2n

    3 жыл бұрын

    "Origin of Nanjin Massacre's Fake Photos" togetter.com/li/1403743

  • @user-er6oi9jz2n

    @user-er6oi9jz2n

    3 жыл бұрын

    The Population of Korea www.cicred.org/Eng/Publications/pdf/c-c30.pdf The annexation of Korea by Japan in 1910 coincided with the first important turning point in the development and course of the Korean population. Both mortality and fertility have undergone a rapid change ever since. In other words, the Korean population entered the first stage of the demographic transition in the very early colonial years. Population had grown at an increasingly rapid rate during the twenty years 1915-1935, as is clear from Table 1.2. The population was reported as 19,020,00 in 1925 and increased to 25,120,00 in 1944 toward the end of the colonial period. The annual rate of growth more than tripled between 1915-20 and 1930-35.

  • @user-er6oi9jz2n

    @user-er6oi9jz2n

    3 жыл бұрын

    Korea during the annexation whichi American pastors witnessed www.hani.co.kr/arti/culture/culture_general/785161.html Korean couple Sinuiju(신의주), Korea,1937 digitallibrary.usc.edu/cdm/singleitem/collection/p15799coll123/id/8208/rec/27 Portrait of bride and groom, Shingishu, Korea, 1937 digitallibrary.usc.edu/digital/collection/p15799coll123/id/8209/rec/22 Portrait on an elderly Korean woman holding a rosary, Japan, 1937 digitallibrary.usc.edu/digital/collection/p15799coll123/id/10762/rec/5

  • @asianlifter

    @asianlifter

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@user-er6oi9jz2n Thank you

  • @MrKenichi22
    @MrKenichi2210 жыл бұрын

    If one wants to be Liberal with World War II's start date, it wouldn't be 1931, rather 1921. That was when the Polish Dictatorship started a war with the USSR. The League of Nations promised to the works that war would be prevented. By allowing this war, it cheapened the promise of the League. As it didn't extend to Communists, later Empires were excluded. By letting Poland be aggressive to the USSR, they never took world peace seriously.

  • @MadMonarchist
    @MadMonarchist10 жыл бұрын

    Part II on the Marco Polo Bridge / China Incident: kzread.info/dash/bejne/gGSruq2fftOxeKQ.html

  • @donmartini112

    @donmartini112

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Mad Monarchist hey Mad, what's the politically incorrect truth about the Amercian Revolution?

  • @morfeusaquino4695

    @morfeusaquino4695

    8 жыл бұрын

    America hated the English monarchy

  • @donmartini112

    @donmartini112

    8 жыл бұрын

    Imperador Morfeus bravo, you must be very smart. i'm just wondering what he thinks about his own country. is it bad, wrong, founded on lies? is he anti-american?

  • @morfeusaquino4695

    @morfeusaquino4695

    8 жыл бұрын

    Мαяէїи No, he only tell the truth about a topic, only him knows about it

  • @KeithTKO
    @KeithTKO7 жыл бұрын

    I see some people have hard time taking in the truth.

  • @joemctaggart3920

    @joemctaggart3920

    5 жыл бұрын

    I find it good some background to japans war is coming out it casts a new light on things

  • @drthrottle
    @drthrottle4 жыл бұрын

    You can also reference that Sun Yat Sen also referred to sending the Machu back to their homeland...and yes, it was legal right for PuYi to invite Japan in to help him, and not too different from when France helped USA in revolutionary war, or Russia helped US in Civil War from threat of European powers.

  • @drthrottle

    @drthrottle

    4 жыл бұрын

    B Mu agree he was too young, but there was a lot of internal intrigue and conspiracy going on, including with the general/would be emperor as described

  • @drthrottle

    @drthrottle

    3 жыл бұрын

    @moonshine 2 I would characterize the reality not as slavophobia, but as a combination of unawareness, and also the strongest portion being non-interventionist belief among great majority of Americans. Remember, even in WW2, Roosevelt had to entice and let Japan bomb Pearl Harbor before American public would support entry to WW2. Additionally, doing the Bolshevik take over, there was a major media + elite effort to characterize the communist take-over as "progress and a good thing ~ many reported from that time for the next 2 decades about the USSR being a successful transformation and economy, as false as that was.

  • @drthrottle

    @drthrottle

    3 жыл бұрын

    @moonshine 2 Is true, FDR openly antagonized Japan to attack, and even people such as Eleanor R stated such...the attack was known and actions were taken prior to the attack to make it more severe, such as ordering the fleet mostly held in harbor vs sailing...

  • @MrKenichi22
    @MrKenichi2210 жыл бұрын

    I am glad to here what you had to say. What you said was mostly true. Why China had in interest over Manchuria has to do with Chinese Nationalism, originally the Republican movement in China was Anti Manchurian as they blamed Manchuria for backwardness. By the mid 1920s, the KMT changed their minds after China Fractured (the five color flag dictated that the Han, Manchu, Mongolian, Tibetan, and Xinxangese aka Uighur, were all Chinese). That Manchuria was Chinese. The Manchurian establishment didn't want re-unification with China, but the Dictator of Manchuria did. So it was Manchuria and Japan who worked together, because by 1929 Japan was convinced the KMT was allied with the USSR. The world didn't want the USSR to take over Asia, Japan was convinced Stalin was using Communism, like the Catholics years earlier, to take over the world. If the communist got Manchuria, then Korea (back then a colony) was next. And the reds would have the dagger aimed at the heart of Japan in their hands. This is what I found on the issue in brief.

