2022년 4월 8일 금요일

militarism was flattering and wonderful, but what I got in return for it.

 In World War II, Germany and Japan once conquered Europe and East Asia, but after the war, they were like, "Mom. Germany ruled for about five years after the invasion of Poland and before Normandy and Japan for eight years after the invasion of China until the surrender... ...and after the war, Germany took over a quarter of its territory to the Soviet Union and Poland and split the rest into four major U.S. and French states. Britain in the northwest, Munich and Bavaria in the south, and the Soviet Union in the East German region. Three minutes for the U.S. and a little for the French... ...four for the capital, Berlin. Austria also has four divisions. The Tyrol Alps is surrounded by the U.S. from Salzburg, Mozart, and the U.S. from Hitler's hometown, the southern region of Linz, the U.K., and the capital city of Berlin. The capital city and the state of the island are divided into four parts. This was ruled for as long as six years until 51... West and East Germany, West Berlin and East Berlin. Austria is a small neutral country after 10 years of rule up to 55 years. Japan was just eaten by the United States ... ... also ruled for six years until 51 ... in short, it had the military prowess of temporarily dominating the East and the West ... ... but paid the price. Case where there is no precedent for a powerful country to temporarily lose its national sovereignty. France was temporarily occupied by the Allies during the Napoleonic Wars... ...and Germany was defeated in World War I by foreign forces except for the French's temporary occupation of the industrial zone of Lourdes in 1923. But this is a loss of national sovereignty... ...a great power =>no state... ...a terrible downfall. the price of an all-out war But they also did... 100 million people who died in World War II... tens of millions of civilians who were deliberately slaughtered by Germany and Japan. A biological experiment is an appendix. You've done too much..................Germany alone has 20 million slaughter of Soviet land and Soviet prisoners of war, 4 million slaughter of Jews, Japan at least 10 million in China. But I don't know if the following Allied retaliation against Germany will be tolerated. It's so miserable........................Soviet Russia deserves to retaliate but why France? The Japanese Poronum deserve this kind of retribution... ...so the Soviets raped a million East German women, and the Czechs raped and slaughtered 300,000 German girls. Scary retaliation..................Park Noja sun went to Norway. At the last Waldor Cup, I said, "You must have thought that you were a Korean-American in the Dead Sea." It turns out that the Nazi... ...real sun was so naive that I didn't like it much, but it was a crock of Dead Sea homophobia. Can't you tell the difference between the real left of Europe and our fake left-wing real yuppie nationalist show.............just read a book or something like that. The same left-wing book only when criticizing the United States.S. ============================================================= The shadow of a just war... How the victors of World War II treated German prisoners Spielberg's film Saving Private Ryan, which was released a few years ago, has almost reached the level of 'famous painting' in Korea. Whenever I think of the movie, I remember the feelings of a famous American progressive historian named Howard Zinn. He says such three-dimensional and emotional propaganda has a greater effect than any propaganda in textbooks or media. In other words, by inducing human sympathy for American soldiers during World War II, the legitimacy of the U.S. war could be further strengthened. Photographs of the collaboration of American tycoons and Nazis/ German soldiers captured by the Allies during World War II. The U.S. military simply left them 'unbearable' to die, and France and the Soviet Union mobilized them for heavy labor. Once the precedent of "just war" is established, it is easy to justify the next slaughter. So it's easy to rationalize a gangster invasion of Iraq by equating Iraq with Pasho Germany by frequently appearing in the media, "Sadam Hussein is today's Hitler." It was Howard Jean-Down, a popular historian who realized that he and his comrades' blood tears helped expand the U.S. empire only after he joined World War II believing it was a legitimate war. "Righteous War".... There was one thing in common between the United States and the Soviet Union, which had different systems. Those who were educated without much interest in history or progressive ideas had little doubt that their participation in World War II was "justifiable." Anyone who publicly expressed such 'doubts' in the past Soviet Union would probably have been treated as a traitor or taken to a mental hospital. It is a sacred belief close to the "civil religion" of both systems that our military, which "liberated the world" by defeating Hitler who attacked the borders of Japan and the Soviet Union, is an absolute good. Education, media, and popular cultural works that spread this pseudo-religion do not usually ask how "absolute evil" has grown to the point of invading the United States and the Soviet Union. Most Americans have no idea that the U.S. chaebol and Hitler's Germany actively traded and cooperated during the war, or that the 1910 Japanese annexation of Korea and Japan was allowed by the U.S. in exchange for the recognition of the Philippines' colonization by the U.S. It is all the more taboo to argue the other side of the 'absolute line'. The slaughter, sex crimes, and extortion of bribes committed by Soviet troops in North Korea or the Eastern bloc are matters that only a few historians know in Russia today. In essence, all kinds of crimes against humanity committed by the defeated side "contribute" the most to the unilateral glorification of the slaughter drama, which is only a global hegemonic battle between Germany, Japan, and the United States and the Soviet Union. However, did the U.S. and the Soviet Union, who believed in the legitimacy of the war and were not suspicious, only "punished" the "criminals" of the victors were relatively less well known than those of the defeated side, and the hands of the confident winners were never clean. Hitler's 'death factory' who massacred millions of workers after exploiting them very efficiently. World War II camps have long been symbols of violence inherent in modern times. Compared to Hitler's meticulously planned camps, the "temporary camps" that the U.S. military, who were on a roll at the end of the war, hastily established in early 1945 near the Rhine were literally "pre-modern." Unlike the German army, the U.S. military, which was indifferent to the long-term exploitation of labor by the Sioux people, only built iron fences to prevent escape, but did not build any facilities. Limitations of the U.S.-Soviet War Crimes Tribunal/Soviet poster painted in 1942 after Britain and the U.S. signed a military treaty with the Soviet Union. What is important is that even Nazi prisoners of war, who were supposed to be protected by the Geneva Convention, were innocently strangled. A closer look at the U.S. military action, which seems to have not been taken prisoner, can only conclude that it wants to save food as many as possible among the approximately 920,000 prisoners trapped behind the fence. The toilet was not allowed to be built, so the narrow space behind the fence turned into a sea of poop and a greenhouse of pandemics. Of course, the U.S. military did not provide any medical services to the sick and dying German prisoners. Overcrowded, nightly coldness, pandemics and low-calorie foods of 600-850 calories a day killed about 50,000 German prisoners in a few months. It is well known that the majority of them were conscripted freshmen in their late teens. The U.S. soldiers who killed young people were the true "war criminals." But... as the ancient Latin saying goes, "The winner has no business being judged." The winner, the U.S.-Soviet-led war criminal court, did not deal with the winner's own problems in principle. For Germans, the names of "temporary camps" near the Rhine River of the U.S. military at the time, such as Remagen, sound like a "national tragedy," but it is unknown to most Americans who have never encountered it in education and media. Unlike the U.S. military, which killed tens of thousands of German prisoners simply because it was too much to save, France, which was devastated by the war, actively sought the exploitation of German prisoners of war like the Soviet Union. In 1945-48, France forced hundreds of thousands of German prisoners to work long hours of unpaid "abnormal human power," providing inhumane living conditions for the exploited. In the end, it is estimated that about 160,000 prisoners died at the labor site due to chronic fatigue caused by overwork and an epidemic. One of the reasons is that the French authorities intentionally reduced the supply of food to ordinary prisoners. Some argue that starving ordinary prisoners attracted them to enlist in France's famous "foreign forces." At that time, France was at the beginning of its war against the Vietnamese independence movement, a representative "dirty war" in modern history, and the foreign troops were one of Powell's framing units. It is not easy to confirm such "intention," but it is true that many German prisoners of war were mixed in other foreign units. It is said that prisoners were used not only as "free labor" but also as "bullet holders." In the Soviet Union, which had far more German prisoners (about 2.38 million) than France, their labor force, which had been exploited for five to six years, was considered a "major driver of postwar recovery." I remember that there was an apartment complex built by German prisoners in the late 1940s near the St. Petersburg (Leningrad) apartment where I lived. How many thousands of such "German villages" across the Soviet Union? Nemersdorf, a symbol of Soviet brutality, but the prisoners who were ministryed at the construction site were lucky. This is because it was not common to return alive when sent to mines in Siberia. Most of the 423,168 German prisoners killed in Soviet labor exploitation died there from overwork, lack of calories, and illness.

