Posted on 05/27/2016 2:40:37 PM PDT by GraceG
The fact that surprises me, is that forty years prior to the end of WWII, Japan and Russia had discussed splitting Korea between them at the 38th parallel. The Soviets happily agreed to the later split with American leaders and were surprised the Americans allowed it, giving them what they wanted decades before. Over forty years prior, Japan had just recently defeated Russia in a war, and the western powers intervened and let Russia retain some concessions, otherwise China and parts of Russia would be Japanese. That defeat of Russia was a reason why the Soviets wanted to invade Japan at the end of WWII but the Potsdam Agreement with our president forbid them from entering Japan until the day the atomic bomb was dropped; the Soviets had moved much of their equipment up to the 38th parallel where the Americans blocked them. This was long before the Korean War.
LOL! Superman's got nothing on GraceG. ;)
At the start of WW11, It would be impossible to convey to today's Americans the strong dislike between the northerners and southerners, the Catholics and Protestants, blacks and whites, and between ethnic groups.
About the only thing these groups had in common was a dislike for Jews.
WW11 changed that a lot, and interaction with other groups ironed out a lot of these animosities.
Intermarriage mongrelized this country, and made us realize one thing we all had in common was being an American.
That is under attack now from our American hating president, Obama. -tom
There comes a time to rise up & remove evil leadership.
We in the U.S. have been fortunate we can do so at the
ballot box if we aren’t too flim-flammed by lying
politicians to do so.
Don’t need to nuke Detriot. Empherical evidence proves all that is needed to destroy a city or a nation is the constant election of marxists democrats.
Yes it would, because we don't teach our children anything of value anymore. I started grade school in 1943 and the school was located near an airfield where we were training British pilots. Those old Stearman biplanes flew right over the school. We all were aware of what was going on even at that tender age.
When those old planes flew over we had an opportunity to sneak a word to our friends, otherwise we were silent.
My dad was a hardened combat veteran (88th/351st Army) of
N. Africa, Italy, & Germany. He would have been sent to
Japan if the war had dragged on. I was not born until the
year after the war ended & I might not have been born.
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