  • @MadMonarchist

    @MadMonarchist

    10 жыл бұрын

    The KMT had been more or less allied with the Soviets under Sun Yat-Sen and they got most of their support from the USSR early on before Chiang Kai-shek started to wipe them out. And Japan had every reason to be worried about the USSR. They had taken over Mongolia in 1921, invaded Xinjiang in 1934 and were infiltrating numerous countries (east and west) with revolutionary agents. The defeat of Japan in World War II set the communists free in East Asia to establish illegitimate and tyrannical regimes across the continent (as some Japanese leaders predicted would happen in 1945).

  • @ProMonarchyGenius
    @ProMonarchyGenius10 жыл бұрын

    Mad Monarchist You speak the truth :D

  • @MadMonarchist

    @MadMonarchist

    10 жыл бұрын

    Thanks

  • @ProMonarchyGenius

    @ProMonarchyGenius

    10 жыл бұрын

    Mad Monarchist Your welcome and keep with the good work of setting the record straight :D

  • @popcult
    @popcult9 жыл бұрын

    Keep up the good work!!!

  • @hitoshisawatheseconded2545
    @hitoshisawatheseconded25457 жыл бұрын

    Japan left the league and invaded china to protect its assets that where vital to keeping Japans economy afloat such as the......... ((The South Manchuria Railway Company (南満洲鉄道株式会社 Minami Manshū Tetsudō Kabushiki-gaisha)), or Mantetsu (満鉄, literally "Manchurian Railway") for short, was a company founded by the Japanese in 1906 and operated within the Japanese-controlled South Manchuria Railway Zone. The Japanese-controlled railway ran from Lüshun Port at the southern tip of the Liaodong Peninsula to Changchun, where it connected to the Russian-controlled portion of the southern Chinese Eastern Railway. The company was often referred to as "Japan's East India Company in China". Japan was in Manchuria legally.....under a treaty negotiated by President Roosevelt From 1916, Mantestu began to spin off a number of subsidiary companies, including Showa Steel Works, Dalian Ceramics, Dalian Oil & Fat, South Manchurian Glass, as well as flour mills, sugar mills, electrical power plants, shale oil plants and chemical plants. And there are multiplu fake photos that where made during the war and after as anti Japanese propaganda and are easly visible when one knows the dress code and ranks and issued equipment given to ranks in the Japanese Imperial Army. Until 1925, the company also operated the Korean railway system. Company assets rose from 163 million yen in 1908 to over a billion yen in 1930. Mantetsu was by far the largest corporation in Japan, and also its most profitable, averaging rates of return from 25-45 percent per year. During the 1920s, Mantetsu provided for over a quarter of the Japanese government's tax revenues. Over 75% of Mantetsu's income was generated by its freight business, with the key to profitability coming from soybean exports, both to Japan proper and to Europe. Soybean production increased exponentially with increasing demand for soy oil, and for soy meal for use in fertilizer and animal feed. By 1927, half of the world's supply of soybean was from Manchuria and the efforts by Mantetsu to expand production and to ship to export ports was a classic example of an extractive colonial economy dependent on a single product. Mantetsu was also charged with a government-like role in managing the rail transportation system after the formation of Manchukuo in 1932. By 1938, Mantetsu had 72 subsidiary companies, development projects in 25 urban areas and carried 17,515,000 passengers per year. Between 1930-1940, the Japanese population of Manchukuo rose by 800,000 making ethnic Japanese the majority in many of the towns and cities served by Mantetsu. Mantetsu prided itself on state-of-the-art urban planning, with modern sewer systems, public parks, and creative modern architecture far in advance of what could be found in Japan itself. Yet this was not enough for Japans over whelming and growing economy that needed more. DR had, as early as October 1940, decided that the U.S. would be involved in a war with Japan.....On October 8, 1940, Admiral James O. Richardson, ( the foremost U.S. expert on war with Japan)Commander in Chief, Pacific Fleet, provoked a confrontation with Roosevelt by repeating his earlier arguments to Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Harold R. Stark and Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox that Pearl Harbor was the wrong place for his ships. Roosevelt believed relocating the fleet to Hawaii would exert a "restraining influence" on Japan. Richardson asked the President if the United States was going to war. Roosevelt's view was: At least as early as October 8, 1940, ...affairs had reached such a state that the United States would become involved in a war with Japan. In their final proposal on November 20, 1941, Japan offered to withdraw its forces from southern Indochina and not to launch any attacks in southeast Asia provided that the U.S., Britain, and the ceased aiding China and lifted their sanctions against Japan. The American counterproposal of November 26 (the Hull note) required Japan to evacuate all of China, without conditions, and to conclude non-aggression pacts with Pacific powers.

  • @rhysnichols8608

    @rhysnichols8608

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Anonymous Panacea No they needed the resources. 75% of their oil was cut off

  • @asianlifter

    @asianlifter

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Anonymous Panacea no

  • @BUNDO-140

    @BUNDO-140

    2 жыл бұрын

    Is there any literature on these matters that you recommend?

