Monday, September 30, 2013

PRC and ROK Snub Abe

Once again the most murderous regime in human history, that illegitimate bandit government in Peking that calls itself the People's Republic of China is snubbing the leader of the Japanese government, Prime Minister Abe. There is a big conference coming up and the current dictator of Red China will be meeting with many other Asian leaders but has said they will definitely not be meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Abe. What are they afraid of? Two countries do not have to agree on everything or even like each other just to talk to each other but the Red Chinese must be very frightened of Prime Minister Abe because they are refusing to even speak with him. The reason they give, as usual, is their spurious claim to the Senkaku Islands which belong to Japan. The conference isn't about the island dispute, it would likely not even be mentioned and yet, because Japan doesn't take the ridiculous Chinese claim to the Senkakus seriously, the communist dictator is refusing to even speak to the Prime Minister of Japan. Mr. Abe is likely very relieved by this really. Talking to the dictator of a country that runs slave labor camps and drives over its own people with tanks would be a sacrifice for any civilized person anyway.

However, the bandit government is not alone! The President of the Republic of Korea is refusing to meet or speak with Prime Minister Abe as well. Their reasons are even more convoluted. Red China opposing Japan is not surprising (what is evil will always hate what is good) because China has had a government and ideology ever since the revolution that is opposed to monarchy and traditional Asian values that Japan is based on. The attitude of South Korea, on the other hand, really makes no sense. Both Koreas, it goes without saying, are republics that have an ideology that is totally opposed to Japan as well as the whole history and values of Korea but it really makes no sense that South Korea should be on the same side as Red China in refusing to even speak to the Prime Minister of Japan. Is she afraid of something? It was China that sent hundreds of thousands of troops onto the Korean peninsula to totally destroy the ROK, not Japan, yet South Korea (and North Korea for that matter) side with Red China. In the past, Japan actually fought a war to end Chinese rule over Korea. Perhaps they just like being ruled by the Chinese and that's all there is to it. Who knows? With Red China and North Korea, both communist dictatorships who want to destroy all non-communist countries and dominate all their neighbors, South Korea and the ROC on Taiwan should be coming together with Japan for mutual cooperation. Will that happen? Probably not, at least not until these illegitimate republics start behaving sensibly.

IJN Aircraft Carriers Art Part II

The Shokaku

The Soryu

The Taiho

The Taiyo

The Unryu

The Zuikaku

Sunday, September 29, 2013

IJN Aircraft Carriers Art Part I

The Akagi (my favorite carrier of all)

The Hiryu

The Junyo

The Kaga (great ship)

The Ryujo

The Shinan


Thursday, September 26, 2013

The Senkaku Islands Dispute

Recently, tensions have been raised dramatically between the State of Japan and the People’s Republic of China (as well as the Republic of China on Taiwan to a lesser extent) over a small group of rocky, uninhabited islands known in Japan as the Senkaku islands and as the Diaoyu islands in China. Unlike other disputes, such as that over the Falkland Islands for example, the Senkakus only recently became a controversial issue and, fortunately, one does not have to go back so far in history to trace the origins of the dispute. That, in itself, however, is something worth giving a moment of consideration. Certainly in Japan it is not seen as merely coincidence that the two Chinese republics only decided to lay claim to these minor islands after evidence of mineral resources was found in their vicinity, and after Japan had adopted a constitution that embraced pacifism and after the American occupation of Japan had ended. In other words, the Chinese republics only “discovered” that the Senkaku islands had “always” belonged to China after they learned they might be worth something and after the point when their claim would have meant a dispute with the United States rather than an officially pacifist Japan. As with the earlier case looked at, it should be made clear at the outset that the Chinese claim is blatantly ridiculous and there should be no doubt that the Senkaku islands are Japanese sovereign territory. So, how did this dispute come to be? Let us take a look at some history first.