It would have been obvious that French and Soviet authorities did not know that the use of prisoners in labor for their own country - and that it would be against the Geneva Convention, an international corporation. However, as the saying that enlightened intellectuals liked at the end of the Joseon Dynasty, "thousands of books on universal law (international law) fall short of a single cannon gate," tells the reality of the world dominated by imperialism. Nemmersdorf in eastern Prussia has become a symbol of the brutality of the Soviet army, which claims to be a "liberal force." It was the first German city to enter the hands of Soviet troops in October 1944. Few of the population survived, and the brutality of raping and killing women dozens of times, using bodies as targets for shooting ranges, and tanking fleeing children shocked even some Soviet officers. Solzhenitsyn, a young officer who witnessed a similar scene in another German city, said that it led to the first serious suspicion of the morality of the Soviet regime. After that, Solzhenitsyn's journey to fight against the regime began as he was imprisoned as a thought criminal and exposed the reality of Stalinism with works such as "The Prison Archipelago" after being released from prison. In an era when imperialist countries that consider human life only as a red mother share the world, no slaughter by a modern state can be seen as a "just war." Even if the country's propaganda uses the fact that the other country committed crimes against humanity, it is self-evident that there cannot be a country that respects humanity in principle among modern countries centered on the suppression system. But there is the only 'right' struggle. Capitalism, the source of inhumanity, a modern state, and a non-violent struggle to overcome class society. A full-fledged paper on the post-World War II "German extermination policy" (http://members.iinet.net.au/) on the Allied side and Germany's genocide (http://serendipity.magnet.ch/hr/bacque01.htm)) (the proof of the "intentional "Assa-inducing operation" in 1945): http://serendipity.magnet.ch/hr/bacque01.htm) (http://serendipity.magnet.ch/hr/bacque01.htm)) http://www.ibiblio.org/pha/) Professor Park No-ja of Oslo National University and Editorial Member of Outsider

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