  • @thatsaboat2882
    @thatsaboat28823 жыл бұрын

    You know it’s a great video when the like and dislike buttons are disabled

  • @mr.rightside9080
    @mr.rightside90807 жыл бұрын

    So great to find actual information with regards to all the monarchies of the world. I have been devouring each of the Mad Monarchists' "Politically Incorrect Truth" videos. Wow, just wow! I also forwarded the recent French Nationalism article that the Mad Monarchist wrote to some like minded friends. This content is gold!

  • @M0nARchiSM
    @M0nARchiSM10 жыл бұрын

    I could go on at length about the Mukden incident, but it would be pointless due to the simple reasoning you gave in this video. Regardless of who started this conflict, the fact of the matter is irrefutable: Manchuria was Japan's, and the Han Chinese had no right to dispute this claim. The Tokyo government was not directly responsible for the incident, nor was the imperial family. There were, however, many prescient Japanese who feared that China would fall to Communism and that a Sino-Soviet front would encircle Japan. They believed this threat had to be dealt with, one way or another. I cannot wait until you broach the topic of American involvement. Nothing gets my blood boiling more than how shamefully Prince Konoe and other Japanese diplomats were treated by Hull and his dogs. They demanded the impossible from the Japanese and imposed crippling sanctions (the oil embargo, the freezing of Japan's assets, etc.) when they didn't get their way. America was a mockery of a neutral power.

  • @MadMonarchist

    @MadMonarchist

    10 жыл бұрын

    I didn't go into it in that detail but you are correct. Prince Konoye was desperate to maintain peace and the US Ambassador basically said as much but FDR refused to listen, refused to negotiate, refused to even talk to the Prime Minister. And, the American people didn't want war any more than Japan did, the government just had other ideas.

  • @1000rogueleader

    @1000rogueleader

    7 жыл бұрын

    Manchuria was not Japan's The Japanese used a false flag incident and an unwarrented invasion to conquer Manchuria and turn it into a Japanese puppet state. Chinese rights to the territory go back for centuries, and the Japanese had no rights to dispute that claim

  • @1000rogueleader

    @1000rogueleader

    5 жыл бұрын

    @Kahu Zen What in the world are you going on about? The Native Americans had nothing to do with the Japanese invasion. Manchuria was already internationally recognized Chinese territory. And yes the Chinese had a concept of owning land and a nationalistic connection to it, unlike native american tribes. The Manchu government wasn't even in power at the time, and there were native Chinese governments both before and after its existence.

  • @1000rogueleader

    @1000rogueleader

    5 жыл бұрын

    @Kahu Zen Ok, but none of that has anything to do with what I said.

  • @1000rogueleader

    @1000rogueleader

    5 жыл бұрын

    @Kahu Zen Dude, what in the fuck are you talking about? The British were the ones who primarily sold the Chinese opium and flooded their markets with it. But hat has nothing to do with Japanese invasion of China (who also flooded China with opium to try to destabilize the country).

  • @dixztube
    @dixztube2 жыл бұрын

    ive actually enjoyed listening to these some have made me laugh cause my own perspectives but its good content

  • @redwhitedude
    @redwhitedude9 жыл бұрын

    Also how do the 21 demands fit into this?

  • @iosefamr8289
    @iosefamr82892 жыл бұрын

    Absolutely excellent presentation, the narrator seems to have very high knowledge of history, thank you for spreading the truth!

  • @norwegianboyee
    @norwegianboyee7 жыл бұрын

    Can you cite your sources. Why should i believe your version of history if you don't post any sources?

  • @norwegianboyee

    @norwegianboyee

    6 жыл бұрын

    You can claim whatever you want, where's your fucking evidence? Oh wait, am i supposed to just believe your half-assed ranting just because you said so? Wow fuck critical thinking, let's all just start blindly listening to you because you must be so smart for not "conforming" to the majority of people that actually would like some proof of whether they are spouting bullshit or not. Oh no, my logic and critical thinking is resisting your simple-minded tactics! Heal my diseased brain PLEASE!!

  • @urban0443

    @urban0443

    Жыл бұрын

    Then research it yourself. He created this video to document what he research but still chose to question him.

  • @shin-ishikiri-no
    @shin-ishikiri-no5 жыл бұрын

    Japan is the way, truth, and light in Asia. Amen.

  • @shin-ishikiri-no

    @shin-ishikiri-no

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Neo Longist101 Correction: Disciples of Weeb

  • @shin-ishikiri-no

    @shin-ishikiri-no

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Satori Pittman Jesus can't touch Brahma, Vishnu, or Shiva for that matter... He doesn't want those hands.

  • @asianlifter

    @asianlifter

    2 жыл бұрын

    What do you think of inter-Asiatic mixing? As in, if a Vietnamese wanted to marry a Filipino, or a Malaysian wanted to marry a Korean? I’m gathering opinions on the matter

  • @HolyknightVader999
    @HolyknightVader9993 жыл бұрын

    Basically, the Emperor wasn't responsible for the war at all. His own generals and admirals dragged the country into the war and refused to surrender when their incompetence and scheming backfired on them and made the country a target by a revenge-hungry United States. Then the nukes got dropped. The Emperor then grew a pair and told the military to stand down and negotiate. If he was in charge this entire time, he would have never attacked the United States at Pearl Harbor, as it was his intention to settle the American problem peacefully so Japan could expand without the Americans getting in the way.

