White  American ,  WASP,
still  look  upon the  Japs  as racially inferior  in this  new
Century .



On Feb 18, 5:05 am, "Philip" <home.ho...@virgin.net> wrote:
> You have made a few mistakes for example:
>
> First World War Japan was not an ally of Germany it was an ally of
> Britain.
> Quotation from the war museum.
>
> The First World War 1914-1918
>
> By the outbreak of the First World War, Japan had an army of over
> 300,000 men, the fourth-largest navy in the world and a booming
> economy which could produce many of the armaments it needed. Japan was
> now the strongest power in east Asia and took full opportunity to
> strengthen its position while the European states were distracted
> elsewhere.
>
> As a consequence of its alliance with Britain, Japan fought on the
> Allied side, declaring war on Germany on 23 August 1914. It moved
> quickly to seize Tsingtao, the only German port on the Chinese coast,
> and German island possessions in the Pacific. Apart from sending light
> naval forces to the Mediterranean in 1917-18, however, Japan was not
> otherwise involved militarily in the war.
>
> The rise of Japan over the last sixty years had created significant
> problems. To feed a growing population and acquire the cheap and
> plentiful raw materials which were not present at home but were
> essential for sustained success, expansion overseas was vital. In
> January 1915, Japan moved to exploit the temporary power vacuum in the
> region by presenting the Chinese with the "Twenty-One Demands". This
> harsh ultimatum was designed to extract widespread political and
> economic concessions to make Japan the dominant colonial power in
> China.
>
> Although the Chinese capitulated on many issues, they managed to
> resist the most extreme Japanese demands, the acceptance of which
> would have turned China into a Japanese puppet state. Japan's
> rapacious policy towards China, driven by an awakening nationalism
> which fuelled the belief that Japan deserved a special position in
> that country, left a significant legacy of bitterness and mistrust
> between the powers after the war.
>
> The First World War changed the political situation in east Asia. It
> had eliminated German and Russian influence and weakened that of
> Britain and France in the long term. The USA and Japan, which without
> an active involvement in the conflict had been spared the cost and had
> taken the chance to strengthen its trade and industry, were left to
> struggle for supremacy in a China weakened by civil war between
> Nationalists and Communists. Despite acquiring the former German
> Pacific colonies as mandated territories, Japan felt aggrieved that
> its objectives were not fully realised at the Paris Peace Conference.
> This sentiment added to the feeling that, just as in 1895 and 1905,
> the potency of its military victories had been watered down by
> political interference from the West, which looked down upon the
> Japanese as racially inferior.
>
> _________________________________________________________
>
> 1980s
> There's been a bomb in Oxford Street! And in the
> days before Al'Qaeda, there's only one prime suspect.
> U.S.A sponsoring terrorists as always.
>
> The U.S.A has sponsored every terrorist organisation in the world.
> One way or another throughout history the U.S.A as attempted
> to kill you.
>
> Who's the Governor! You wankers. Keyboard warriors. Put up or shut the
> fuck up.
>
> http://media.putfile.com/On-The-Streets-Of-America-3
> It shows you just how backward  yanks are pathetic fucking yanks.
> ____________________________
> ID signature
> Freedom, if you don't use it you lose it.
> Philip Davidson,
> 10 Ronald Avenue
> West Ham
> E15 3AH
> East London
> Mobile phone 07906821566http://philipdavidson.blogspot.com/