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Horror in the East: Japan and the Atrocities of World War II -Part 1 of 7

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Uploaded by on May 10, 2009

http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XMjQ3NzE3Mjg=.html

A BBC documentary on the Japanese atrocities committed by the notorious unit731, such as live human body experiments, vivisection etc etc
Among the most disturbing atrocities of World War II were the shocking human experiments performed by Japans notorious medical unit 731,bacteria development for bombing raids; vivisections on living prisoners; injections of pathogens; and life with the clinic rats are vividly and painfully related by former unit members themselves. These testimonies are evidence of the unhealed wounds left by this cruel period in Japans history.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horror_in_the_East

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Education

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  • The 1936-45 interpretation of Bushido is random bullshit the militarists cooked up during the depression. White people don’t tend to realize this because PC societies assume that other societies are ancient, static and immutable.

  • (Part4)After the United Nations killed many Japanese civilians with atomic bombs, they could not admit The U.S was cheated by China. China still loves cheating people in the world. Has China said sorry to Tibet?

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  • @TKKTism well said, this brainwashed jap has been spamming his ill informed lies all over youtube, he should be banned.

  • @suspicious35 Yes: it seems a distorted view of Bushido that you mention caused the indiscipline within the Army that led to both an escalation of conflict overseas and political murder at home. Bushido (way of the warrior) at its best is a chivalric code of honour for Samurai (military caste), stressing simple living, self discipline and bravery. Many Army leaders were not of Samurai stock, being loyal, not to the Emperor as he was, but to their conception of how he should be :-)

  • @undertakerRach There is no doubt that the Japanese forces that captured Nanking in December 1937 were given a free hand to commit excesses against the inhabitants in a breakdown of military discipline that would not have been tolerated by the generals of the Meiji era. Details of the atrocities were not allowed to leak into the Japanese press, but those held responsible by the high command, including the commander-in chief and two divisional commanders were recalled to Japan :-)

  • @elrjames777 Thank you kindly. Vote up, if you want others to see it.

  • @suspicious35 Re: "interpretation of Bushido": 100 % correct :-)

  • You lack to understand credibility when you take any Japanese counter argument to heart without analyzing incentives etc.

    Had you been a judge of a court then every charged individual, regardless of one's innocence, would have been set free under your standards.

  • @undertakerRach, you fail to understand the terms credibility and impartiality. There is nothing to prove to you about Nanking massacre since you won't be able to comprehend what constitutes as proof when you can't understand the term credibility and impartiality.

    To an educated individual, understanding the circumstances in Nanking back the, would accept that evidence about the massacre would come from Chinese. Since your bias condemned all evidence from Chinese thus you fail impartiality.

  • I seriously love the song at 4:24

    is that weird?

    haha

    

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