  • @ivankilday7743

    @ivankilday7743

    2 жыл бұрын

    I heard a story of Richard Zorge, a Soviet agent in Tokyo, Japan. Zorge had a very wide network of informants and infiltrators, mostly Japanese citizens, reaching very high levels of the Japanese government and military. Obviously, as a spy, Zorge was working for the USSR, pretending to be a supporter of Germany (at that time of history). In the beginning of 1941 Germany finally understood that all these Soviet "peace agreements" are fake, and Stalin was actually planning to hit Germany from behind and occupy the entire Europe. The Soviet Army was much stronger than German troops. As a little example, the Red Army had over 5,000 "KV-1" heavy tanks alone (in 1939 and in 1941), when first German heavy tanks were "Tiger" (starting from 1943 only). Germans didn't have any heavy tanks in the beginning of the war! The entire Red Army was stronger than all Western armies combined. But the USSR had no active threats at that time, none. Also the USSR was not building (maintaining) any defensive fortifications. So, Stalin was not preparing for a defense, why to build such a giant army though??? Germans understood it and preemptively attacked first, basically it was a leap of faith from them. Theoretically, Germany could defeat Soviets if not the Western front (GB, USA). Obviously, Germany could defeat Soviets in WW2 with the American help, if America would want to defeat Communism. But Franklin Roosevelt (and wealthy people behind him) had different opinion on that matter, and much closer relations with Joseph Stalin than most modern people know (find about nuclear bomb technology transfer from Roosevelt to Stalin in 1943)... So, about Richard Zorge (Stalin's spy in Japan). Zorge found (from the German embassy in Tokyo) about future German plans of an attack against the USSR. Zorge was not only informing Stalin about these German plans, including approximate dates of the attack (that date was changing several times), but also Zorge was trying to influence the Japanese government as well. At the time, Japan was considering to attack Soviet Union too, but from the East. That would be the end for bloody Stalin's regime and his GULAGs and mass executions of the Russian people. But with tricky manipulations, Soviet spy Zorge could persuade some influential and powerful people in Japan, and then Japan (against all logic whatsoever) attacked Pearl Harbor. There is more to that. Franklin Roosevelt _KNEW_ about future Pearl Harbor attack, but he classified that information, which lead to many American casualties (that could be easily prevented if not Roosevelt). Roosevelt needed a reason to bring American people into the war. After Pearl Harbor, with a huge help from American press, American people were persuaded for a revenge. A little known fact, Germany never declared war on America, it was Roosevelt who declared war on Japan... and also war on Germany as well. Imagine, you walk with your friend, then you have an argument with some nasty dude (your friend stands apart), and then this dude attacks both you and your friend (why him too???). Find old newspapers, Roosevelt's war declaration on Germany is there. Even more, when Roosevelt ordered to bomb Hiroshima and Nagasaki, it was reported to Americans that these two places were, quote: "a military base and an industrial sea port, with minimum of civilian casualties" (find radio broadcasts of the time)...But long story short, the guilt for Pearl Harbor is not on Japan, the guilt is on the USSR (and on those wealthy bank owners who were standing behind both Stalin and Roosevelt).

  • @rudeegruenberg9184

    @rudeegruenberg9184

    Жыл бұрын

    true very true

  • @Konmonachi

    @Konmonachi

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah exactly

  • @dogmatim7182
    @dogmatim71825 жыл бұрын

    And the same photo was also used in other anti-Japan propaganda movie by Jew-American, Frank Russell Capra. Capra was invited by George Catlett Marshall (Chief of Staff of the United States Army) directly and made this propaganda movie. George Marshall got Nobel Prize in Peace in 1953. livedoor.blogimg.jp/onigunso2/imgs/8/9/89b382bb.jpg livedoor.blogimg.jp/onigunso2/imgs/6/1/61a3a64d.jpg

  • @sodomcity6062

    @sodomcity6062

    5 жыл бұрын

    Real Nanjing after the battle (No one witnessed so-called "Rape of Nanjing") www.history.gr.jp/nanking/books_paramount_news.html By American newsreel photographer and explorer, Arthur Menken (Paramount News) At that time, more than 100 western journalists had stationed in Nanjing. After the battle, the Japanese general, Matsui Iwane had a press conference but those western journalists had never accused nor even asked the massacre. Only pro-Chinese (Anglo-Saxon military Advisory Group, American, Australian and British pastor) fabricated the massacre a few days later since the interview).

  • @BUNDO-140

    @BUNDO-140

    2 жыл бұрын

    What is that supposed to be a photo of?

  • @toshitanaka1550

    @toshitanaka1550

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BUNDO-140 its hard to see, but the first is a man walking up to his house after the bombing and the second one is the destruction of a railroad. SDHfacts have a lot of WWII photos in the Pacific specifically talking about Japan’s involvement. You might find those two photos there.

  • @boldsymbol
    @boldsymbol3 жыл бұрын

    是非、日本語訳もつけてくれると嬉しいぜ!