Almost every territorial dispute involving Japan essentially comes down to an effort by the neighboring republics to change historical events that were disadvantageous to them following the defeat of Japan in World War II. For the most part, the Chinese claim that the Senkakus were a part of the Great Ming Empire, arguing that they were either a part of Taiwan or a part of the Okinawa-based Ryukyu kingdom which was a vassal of China (and a vassal of a Japanese daimyo at much the same time). One should keep in mind that Red China has used a similar argument to lay claim to other foreign, non-Chinese lands in the past. For example, because Tibet and Mongolia were vassals of the Manchu emperors, communist China claimed Tibet and Mongolia to be “Chinese”. Tibet was occupied and no doubt Mongolia would have been as well were it not already a part of the Soviet Union in all but name at the time. However, what is seldom mentioned is that China refused to deal with any foreign power unless they took the position, at least formally, of being a tributary of the Emperor of China. By that logic, Korea and Vietnam, for example, could both be claimed as “Chinese” territory. However, in the case of the Senkaku islands this is particularly absurd since the islands are unoccupied, have always been unoccupied and China nor Taiwan nor the Ryukyu kingdom never made any effort to formally claim them. They were simply rocks in the ocean that belonged to no one.

The first formal claim on the islands came in 1895 when the Empire of Japan formally incorporated the islands and installed markers on them to clearly show them as being Japanese territory. No other power had ever even attempted to do something similar at any point in the past. In fact, Chinese records dating back to the Ming dynasty clearly show the islands being labeled as non-Chinese territory and more recent Chinese maps and documents list them as belonging to Japan and label them with the Japanese rather than the Chinese names for them. The best China can do is to point to some “discovered” historical maps which show the islands labeled in Chinese. However, these merely prove that the Chinese knew of their existence, not that they were Chinese territory. Furthermore, words alone have never been deemed enough to lay claim to a territory. One can claim to own anything in the world but unless some effort is made to actually possess such a territory, the claim is meaningless. Recently, the Chinese republics have become quite adept at finding historical maps that show just about everything around them as belonging to China. Thankfully, these are all meaningless to the current dispute as they do not take into account the many international agreements and treaties made in the intervening centuries. After all, there are historical maps which show Florida belonging to Spain, most of France belonging to England or Poland belonging to Russia yet they have no bearing on the current legal status of any of these places.

Realistically, the Chinese are forced to deal with this fact and so tend to argue their case based on the Treaty of San Francisco which a defeated Japan was forced to sign by the victorious Allies after World War II. In this treaty Japan was forced to renounce Taiwan and all the islands belonging to it, basically undoing the Treaty of Shimonoseki in which Taiwan became a Japanese colony following the Japanese defeating China in the First Sino-Japanese War. However, as stated above, the Senkakus had never belonged to Taiwan and so were not part of the lands handed over to China according to the Treaty of San Francisco. In fact, by that same treaty, the Senkakus were clearly designated as a part of Japan and thus came under the jurisdiction of the occupying forces of the United States, grouped as part of the Ryukyu Islands and the Chinese never objected or protested at all to this assertion at the time. This is significant, because the Chinese did make other objections to the treaty concerning territory they wished to claim. China was not represented at the San Francisco meeting because there was a civil war going on and no one could decide which side to invite; the United States wanted to invite the nationalists and the United Kingdom wanted to invite the communists so neither side ended up attending. The Chinese protested, however, claiming the Paracel, Spratly and Pratas island groups as their own but said nothing about the Senkakus.

In fact, as late as 1969 officially Chinese documents still listed the Senkakus as Japanese territory. During the American occupation, U.S. forces even used a couple of the islands as a bombing range for American aircraft and yet, during all that time, China raised no protest. Surely, if they truly believed these islands were Chinese territory, they would have at least raised their voices slightly when they were being bombed by American aircraft, but, not a sound was heard. The situation only began to change in 1969 (the same year the Chinese still say the Senkakus belong to Japan) when the UN identified potential oil and natural gas reserves in the area surrounding the Senkaku Islands. Suddenly, as if by a miracle, the bandit government in Peking became interested. Yet, they still said nothing until 1972. What happened in 1972? Purely by coincidence I am sure, this is when the United States ended its occupation of the Ryukyu Islands, including the Senkakus, handing them back over to Japan (the Allied occupation of Japan having ended in 1952). So it was only then, once oil and natural gas had been discovered and after the United States was no longer responsible for the area, that the Chinese republics suddenly announced to the world that the Senkaku Islands had “always” been Chinese.

