How Japanese are explain all this to their kids?
How Japanese are explain all this to their kids?
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"You're safe from the brown people now"
"Thanks daddy"
They just pretend it didn't happen, so bretty easily actually.
Is that indonesia?
Taiwan.
>Untrustworthy gaijin that don't comprehend supahrioru Japanese tradition say that honorabururu imperial Japanese soldiers did some bad things
>The end
japanese don't talk to each other, so no questions asked
Why aren't we shaming the J*poids for their crimes like we do the G*rmoids? They got off easy when they shouldn't have.
more sex
Ignore it and save face like they do with most problematic things in their history/country
No need to explain anything if it's not in the history books
Japan never do that
Gook gook gook
This, historians agree nihon did nothing wong
don't need to explain anything if you don't have kids
Chink devils thought they could kill Japanese and nothing would happen
It's pointless to wonder who started killing the other first, but the number of Chinese killed by Japanese each month during their occupation is almost as many people as were killed by both atom bombs combined.
you cant spent so many times learning every shitfest that happened.
imagine chinks learning every shit like this.
They just go "nip nong imperial army did nothing wrong" and are done with it.
oh fuck
my sides
Looks like fun, imagine playing a football match with those
Is it in 1930?
At that time the most Taiwanese recognized themselves as Japanese, so it did not matter
It's seediq bale.
This is Taiwan's story
youtube.co
With this four-and-a-half-hour action epic – which is screened here in two parts and as a 150-minute international cut at festivals overseas – Wei Te-sheng has followed up his gigantic box office hit Cape No.7 (2008) with the most expansive Taiwanese film ever made. Irrespective of one’s receptiveness to this new project, the director’s singular conviction in making it all happen has to be acknowledged: you just don’t throw US$24million on an aboriginal-language-speaking movie whose moral ambiguity would be worthy of most arthouse audiences (unless, perhaps, you’re Mel Gibson).
Based on the little-known Wushe Incident in 1930 Taiwan, Seediq Bale charts the head-hunting aboriginal Seediq clans’ borderline-suicidal uprising against their Japanese imperialist colonisers – right to its very grisly end. Despite its high commercial profile, Wei’s film is more Apocalypto than Avatar; and if his attention to anthropological details and his well-rounded portrayal of the aboriginal protagonists has unwittingly earned your sympathy early on, it’s not entirely his fault when you discover their barbaric side when things subsequently turn ugly – it happened in real life.
Headed by the charismatic leader Mouna Rudo (impressively played by first-time actor Lin Ching-tai), whose dignified restraint against starting war with the Japanese army is slowly worn down, the rainbow-worshipping clans will eventually see 300 of their warriors stage a massacre of their colonisers – including the unarmed, the women and the children – at a civilian sports event. The ethnic pride displayed here is undoubtedly dubious by contemporary standards, but Seediq Bale I does offer a disturbingly engrossing look at the savagery that exists equally on both sides of most human conflicts.
Edmund Lee
shut up, they dindu nuffin
How about you post the full story of that incident? I have no idea what the story is
They either pretend it didn't happen, claim it is overexagerrated or tell them it was for the greater good.
headhunting tribe in Taiwan are on bad terms with each other
So they cooperated with the Japanese and did headhunting their enemies
This picture is used by China as evidence of Nanjing massacre constantly in their TV programs and books.
they deny it
like
Tbh Chinamen aren't humans either, so it's really animals killing other animals desu...
Netherlands, Qing, Han
All Taiwan rulers hated headhunting tribe and kill them
Why do you expect Japanese to be so civilized back then?
Japanese in the early 20th century were materially modernized but their mentality was still 17th century feudal warrior tier. Beheading enemies was pretty common for samurai
I don't deny them.
that photo is true.
it is true story that I introduced the movie.