  • @DB-rf9sy

    @DB-rf9sy

    2 жыл бұрын

    確かにそう思います(在日日本人)

  • @jamesthegr8732
    @jamesthegr87324 жыл бұрын

    Is their any book on the Japanese empire during this period? There more on Germany, and even Italy.

  • @millabasset1710

    @millabasset1710

    4 жыл бұрын

    Don't read "Japan bites back" by Joshua Bleakney, its not that the book is bad, but its a white supremacist projecting his values on Japanese culture and isn't a reliable read.

  • @millabasset1710

    @millabasset1710

    4 жыл бұрын

    @On U I have nothing against patriotism, that's rational because you should want to have a healthy community and care for those around you. Nationalism last century brought out the worst in everyone, I will not blame Japan for WW2 with the knowledge I acquired many years ago, that was a war for their self defense. The US, Germany and Russia were the biggest offenders of why nationalism can be dangerous. I also don't like nationalism because it can be tied to race. If you had lets say a white person born and raised in China, they will never be accepted by Chinese, It doesn't matter if they speak Mandarin better than natives, they look different and will be persecuted.

  • @millabasset1710

    @millabasset1710

    4 жыл бұрын

    @On U And I am not saying that guy's book is useless, it has a lot of useful information in it, but he's always comparing Germany to Japan like they had the same goals, when we both know that simply wasn't true.

  • @millabasset1710

    @millabasset1710

    4 жыл бұрын

    @On U I will need to read that in depth thanks for providing it. I'm not a Marxist or a cut throat capitalist. I care more about the welfare of people, I hate racism and sexism, to me all that matters is how a person is feeling. Ideally I would want a perfect monarch, but sadly that doesn't exist. Democracy as of now is the best system we have. I'm of course talking about representative democracy, because a direct democracy would be dangerous in the current American education system. The reason why I hate nationalism is that is basically religion for adults. Nation States are at least real whereas God is entirely fictional. People can't choose where they're born, its a genetic accident and I believe people should pride themselves in their individual accomplishments and not where they were born. Since we're on the topic of Japan, they're nationalist, but that can sometimes be negative. There are rare cases of Japanese parents adopting foreign kids, and they're never accepted there. I love Japanese culture, its unique, but I'm happy I wasn't raised there. I would be the white kid everyone would pick on and I would be bullied for having a hard time learning English. We can continue via gmail or Discord if you like? I just don't want to spam the comment section. I'm worried about Mad Monarchist, hope he's alive.

  • @millabasset1710

    @millabasset1710

    4 жыл бұрын

    @On U I wasn't too harsh in my last comment? Let me know if I did. I acknowledge nationalism is in human nature, I just don't understand it. Then again I'm on the spectrum, so I have a hard time understanding people. What is your contact?

  • @rhysnichols8608
    @rhysnichols86084 жыл бұрын

    Kinda reminds me of Danzig in 1939, the real reason Germany ‘started’ ww2. Rightfully German lands that Poland refused to negotiate over, plus the Germans there being subject to harsh treatment = military intervention. It was only when Britain and France declared war did this escalate into a large scale conflict.

  • @anthonys7660
    @anthonys76605 жыл бұрын

    The Chinese army was not better equipped than Japan, their air force was obsolete and still using biplanes

  • @millabasset1710

    @millabasset1710

    4 жыл бұрын

    Not better equipped? The USA and Germany backed Chinese Nationalists for years prior to WW2.

  • @Amogius

    @Amogius

    4 жыл бұрын

    Ye my mans right here they were desperate scrambling for weapons

  • @Tboy439

    @Tboy439

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@millabasset1710 ...USA did not back the Nationalist's until they agreed to stop fighting the Communist and start fighting Japan. And then the USA agreed to become their airforce with the Flying Tigers!!!

  • @Tboy439
    @Tboy4395 жыл бұрын

    Mad Monarchist- Do you know about the Xi'an incident. It would probably clear things up for you on who was really responsible for the Mukden incident. Also, I can just about guarantee you that Japan was fighting the White Nationalists and not the Communists. Japan was still being used by the allied powers until the Communists were firmly in power. Once this was accomplished the vilivication of Japan began. Although China had already been destroyed by the allied powers long before Japan stepped foot in China, Japan was now being set up to be the fall guy

  • @youtubede963
    @youtubede9637 жыл бұрын

    素晴らしい!

  • @canadiankewldude
    @canadiankewldude3 жыл бұрын

    The WW's end most Royalties, gave boundaries creating conflict and massive dept to many, many nations. It changed the entire world, someone had a plan.

  • @KenDelloSandro7565
    @KenDelloSandro75653 жыл бұрын

    Well said and done. DEVS LO VVLT

  • @tsurutsuru2537
    @tsurutsuru25375 жыл бұрын

    Por favor, vean el vídeo siguiente. kzread.info/dash/bejne/doBtl8GriLnXZbg.html

  • @LittleImpaler
    @LittleImpaler5 жыл бұрын

    I can't find any evidence to this video is saying.

  • @duschgel8960

    @duschgel8960

    5 жыл бұрын

    Because it is on a book in read that is written at the time WW2 happened. Watch the second part he said it there.

  • @a.m.theshinyjohtohunter4287
    @a.m.theshinyjohtohunter42873 жыл бұрын

    My personal theory is Japan only went nuts after the 19th century when Britain and America sunk their claws into Japan. (1860’s including the Boshin war) thank you for such an awesome video!!

