too much coffee
Practically Family
- Messages
- 912
- Location
- Not too far from Spokane, WA
I didn't intend to come off sarcastically. I'm sorry if that's your perception.
Best regards......coffee
Best regards......coffee
too much coffee said:I didn't intend to come off sarcastically. I'm sorry if that's your perception.
Best regards......coffee
HepKitty said:the Nazis exterminated 11 million on their own, 6 million Jews and 5 million "undesirables" as they viewed them. does anyone have the numbers on the Chinese victims?
I've not yet seen "the Pacific" but it's on my wish list on Amazon
Doublegun said:I stand corrected (again). :eusa_doh: You obviously have a very strong grasp of history, I hope you enjoy The Pacific. Starts out a little slow but the payoff in the is worth it (at least it was for me).
JDG
LizzieMaine said:It's impossible to know exactly how many Chinese civilians died as a direct result of Japanese war crimes, but estimates of civilian deaths between 1937 and 1945 range from 3 million on the low side to 9 million on the high side. Historian R. J. Rummel of the University of Hawaii, whose studies of the period may be the most thorough currently available pegs the figure at 4 million, and this is the figure most widely accepted. These include those directly slaughtered in the Emperor's name, such as the 300,000 men, women, and children murdered at Nanking, and the half-million people murdered in biological-warfare experiments, as well as those who died as a result of the overall policies of the Japanese occupation, which decimated Chinese agriculture and caused far-reaching famine.
swinggal said:The Japanese threat was a very real one to Aussies back in the day. The bombings were downplayed at the time so people wouldn't panic...many people don't even know this history today. Australian troops played a HUGE part in the Pacific war which is often forgotten in US movies. I was disappointed that more Australian imput was not shown in 'The Pacfic'. Kakoda, Singapore, Malaya, Papua...all places that my relatives fought.
swinggal said:Yeah well, it's not downplayed in Australia, that's for sure as we were bombed by the Japanese in Darwin, Sydney and Northen Australia.
Darwin came under attack 64 times between 1942 and 43 and around 300 people died and some 300 more seriously injured. There are some old timers who say a 1000 people were killed.
Broome was bombed in 1943 with around 88 killed. Even North Queenland was bombed.
Sydney was torpedoed by Japanese midget subs and the HMAS Kuttabul was sunk killing 19 sailors. In other sub attacks Sydney was hit by nine shells damaging property. They also earlier sank 3 ships in Australian waters.
The Japanese threat was a very real one to Aussies back in the day. The bombings were downplayed at the time so people wouldn't panic...many people don't even know this history today. Australian troops played a HUGE part in the Pacific war which is often forgotten in US movies. I was disappointed that more Australian imput was not shown in 'The Pacfic'. Kakoda, Singapore, Malaya, Papua...all places that my relatives fought.
V.C. Brunswick said:So much so that Australian divisions battling Rommel's Afrika Korps such as the 6th Division -- veterans of Tobruk, and the 9th Division -- which had fought at El Alamein, had to be brought back from North Africa to face the threat closer to home.
swinggal said:Yeah well, it's not downplayed in Australia, that's for sure as we were bombed by the Japanese in Darwin, Sydney and Northen Australia.
LizzieMaine said:Here in the US the whole Pacific war defintely tends to be minimized.
swinggal said:Yeah well, it's not downplayed in Australia, that's for sure as we were bombed by the Japanese in Darwin, Sydney and Northen Australia.
Darwin came under attack 64 times between 1942 and 43 and around 300 people died and some 300 more seriously injured. There are some old timers who say a 1000 people were killed.
Broome was bombed in 1943 with around 88 killed. Even North Queenland was bombed.
Sydney was torpedoed by Japanese midget subs and the HMAS Kuttabul was sunk killing 19 sailors. In other sub attacks Sydney was hit by nine shells damaging property. They also earlier sank 3 ships in Australian waters.
The Japanese threat was a very real one to Aussies back in the day. The bombings were downplayed at the time so people wouldn't panic...many people don't even know this history today. Australian troops played a HUGE part in the Pacific war which is often forgotten in US movies. I was disappointed that more Australian imput was not shown in 'The Pacfic'. Kakoda, Singapore, Malaya, Papua...all places that my relatives fought.
Rookie1 said:I was just at a local WW2 Vet meeting and the speaker was a B29 pilot. It was fitting seeing how he was in the Pacific and VJ day was the other day. On his 35th and final mission he bombed a marshalling yard and was unopposed. He thought it was odd that nobody fired a shot at him. On the return trip he heard the Japanese had stopped fighting. He landed at Iwo for refueling and he said the island was quiet,he thought there would be celebrating going on but it was somber. I thought that was an interesting story.
It's great isn't it? To my knowledge they still don't know who he was or is for suredeleteduser said:sorry to butt-in guys, i just love this picture.
xxx
I love to hear their stories also. That is why I take the day off from work and go to the meeting. The city that hosts it records the meeting for their historical society.HepKitty said:that is interesting. I love to hear WWII vets tell their stories, it's so sad there are fewer and fewer around to share them
swinggal said:Yes, the Rape of Nanking...absolutley dreadful stuff.