Monday, August 15, 2005

via: peking duck - Japan apologizes, while rightists continue giving Japan a bad name

related links: Japan Waffles, Even I Begin to Lose Patience

Photo

Japanese residents from Kobe hold a banner to mourn Chinese war victims at a memorial in Nanjing, east China's Jiangsu Province, August 15, 2005.

young japanese dressed in "imperial army" uniform, worshiped the notorious war shrine on Aug 15, 2005

japanese worshiped the notorious war shrine on Aug 15, 2005, not sure how many people did this old guy kill with this sword

japanese worshiped the notorious war shrine on Aug 15, 2005. it reminds me how a german writer describes nazi soldiers - "intellectually civilized, morally barbaric"

a lot of young followers, surely they are the hope of japan, invade, kill, bomb, rape, torture ... just wait and see who will be the next country they are going to f**k

polite beasts, lofty killing, clean shits, offensive "apologies"

this little shit appeared in last year's worship too. he must be reading a japanese "science fiction" in which japan defeated china, nuked the US, and invaded soviet union ...

finally, we have officials from japanese government who just said "sorry" - sorry/fu*kyou/sorry/fu*kyou/sorry/fu*kyou/sorry/fu*kyou ...now you must fall in love with japanese language as well as their famous "apologies" (14 times since 1945)

posted @ 8:01 PM

via: answer

my post about cherry's qq car appears as answer.com's top searching results, and what's more, i received mnay inquiry mails about how to become a local dealer of cherry qq car, from africa, europe and a lot of them from pakistan (don't know why).

i feel i am already a proud member of cherry motor company.

do you think i should distribute cherry qq car through the teahouse?

posted @ 6:28 PM

via: yahoo hk news (in chinese)

mingpao photo

Mr. Bu Dong (Bu Dong-san, a former japanese "imperial army" soldier)

a former japanese soldier stayed in guangdong's foshan when japanese empire collapsed 60 years ago.

some local villagers tried to kill him when they knew he was a japanese soldier but were stopped. they were told by other chinese villagers not to do it because nobody has seen him involved into killings of chinese during the war. the former japanese soldier re-named himself as Bu Dong (don't understand) and made a living in foshan of guangdong province by working in a local tree farm. in his hardest time, he begged for a living and got help from local villagers.

posted @ 1:55 PM