  • @BUNDO-140

    @BUNDO-140

    2 жыл бұрын

    I kinda agree with you here. I think Commodore Matthew Perry and his "Black ships" should have just left Japan be

  • @a.m.theshinyjohtohunter4287

    @a.m.theshinyjohtohunter4287

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@BUNDO-140 not saying Japan was perfect or saintly by any stretch but they certainly got worse after becoming “Americanize” If only they didn’t reject Christianity maybe things would’ve turned out better... 🤷‍♀️ never know...

  • @BUNDO-140

    @BUNDO-140

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@a.m.theshinyjohtohunter4287 Oh I get what you mean. Things would have gone a hell of a lot different if Japan didn't have modernize and catch up with the rest of world. Or say what would have happened if the Tokugawa we're still in power and there was no Meiji Restoration?

  • @toshitanaka1550

    @toshitanaka1550

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@a.m.theshinyjohtohunter4287 not necessarily. The government of Japan got involved in ridding Christianity was because Portugal did shady things to the Japanese. Its fine if they wanted to have business in Japan, but they outrightly did some of the worst human trafficking. They told many Japanese women to come to Europe as for their faith they will be blessed with wealth. Japanese documents have recorded at least 2,000 women have been abducted and were sent as sex slaves. The government had enough and banned the Portuguese on making any further corruption. The Japanese Communists lied about that part of history when the Japanese government forced out the Portuguese for no reason. This is one of the many reasons Japanese don’t like foreigners and anybody would hate that if they were under the same boat as this incident.

  • @a.m.theshinyjohtohunter4287

    @a.m.theshinyjohtohunter4287

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@toshitanaka1550 trying to spread Christianity was not bad in an of itself, but yes, the Portuguese didn’t have the most pleasant track record with PR. 🤦‍♀️

  • @edsonassim905
    @edsonassim9053 жыл бұрын

    oi linda família

  • @notfunny6369
    @notfunny63694 жыл бұрын

    Defending Japan's actions in ww2 is not good

  • @kintaman6396

    @kintaman6396

    4 жыл бұрын

    Try to be open minded. If only one side of the story is told we should all get suspicious. History is not 100% truthful. How can you know what you were taught in school is even true?

  • @rhysnichols8608

    @rhysnichols8608

    3 жыл бұрын

    Defending japans real crimes against Chinese civilians and POWs isn’t good, BUT giving a reasonable view of both sides of the story is very important. The allies committed vast war crimes as well and started the war by imposing aggressive sanctions on japan in a deliberate effort to provoke them. This type of political scheming needs exposing

  • @rhysnichols8608

    @rhysnichols8608

    3 жыл бұрын

    @moonshine 2 Yes that’s 100% true. America wanted war and camouflaged their actions to make japan seem the aggressor. Japan much like Germany and Italy were a threat to the international finance powers

  • @rhysnichols8608

    @rhysnichols8608

    3 жыл бұрын

    @moonshine 2 Thank you sir I’ll look it up

  • @user-co5ri6dp3c

    @user-co5ri6dp3c

    2 жыл бұрын

    Duterte "There is no grudge in Japan. Relations between the two countries are positive." Duterte "Don't kid me! We are not an American colony."

  • @mikek0135
    @mikek01353 жыл бұрын

    😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @rudeegruenberg9184

    @rudeegruenberg9184

    Жыл бұрын

    not very at all funny the Japanese are not some evil devil its not their culture but their not perfect

  • @KanazawaKings
    @KanazawaKings10 жыл бұрын

    First of all, I love Japan. I've lived here for 8 years, so how could I not love my adopted country. That being as it may, does not change how most historians inside and outside Japan look not just the events immediately preceding the war in Asia, but also the gradual movement towards an expansionist, colonial government in Japan. Simply put, Japan was 100 years too late in the colonial game. In 1800, no one would have bat an eye for Manchukuo or even China. After WW1, though some nations tried to maintain colonies, the writing was on the wall. That era was done. But let's look at your reasoning in this video. According to you, China had no right to Manchuria. Let's assume so. What was Japan's claim? Manchukuo is well known to have been established as a puppet government. The Kwantung army's commander held veto power over Puyi. Each manchurian minister had a Japanese "vice minister" to make sure Japanese interests were protected. Japan had no more claim to rule Manchuria than Russia or China. How was life in Japan's protectorate? Not bad, if you were among Japan's friends. Industry boomed, schools were built and the economy flourished. The problems? According to Japanese sources, 10 million Chinese were "conscripted" for slave labor. According to a 2007 article in the Japan Times the drug trade was restarted in Manchukuo to help pay the bills of the Kwantung army. And the now infamous Unit 731 performed fiendish crimes against humanity that can only be rivaled by Nazi death camps. So tell me Mad Monarchist, do you believe that the Manchurians were the beneficiaries of Japan's influence? I repeat, I love Japan. The vast majority of people are extremely anti-war and Japan is a good role model for many countries. But that doesn't change history.

  • @shin-ishikiri-no

    @shin-ishikiri-no

    6 жыл бұрын

    Simply put, some cultures are superior to others. Japan vs Russia, or China? Clearly Japan wins, and Korea would be far richer today if the North and South remained as part of Japan.

