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· @pritam43 ·
$0.42
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πŸ‘  
properties (23)
authorpritam43
permlinkp38shw7l5
categorymusing-threads
json_metadata"{"app":"Musing","appTags":["japan"],"appCategory":"japan","appTitle":"Is there any resentment of Japan towards the United States due to the Second World War?","appBody":"","appDepth":1,"musingAppId":"aU2p3C3a8N","musingAppVersion":"1.1","musingPostType":"question"}"
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@cryptoandcoffee ·
$1.27
Question answered on Musing.io
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properties (23)
authorcryptoandcoffee
permlinkp3selg79x
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json_metadata"{"app":"Musing","appTags":["japan"],"appCategory":"japan","appTitle":"Is there any resentment of Japan towards the United States due to the Second World War?","appBody":"<p>I asked some Japanese friends this years ago what there feelings were to the US after they lost the war. It ended in a heated argument.</p>\n<p>They feel that the Americans should never have dropped the bombs as it was unfair. I tackled them on this as I said that they attacked Pearl harbor with no warning and that was meant to be fair?</p>\n<p>It seems that they expect to win at everything playing by their rules and personally agree with what the States did dropping the bombs. The Americans gave them more than a week of warnings including radio broadcasts and millions of leaflets but it fell on deaf ears.</p>\n<p>I think the resentment is slowly disappearing as it is a blemish on the Japanese pride as they hate to lose. maybe in 50 years it will be seen as history and no hard feelings will exist.</p>","appDepth":2,"appParentPermlink":"p38shw7l5","appParentAuthor":"pritam43","musingAppId":"aU2p3C3a8N","musingAppVersion":"1.1","musingPostType":"answer"}"
created2018-10-31 21:27:51
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vote details (3)
@jacqueline2 ·
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properties (22)
authorjacqueline2
permlinkf35xqf795
categorymusing-threads
json_metadata"{"app":"Musing","appTags":["japan"],"appCategory":"japan","appTitle":"Is there any resentment of Japan towards the United States due to the Second World War?","appBody":"<p>Consistently, I've come into contact with a significant proportion of Japanese people. A couple has been greatly productive masters; some have been educators or lawful instructors. A few them have been legislators, and, clearly, many have fundamentally been standard basic workers individuals. I've similarly had the delight to converse with a couple of past WWII period Japanese sailors, contenders, and pilots. All have been altruistic and happy for their country's relationship with the US. </p><p>For no circumstance did any of them ever say anything negative concerning America's activity in WWII. Many voiced a particular severity over the use of two nuclear bombs and wished there was a way that the war could have completed in an unforeseen way. Some said that the US shared in the fault for setting off the war by cutting off genuinely required rough materials. </p><p>Regardless, an expansive part of the Japanese I've chatted with are grateful to the US for empowering the ruler to remain, and for helping Japan patch up its organization and its economy. The US keeps up a couple of armed force establishments there, which help support the close-by economy. Relations between the Japanese and US military are typically very much arranged. </p><p>The issues which on occasion develop is ordinarily the delayed consequence of some ass in uniform achieving something doltish, for instance, blending up some residue, trying to strike some young woman, or despite plundering someone. The US response is for the most part exceptionally incite and the individual is immediately caught and much of the time perseveres through genuine disciplinary measures. </p><p>Along these lines, to your request, I've never thought about any contempt toward the US for WWII, with the exception that the US ought to share in a part of the blame for the breakdown of the association between the two countries. They didn't assume that all the blame should lay on Japan's shoulders. In any case, about what trailed December 7, 1941, there was no disdain.</p>","appDepth":2,"appParentPermlink":"p38shw7l5","appParentAuthor":"pritam43","musingAppId":"aU2p3C3a8N","musingAppVersion":"1.1","musingPostType":"answer"}"
created2018-10-31 18:34:33
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@sseerrr ·
$1.25
Question answered on Musing.io
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πŸ‘  ,
properties (23)
authorsseerrr
permlinkpkmxuf795
categorymusing-threads
