Japanese army grasped such unlawful combatants hid everywhere around them, then started to wipe them out. Execute them is legal even if they don't wear a military uniform.
You shouldn't confuse legal "execution" with indiscriminate "genocide".
https://t.co/tdnC76V4Vs https://t.co/VmHQy0B194
1907, the Qing Empire objected to the Japanese who named and developed the Dongsha Is. in the South China Sea as NISHIZAWA. The fact that they did not object to the Senkakus but bit on the Dongsha Is. shows that the Senkakus were a non-issue at that time.
https://t.co/PI6GZLIeTE
@sorensen_j9 @HugoAgogogogo @Nausicaa4_ @Anacampseros @LadyPoop2 @Williams1Isabel @Pmac89360732 @AaronTa67472031 @Tokidok42078559 @TedTratt @pw19751 @BandyTez @RMDLTD1 @OcarinaJones @JewsDownUnder @KColdrey @gcLaborista @FabioViagarra @Conservatismisa @12moreboosters @BankstownBoy64 @Lukestruth @DJGothWhitlam @AndreBassi1 @Rachael07384347 @FatherBob @CarlDeplorable @_latenightlogic @gtwarrior47 @TheWhogg @lifeandlarder @RusSprouts @WhosFibbing @WayneTKing @theblackeffect7 @BoilieO @isaacfloyd13 @Smile__Petal @Maximum_Rider1 @GailClifford7 @Cranky_Old_Guy @TheRealDrWING @beamailuc @PW_Arts @ev42512B @FieldNovak @Dizruptor1 @RyanWil62993886 @browncoat5757 @captainswingAU I often go to National Library in Tokyo. Here's the dead toll in Nanking what a Chinese civic group counted. According to this, 300,000 people didn't die.
https://t.co/1AZ5H76LH3
@podca_s A Chinese civic group counted dead bodies in Nanking. I can't find such large number from this report. Please count it if you are interested.
https://t.co/1AZ5H76LH3
@londonbel0w People who can't read Chinese characters including Koreans still do believe CCP's propaganda.
https://t.co/1AZ5H76LH3
世界紅卍字會
南京分會救援隊
埋葬班埋葬死体数統計表
Good luck believing bullshit
@Ugp32 Origin of quotation(引用元)National diet library,Japan
A general education textbook: Each subject teaching method, education system, school administration second book empire local administration society. Empire local administration society, Taisho 12
https://t.co/ZUGLWLrV6F
This book from the Edo period includes illustrations of men and women in colorful costumes. But when you turn the page, you'll find that they are actually kitsune (foxes) and tanuki (raccoon dogs) disguised as humans. #ndldigital https://t.co/moOQ4pvixa https://t.co/D72c3MCZG5
At the end of the year, the sound of pounding rice cake was heard every day in the streets of Edo. The embraced child is holding Mochibana (rice cake flowers) which is a Japanese New Year's decoration. #kunisada #toyokuni3 #nishikie #ndldigital https://t.co/0IMITuVOjF https://t.co/Al9d6YmYn6