  • @DEEYANASE

    @DEEYANASE

    6 жыл бұрын

    First, as a Japanese American, I thank you for loving Japan. Since you lived there for 8 years, you probably know that Japan Times is a left-leaning liberal paper and it's influenced a lot by Chinese point of view. I'm not saying that the paper is a fake news media but it's not always objective.

  • @millabasset1710

    @millabasset1710

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Griffith Taka China is Israel's new host when they can't drain anymore out of the USA.

  • @yellowlanterncore352

    @yellowlanterncore352

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@shin-ishikiri-no Japanese culture is definitely better than American culture, I mean shit the USA isn't even 300 years old yet. China and India are the most notable cradles of civilization, and Japan has a unique culture they're willing to share with people, but are also rightfully defensive of it.

  • @yellowlanterncore352

    @yellowlanterncore352

    3 жыл бұрын

    @On U Japan was too nice, which really says a lot about my character because I can't imagine having the patience for liars, Japan and the annexed Koreans were playing a fair game in the world. During WW1 and the 30s, you had white and Japanese students getting along just fine at Harvard and Yale, so clearly there was a growing friendship between the US and Japan, until FDR and his opium syndicate ruined America. You might disagree, but FDR's New Deal wasn't done out of love for the American people, FDR made the United States somewhat socialist to appease Wall St. Maybe the US was better off Balkanizing if the Depression destroyed America. I personally think both Japan and Spain would have taken care of the American people better. Japan could have had the western and mid west states under their Constitutional Monarchy. Spain can have everything from Florida again, to Virginia. Texas would be their own country and finally New England would one nation with a new Constitution. Its a weird scenario yes, but the American people would have been safe from Communism, Japan and Spain at that time weren't infested with Commies. Germany and Italy were still fascist and dishonorable countries, keep them out of post depression America.

  • @tayls311
    @tayls3117 жыл бұрын

    Manchus invaded China and established the Qing dynasty, they ruled the entire country as one, north extending to Manchuria (where they originated) and all the way down south bordering Indochina. When KMT took power and established ROC, the fundamental principle is replacing the Qing government which included all territories. So the absurdity you mentioned is really not that absurd. Japan's entry into Manchuria is nothing less than territorial expansion to obtain natural resources to fuel its own growth. What goes on next is open for debate. However, when hostilities started, there should be no arguments with the needless atrocities the Japanese military forces committed in China, including in Manchuria specifically 731 unit. One can argue about the numbers of people massacred in Nanjing or the extent of 731 unit's human experiments, but it will be hard to argue if those incidents took place. I can look away from so-called history books or government narratives of these events because I believe, too, that the victors get to write them. But it will be hard to look away from accounts given by people who had first hand experiences. This is nonetheless a good post to get people to think deeper and question the root causes of WWII.

  • @ivankilday7743

    @ivankilday7743

    2 жыл бұрын

    An interesting fact. During the Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal, when the Emperor of Japan was under military tribunal for his 'war crimes', the "Unit 731" was mentioned only once, but the War Crimes Tribunal dismissed these allegations as vague and totally lacking the evidence. No concrete documents were provided about the unit or its 'crimes', ever. All the accusations and "chilling stories" came only from "witnesses' testimonies" or from the Soviets (who were and are infamous for their constant blatant lies). Yet nobody speaks about American concentration camps for Japanese (most were American citizens at the time), neither about American war atrocities in Philippines... Neither about Soviet GULAGs and mass executions, with numbers far greater than any numbers of the alleged 'war crimes' of the Axis countries combined. There are authentic documents about that. Even more documents are still classified (in Russia). But nobody talks about these horrors and tragedies. How so?

  • @toshitanaka1550

    @toshitanaka1550

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ivankilday7743 this is another story that has never been mentioned. During the 1920s there were a lot of mainland Japanese heading towards Hawaii for a better living only to be deceived and become slaves to sugar cane harvesting. They weren’t payed well and were worked tirelessly. My great grandfather knew the problems ahead of him so he switched from being a sugar cane farmer to making Japanese trees and then would become a barber. These hidden dark atrocities should not be ignored either.

  • @ivankilday7743

    @ivankilday7743

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@toshitanaka1550 Wow, you are right, Tanaka-san, i didn't hear before of this. That's a very said story, it was totally unfair towards poor Japanese farmers... I really feel sorry that these horrible things happened to your people... And I'm very glad that your great grandfather was so smart and wise man! Thank you so much for sharing truth, brother!! I will remember it too from now on. These hidden (intentionally hidden by the Victors from the people) dark atrocities of the past should never be ignored neither forgotten, we must always remember history, to prevent repeating of the tragedies (and I mean real tragedies and crimes committed by "the Victors" eighty years ago as an example). Also, as a person who was studying the culture (and a little bit language) of Japan - I feel huge respect to the Japanese people, to history of Japan, to the Japanese traditions and folk's wisdom. Japan is absolutely unique country, that combines ancient traditions with modern cutting-edge technologies, one helps to another as a symbiosis, and that's why Japan (Nippon) is a truly great Land of the Raising Sun, and so be it for thousands of years ahead! Also, I believe that the Northern Territories (including Kuril Islands) belong only to Japan, that's my personal opinion. Let Gods and Buddhas Bless you, brother! Keep the Sun on your side.