json_metadata"{"app":"Musing","appTags":["japan"],"appCategory":"japan","appTitle":"Is there any resentment of Japan towards the United States due to the Second World War?","appBody":"<p><strong>Before traveling to Japan, I would have answered no.</strong></p>\n<p><br></p>\n<p><br></p>\n<p><img src=\"https://cdnmundo2.img.sputniknews.com/images/105305/85/1053058505.jpg\" /></p>\n<p><br></p>\n<p>Now, I answer that Japan is great, that not all Japanese think the same, and that the effects of the Second War are felt today in things that one can not imagine from a distance ...</p>\n<p><br></p>\n<p>We visited Japan with my family, in 1999. We spent most of our time in Tokyo, but to try something different, we spent a few days in Okinawa, based in Naha. Unlike Tokyo where we slept in ryokanes (= traditional Japanese hotels, microscopic rooms) in Naha we stayed in a modern Western-style hotel. Since Okinawa is full of American naval bases, we took it for granted that people would speak English: to our surprise, the receptionists barely spoke a little (first clue that something was not right ...), and it was clear that we were the only gaijin ( = foreigners) at the hotel.</p>\n<p><br></p>\n<p>Driving in Tokyo is a torture, so we went there by subway and trains. But Okinawa is big, there are many places of interest to visit, and in the hotel there was a brochure (in Japanese, but the photos were clear enough) of a car rental company, showing a car I fell in love with: based on a Nissan, convertible, but with a retro design imitation Jaguar (!) So there we went with my wife to rent the car. Second surprise: employees spoke even less English than at the hotel. After a few minutes of trying to communicate by signs, we concluded that filling a contract without having the remotest idea of ​​what he said (and we could not be sure that they understood how many days we wanted!) Was a bad idea, so I went back to the hotel to see if any receptionist offered to help us. They did not offer (supposedly they could not leave their post, although the car rental was five minutes away) so I turned to rent, and surprise: somehow my wife had found someone with whom she could agree to the basics (we never knew if we had insurance), and we were ready to take the car with us.</p>\n<p><br></p>\n<p>Leaving Naha there is a naval base behind another, so the routes with palm trees on the central road are identical to California, except that it is handled on the other side. There are McDonalds, KFCs and Burger Kings in bulk. My children had never seen a KFC (in Argentina there was no, now I think so) and they wanted to see how bad the fried chicken is (answer: it's abominable), so we stopped in one. There, the clients were all gringos, and the cashiers spoke impeccable English.</p>\n<p><br></p>\n<p>We continue our trip to a beach that was our destination, with a very promising tourist resort. Indeed, the resort was very beautiful and the beach paradise ... for who could be understood with the reception. Again to sign language, until someone decided to call a young man with a dazzling smile who spoke English more than correct. Great relief! We arranged with him, and while my wife and the boys were preparing to go to the beach, he could not help but ask our guide because it was so rare to find places that speak English, with the bases so close. The boy's smile faded a bit when he answered \"oh, yeah, the American bases.\"</p>\n<p><br></p>\n<p>I was not going to let the occasion pass, so I insisted until, with much effort (for the Japanese a personal confession is almost pornographic, although in Okinawa they are ethnically different, almost more Chinese than Japanese) the boy told us that the people of the place she was sick of the bad manners of the soldiers, the drunks, and-in the worst case-the rapes of the local girls. But at least they help the island's economy in some way? I insisted. There came a resounding \"no\". It turns out that if the bases pay something, they pay it to the central government, and they probably do not pay anything, so the Okinawans do not get anything from the bases. And what the soldiers consume remains for the American chains (it was clear that no gringo stepped on hotels, shops and resorts run by Japanese).</p>\n<p><br></p>\n<p>During the rest of the trip we tried to pull the language to other places, although between the linguistic barrier and the natural reserve of them, we did not learn much more. But we are convinced that, at least in Okinawa, Americans live in a different world, and are guests by force, not at all welcome.</p>","appDepth":2,"appParentPermlink":"p38shw7l5","appParentAuthor":"pritam43","musingAppId":"aU2p3C3a8N","musingAppVersion":"1.1","musingPostType":"answer"}"
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vote details (2)