天皇陛下萬歲!
The idea that anyone at all could be taken in by such blatantly dishonest and self-serving tactics is, frankly, astounding. Regardless of what any historical Chinese maps label the islands, the facts are these: the only country to ever actually make a physical claim on the Senkaku Islands is Japan, the only country to ever actually occupy the Senkaku Islands (in a short-lived business venture) was Japan and before the UN discovered potential oil and gas reserves in the area there was no disagreement at all that the Senkaku Islands belonged to anyone other than Japan. The fact that these were Japanese islands and did not belong to China (or Taiwan) was made clear by their being included in the U.S. occupation of Japan and in subsequent defensive treaties between the United States of America and the State of Japan, the Senkaku Islands were clearly included as Japanese sovereign territory just as Chinese official records show the islands as belonging to Japan right up until China thought they might be worth something. One would also be foolish not to view this dispute in context since Red China has similar disputes with many other neighbors, particularly in the Southeast Asia area concerning islands in the South China Sea, all of which China suddenly took an interest in when oil and/or natural gas deposits were found to be in the area. Similar disputes involve the Chinese republics with The Philippines, Malaysia, Vietnam and Brunei all because China has discovered mineral deposits in certain areas. Communist China, ironically enough, has no other motive than the profit motive when it comes to their sudden claim on the Senkaku Islands.

Monday, September 23, 2013

Christianity in Japan - Hail Mary

The Hail Mary by dokeshikurai



すべての人をうやまい、兄弟たちを愛し、神をおそれ、王を尊びなさい。

Friday, September 13, 2013

Korean Children Learn to Hate Their Neighbor

 Recently, I remarked on how the bandit government in Peking is indoctrinating children in Red China to hate Japan and the Japanese (Red Chinese Triumphalism). Unfortunately, this seems to be an act of bigotry not restricted to the communists but shared by the other republican neighbors of Japan. Here we see drawing by school children in South Korea, proudly displayed, with an anti-Japan theme. Even among the many despicable republican regimes of the world, where anti-monarchy prejudice is common, this sort of enforced, indoctrinated hatred of a neighboring country and people is far from common. Even more than Red China, the hatred and vitriol against Japan is the most bewildering coming from South Korea. It is in the vital national interest of South Korea to be a close friend and ally of Japan. Surrounded by Japan, North Korea and Red China, Japan is the only country that doesn't want to see South Korea totally destroyed. Yet, there often seems to be more hatred aimed at Japan than anyone else on the part of the Republic of Korea. Consider for a moment that the North Korean slave state has said that if they are ever attacked by South Korea their first retaliation will be against, not South Korea, but Tokyo! There is nothing, it seems, they will not blame Japan for. It has gone beyond the ridiculous to the positively disgraceful. Just take a look at these pictures and think about what they mean. Children are not born with this kind of hatred toward their neighbors. This is something they have to learn which means this is something they have been taught which means that just like in Red China, the Republic of Korea is deliberately teaching their children and raising them up to hate the Japanese. Really, this is no different than a form of child abuse. It is shameful and should be unworthy of all Koreans.