  • @toshitanaka1550

    @toshitanaka1550

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ivankilday7743 I believe any nation has its strengths and weaknesses. Its whether the people would like to admit their terrible crimes that cost many lives to war or to slavery. Once humans learn from their mistakes then will people start to get along and forget about why they had rivalries in the first place. That goes for religions as well. I may disagree with some, but for nations like China to ethnically cleanse the Uyghurs is unacceptable they are humans as well that deserves a chance to live. History shouldn’t be complicated and in fact for my opinion it is black and white because you have on nation or in some way there is always a white lie and the other tells the truth. It should be known to the world on how to decipher right and wrong yet many people these days have collected the wisdom of stupidity and stubbornness and the human race in many parts of the world will never achieve greatness. I don’t ever take sides politically, but I will stand up for good moral standards rather than living in a world filled with gangsters that spreads lies and chaos.

  • @ivankilday7743

    @ivankilday7743

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@toshitanaka1550 I totally agree with you, Tanaka-san! That's right, people need to learn from our past mistakes, people need to treat other people as people, always and everywhere! People should stop stupid racism and religious division. These factors that divide people benefit only dirty rulers, never people. There are no "bad races", there are good and bad people in every society, country. Religious and racial supremacy unfortunately serve as an "indulgence", as something that allows to turn a blind eye on crimes and atrocities and it is very wrong, that must be stopped. I'm not saying that "everybody are equal", never, that's a Soviet lie. People are never equal, people are UNIQUE. We just have to accept other's uniqueness, and respect it. Somebody is stronger, somebody is smarter, somebody is kinder, none of them is "bad" but all these unique people are good when they have good morals and values and are UNITED for the common goals that benefit them all, and their society at large.

  • @edsonassim905
    @edsonassim9053 жыл бұрын

    oi

  • @jaywalkallstar
    @jaywalkallstar5 жыл бұрын

    This is just straight up intellectually dishonest

  • @deniskamikhailov5619

    @deniskamikhailov5619

    3 жыл бұрын

    Huh feelings! Democracy bad and dictatorship good! Keep on following your leaders who tell you any lie you want.

  • @urban0443

    @urban0443

    Жыл бұрын

    You are someone who can't clearly accept the truth bc truth hurts.

  • @redwhitedude
    @redwhitedude9 жыл бұрын

    But didn't the Japanese loiter far longer than anybody in Siberia? Other countries got suspicious of Japanese intentions when they did that.

  • @PsyBurst

    @PsyBurst

    4 жыл бұрын

    Do you know Nikolayevsk Massacre? Do you know how much other Japanese civilians suffered from the Red Army? Do you know who was the member of the Red Army who killed and robbed Japanese civilians?

  • @lorenwyman
    @lorenwyman7 жыл бұрын

    Holy shit, you kinda talk like Hank Hill.

  • @adrianainespena5654
    @adrianainespena56542 жыл бұрын

    The people of Nanking have some objections to make.

  • @toshitanaka1550

    @toshitanaka1550

    Жыл бұрын

    More like the KMT and Communists of China want to say because they want to project blame and not fess up to their crimes. The KMT very well knows what they did to their own people and how they even deceived the world. The book Behind the News in China says otherwise by a silenced American journalist Fredrick Vincent Williams.

  • @adrianainespena5654

    @adrianainespena5654

    Жыл бұрын

    @@toshitanaka1550 Sorry, but the Nanking atrocity was BEFORE the Communists took over. And it was recorded at that time. So, yeah, the Japanese Imperial Army was wicked.

  • @toshitanaka1550

    @toshitanaka1550

    Жыл бұрын

    @@adrianainespena5654 clearly you didn’t listen to this video and haven’t read the book. That book was published in India because the man that was silenced was because the KMT didn’t like it. Japan in no ways was going to escalate the war and even try to quail it. The second part series of this clip even talks about the rumored Marco Polo Bridge incident and also how Mao supposedly caused more issues during the incident to get the KMT and the Japanese army to keep fighting. Your biased opinion is the reason why nobody understands history. Sorry to point it out that China has caused mass contention to its neighbors in ancient times and also tends to lie about its 5,000 year history. You want more testimonies of Chinese not supporting this. A man named Seki Hei in Japanese is Shi Ping in Chinese(石平). When he grew up during the Cultural Revolution his family would be purged and sent to farm lands. During that time they never discussed the Nanking massacre. He would hear it when he got to Peking University in Beijing. If he never heard of it this indicates obviously China doesn’t bother to try and address the issues nor check the quality of its fact checking. To top that off he would later question about the issue with a friend that he knew. The testimony of his friend was his grandfather had 8 children when he was living in Nanking and none of them were murdered. A war brewed up, but no murder was to happen even if it did one of those children or family members would’ve been killed. Like I said read the Book since this is journalism that has investigated and points out the flaws in the propaganda that Chiang Kai Shek basically placed his B.S. claims and also got a dictator like Roosevelt to follow his scheme. If the KMT were heroes then Taiwan wouldn’t protest and deface Chiang Kai Shek of his mass murders amongst them after the Chinese civil war of that would force Chiang and his cronies to retreat to Taiwan and would continue his reign of terror. Not to mention that the modern KMT are now CCP puppets.