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  1. >Please pick up a book and read up on Comfort Women
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  3. "A "comfort girl" is nothing more than a prostitute or "professional camp follower" attached to the Japanese Army for the benefit of the soldiers. The word "comfort girl" is peculiar to the Japanese"
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  5. http://www.exordio.com/1939-1945/codex/Documentos/report-49-USA-orig.html
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  7. > Bataan Death March
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  9. "General Honma was not getting a team of experienced criminal lawyers to defend him.... [T]he reason that Jack Skeen was head of the team was that he was a major. It had nothing to do with his experience as a lawyer."
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  11. "[N]o man could recieve a fair trial under this set-up"
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  13. "somewhere between seventy and eighty thousand men were surrendered to the Japanese, whose intelligence had led them to expect about half that number"
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  15. "Seven thousand Filipino and American prisoners died from exhaustion, insufficient food and water, lack of medical supplies"
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  17. "Neither Japanese general was charged with ordering, condoning or specifically knowing about the commission of atrocities."
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  19. https://www.wcslaw.com/wp-content/uploads/Mr-Iglehart-World-War-II-memoir.pdf
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  21. >the Rape of Nanking
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  23. "Shortly before eight o'clock Colonels Lung and Chow arrive (Ling has marched off by now) and ask if they can take shelter in my house. I agree. Before Han and I left for home, these two gentlemen deposited 30,000 dollars in the committee's safe."
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  25. The Good Man of Nanking , p.64
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  27. "I thought I made that clear in my testimony. I only personally witnessed the killing of one man."
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  29. John Magee, The Tokyo War Crimes Trial , pp.3929-3930.
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  31. "The last sights I saw in Nanking were endless lines of evacuees, boarded-up houses and shops, and troops rushing in to defend the capital, the air-raid siren wailing all the while. Rickshaws and automobiles were piled high with packing crates, bundles, furniture, and humanity. Crowds of departing residents were on the move at all hours of the day and night. One by one, the shops closed down. Since the electricity in most of the houses had already been turned off, merchants were selling off their remaining stock by candlelight. It was impossible to find packing crates or brown paper anywhere - the shops were all sold out. Last week about 200,000 people left Nanking. One million souls once inhabited the city, but their numbers had dwindled to 350,000. Now there are at most 150,000 people remaining, but the waves of evacuees seem interminable"
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  33. "Wherever we went, we could see that order was given way to chaos. A train carrying 2,000 wounded soldiers arrived at Nanking Station, but no one paid it any heed. There were no medical soldiers. The wounded soldiers were left there for two days, and during the time, dragged out of the train with corpses. The corpses emitted a horrible stench, polluting the air."
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  35. "0n December 7, 1937 the Nanking Garrison thoroughly burnt down the area around the Nanking city. Citizens were burned out, and the refugees dashed into the city. Commodity circulation and food distribution was suspended, so that food shortage became serious at an increasing tempo. In some areas, even riots flared up. In order to maintain public order, the Nanking Garrison shot to kill all of those who seemed suspicious, at random."
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  37. "Around December 10, the city completely fell into a state of anarchy. The Chinese soldiers came to be out of control and began looting"
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  39. Wie wir aus Nanking fluchteten: Die letzten Tage in der Haupstadt Chinas
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  41. "He [Rabe] is still actively trying to counter the bloody excesses of Japanese looters, which have unfortunately increased of late. To my mind, this should not concern us Germans, particularly since one can clearly see that the Chinese, once left to depend solely on the Japanese, immediately fraternize. And as for all these excesses, one hears only one side of it, after all."
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  43. Memorandum of Chancellor Scharffenberg for the Embassy in Hankow, The Good Man of Nanking, p.190
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  45. >Japan was going to massacre Southeast Asia had they not been stopped by the atomic bombs.
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  47. nice conspiracy, makes no sense for a massacre to take place in that part of the war and what would atomic bombs on the mainland do to prevent in actuality?
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