Reiryc
Posts: 4991
Joined: 1/5/2001 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Mart Can I ust add a touch of cynicism. While the Japanese were raping Nanking, and half the rest of the east, the brave American soldiers and airmen were in their bases, and enjoying the same peaceful, wealthy lifestyles that the average US citizen carried on having throughout the war, which, incidentally, the US did not bother to join, and become "outraged" about until they were bombed at Pearl harbour, which was a great source of relief to most of the british cabinet who thought that maybe the US would now put it's forces where it's "outrage" was. The incident will not go down in the history of infamy, regardless of poular belief. It was a mere pinprick. Thousands upon thousands of other innocent people died that day, and every day for years at the hands of the Japanese and Nazis. The Japanese also made a pre-emptive strike on Port Arthur during their war with Russia, and nobody seemed to bothered then, and the Japanese army treated prisoners very well. A good deal of cant is trotted out about all this. Is someone a savage if they stand by, quite comfortably, watching other people butcher each other, or is it only the butcherers that are savages? If you were all so bothere over in the US, you'd have pulled your fingers out in 1939, or maybe earlier in the case of China. Still, mustn't let anything get in the way of a good burger. Maybe I'm mistaken, but didn't the 'rape of nanking' happen in 37-38? Oh that's right, the brave brits didn't lift a finger about it either... As to this question, "Is someone a savage if they stand by, quite comfortably, watching other people butcher each other, or is it only the butcherers that are savages?" I'd say it's the butcherers that are the savages not those who didn't perform the act.
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