In article <1150989821.443019.177520@y41g2000cwy.googlegroups.com>,
<wwerewolff@yahoo.com> wrote:

>  The United States didn't lock up all Americans of German descent
> in prison camps during WWII,"
> 
> 
> --- Not all, but many - and it's a story that is untold to this day.
> They didn't lock up "all" people of Japanese descent either!
> 
> 
>  nor did they "bestow" democratic principles and
> a constitution on Germany. Basically, they treated them like adults,
> and
> they responded accordingly.
> 
> --- Whoa!  You got that wrong!  The post-war occupation of Germany was
> infinitely more brutal than was their occupation of Japan, where they
> even left the emporer in power - and to this day Germany remains an
> occupied country with foreign tanks rolling down its streets...Japan
> does too.
> 
> --- Did you know that more young surrendered German soldiers were
> deliberately murdered in Eisenhower's Death Camps than died during the
> entire war on the  western front?  Here's one link:
> 
>
> <http://www.the7thfire.com/Politics%20and%20History/us_war_crimes/Eisenhowers_death_camps.htm>

I'd check it out but the advertisementon the right overlaps the text
and can't seem to be removed.

-- 
"A Dictionary of Japanese Food, Ingredients & Culture" by Richard Hosking
(Tuttle, '97).  All the hints one might need for exploring Japanese food.

"The Sake Handbook" by John Gaunter (Tuttle, '02). An excellent intro and
reference to sake.