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Red Chinese Triumphalism

Recently it was the anniversary of the official ceremony in which the Empire of Japan surrendered to the Allied nations on the USS Missouri at the end of World War II. Most countries take the opportunity to reflect on the horrors of war and to honor those who died in the conflict. That is not the case, however, in the People's Republic of China where, year after year, triumphalism and brain-washing is the order of the day for the communist bandit government in Peking. I saw it again this year with CCTV coverage of ceremonies in various locations across Red China with all of them using the same government-fed talking points, all repeating again and again the communist party line about the conflict being the "anti-fascist" war to stop "Japanese aggression". The phrase "Japanese aggression" is of course repeated the most by the indoctrinated Red Chinese. It is, and this should go without saying, a complete lie. You will notice that other countries do not refer to the war in this way, only the Red Chinese are so insecure as to feel the need to try to make a political point, glorify themselves and denigrate another country even in what they call the war. However, it is a lie. And this can be easily explained.

China, neither the communists nor the nationalists, fought against fascism in World War II. They never fought the fascists who were the Italians in World War II nor did they fight the Germans who were national socialists (Nazis). In fact, prior to signing the Axis pact with Japan, Nazi Germany was the biggest foreign supporter of the Republic of China. Did anyone at CCTV appreciate the irony of showing newsreel footage of Chinese troops wearing Nazi uniforms and Nazi helmets at the same time they were calling the Chinese war against Japan an "anti-fascist" war? And, as for the often repeated phrase about the war being against "Japanese aggression" this is certainly laughable. The Chinese initiated the conflict with Japan in the beginning and if the Chinese had been the victims of Japanese "aggression" all of that time, about a decade; why did they not declare war on Japan until after December 7, 1941? I would also like to know, since the Red Chinese refer to World War II as a war against "Japanese aggression", what they call the many other wars the communist Chinese have fought? If they were so honest they would call the Chinese Civil War the war of communist aggression against the Republic of China, the Korean War would be the war of Red Chinese aggression against South Korea and the United Nations. What about the wars of Chinese aggression against Tibet, India or Vietnam?

However, the worst part about these displays of triumphalism every year is the indoctrination that goes with them. In the CCTV report that I saw, they interviewed little children, in their little communist party uniforms, repeating everything they had been taught (indoctrinated) at their communist party schools about the heroism of the Chinese soldiers and the supposed aggression of the Japanese. They are not teaching these children to honor their forefathers or have a respect for true history but are simply indoctrinating each new generation to have a prejudice and hatred against Japan. This is something they have to keep alive because the bandit government in Peking knows how valuable it is to always have hatred of Japan as a way to distract the people from their own tyranny and oppression to rally against a foreign power. Of course, it is also completely laughable to hear these adults and children repeat the ridiculous lie their government masters have taught them that the Chinese ever "defeated" the Imperial Japanese Army. Japan was forced to surrender by the dropping of two atomic bombs by the United States and the disgraceful stab in the back of the Soviet invasion of Manchuria afterwards. The Chinese had nothing to do with it and prior to the United States, Great Britain and other Allies all going to war against Japan, the Japanese were clearly winning the war in China and the Chinese had proven completely unable to stop the Imperial Japanese Army in open combat.

This is especially ridiculous coming from the leaders of the communist bandit government in Peking since the fighting that did happen between China and Japan was carried out almost entirely by the forces of the Republic of China and the communist bandits of Mao Zedong had very little to do with it. They made almost no appreciable contribution at all to the overall Chinese war effort. Most of the time, the communist bandits never succeeded at being anything more than a nuisance to the Imperial Japanese Army. But, this is certainly nothing new for communist China. Lies and deception have always been standard procedure to them as has been indoctrinating the public, children and adults alike, to carry on a legacy of hatred against their neighbors. These war memorials are not about honoring the past but are about distorting history, glorifying the communist dictatorship and putting hatred and bigotry in the hearts of every new generation of Chinese children. It is a disgraceful scene. None of it can compare to what goes on in Japan that always so infuriates the bandit government in Peking. They are angered that in Japan people remember the end of the war by honoring those sacrificed their lives for the Emperor, who died defending their homeland while in China they use the occasion to keep the communist sacred tradition of anti-Japanese hatred alive.