The Battle of China

PublicResourceOrg 255 tūkst. prenumeratorių ARC Identifier 36072 / Local Identifier 111-OF-6 - Department of Defense. Department of the Army. Office of the Chief Signal Officer. (09/18/1947 - 02/28/1964) - 1944 - This motion picture film explores Japanese aggression. In Reel 1, Japanese planes bomb Shanghai; citizens flee. Describes Chinese development of the compass, printing, astronomy, gunpowder, and porcelain. The reel shows views of the Gobi Desert, sampans, and types of architecture and statuary. Japanese artillery fires and cavalry advances. The reel also describes Japanese plans for world conquest; contrasts Japanese unity with Chinese disunity. Footage also shows Emperor Hirohito. Reel 2 shows Sun Yat-sen and uprisings against the Manchu dynasty. Students go abroad. Hospitals, highways, schools, and factories are constructed. Children play at school. Emperor Hirohito reviews Japanese troops; tanks roll down a street. The reel shows a Japanese munitions factory, a Japanese fleet at sea, troops marching, the Army occupying Manchuria, views of the League of Nations as the action is condemned, the Great Wall of China, the puppet premier Pu-Yi, Japanese attacking Chinese at Marco Polo Bridge in 1937, and Chiang Kai-shek. Reel 3 shows street and harbor scenes in Shanghai, the bombing and naval bombardment of the city, street fighting, and the city's capture by Japanese units. Japanese troops advance toward Nanking. The gunboat Panay is bombed in the Yangtze. The reel also shows fighting in and around Nanking. In Reel 4, the battle continues. Footage describes Japanese atrocities during the rape of Nanking and shows dead and injured civilians. Chinese demonstrate against Japan. Chiang Kai-shek speaks. Hordes of Chinese emigrate to the West carrying their belongings with them. Reel 5 shows the establishment of the new Chinese capitol at Chungking. Air raid shelters are dug; the city is bombed. The reel shows an underground factory, fires being fought, recruits for the Chinese Army, the "Flying Tigers" taking off, and Japanese units occupying the Chinese coast. In Reel 6, coolies repair and expand the Burma Road by hand; trucks move over it. Dikes on the Yellow River are blown up to stem a Japanese offensive on Chengchow. Guerrillas ambush a Japanese patrol. Japanese planes attack Pearl Harbor. Footage shows the Japanese high command. In Reel 7, Japanese units advance against Changsha, their supply lines are cut forcing their withdrawal, and the Chinese infantry advances. Footage shows Generals Douglas MacArthur and Joseph Stilwell. Madame Chiang Kai-shek addresses the U.S. Congress. The Ledo Road is constructed; transport planes fly over "the Hump." The "Flying Tigers" bomb Japanese airfields in China. - Copied by Tim Vollmer
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Guoqiang Ai prieš 1 metus 日本爲何侵略中國? 1. 首先你要去讀歷史,真正的歷史,不是國民黨,共産黨寫的假歷史。 簡單説,俄國侵占東北,清無力抵抗,求日本出兵幫忙,死十萬兵慘勝,清回報日本,由日本管理南滿鐵路幷駐軍鎮懾俄國。1911年辛亥革命,日本已經駐軍在東北26年了。 2. 孫文答應過日本,推翻清後東北歸日本。所以東北軍接令撤退。 3. 東北軍撤出東北,中日沒有戰爭。張學良心中有氣,西安事變後,中俄結盟,事情開始起變化,變成俄日戰爭,戰場在中國。結果是俄國人戰勝了,黃種人戰敗了。 爲了掩飾漢奸身份,天天扮“愛國”,天天鼓吹“愛國”,漢奸叫人愛國,等於妓女叫人守貞操,何其荒謬! 國民黨背棄撕毀了對清室的條約,導致滿遜帝溥儀回到滿州建立滿州國,這也是重要原因。國民政府老蔣一面撕毀對清廷的共和承諾,一面宣稱滿州是支那的領土,發動了對滿州的侵略。而滿州國的保護國日本,也不得不對支那宣戰。 【當老蔣的國民黨撕毀承諾時,其孫大砲對清室的未來五族共和、聯邦體制的也等於被當場撕毀了。所以溥儀帶著滿人回滿州老家,建立了滿州國跟支那切割】。 而孫大砲的追隨者汪精衛壓根不同意老蔣這樣幹,因為這實在太無恥太土匪了,於是他最後的命運是被打成漢奸。 國民黨被蘇聯發錢,發槍,建立黃埔軍校。驅日是配合俄的需要,目的是聯俄抗日,保衛蘇聯。 1937-7-29 通州事件 中國軍屠殺日本人事件 日本「暴支膺懲」口號的由來 https://forum.gamer.com.tw/Co.php?bsn=60076&sn=31663399




Vacys Motuzas

Wai Lee prieš 4 mėnesius Yes, I was told the same history of death, pain, and suffering, again and again by my dad, my mom, uncles, aunts, my older second cousins, dad's war buddies, family friends ....etc. I remember I was 5 to 8 years old and one of my neighbors loved to hug me every time she saw me and pet my head while she cried. She sold street food for a living in Hong Kong and always gave me a little of leftover (or saved up) food I like, but not to my brothers. Her stupid husband left his family to join up, and died as a volunteer soldier. All 4 of her kids died in her arms, one after another from starvation and illness related to malnutrition when they fled the "kill all, loot all, and rape all" Japanese soldiers. She was starving and had no breast milk for her youngest son. She told my mom time and again she felt so guilty but she did everything, including sex for food. Years later I was looking at some old photos and suddenly remembered her and asked my mom why she cried every time she saw me and loved me so much. I really looked like one of her sons. No wonder she said I was the cutest and most lovely boy on earth. My mom told me her story when I was 22 and I cried. My mom cried too. My eyes are wet when I am writing this. How could I forget. No one living through the war in China and their next generation would ever forget. The message was: "don't forget what they did, hate them, don't buy anything made in Japan, do the same to them if there is ever the opportunity". My dad never bought anything from Japan. He only bought "Made in USA" in return for his Thompson submachine gun that saved his behind many times, to wit: in Hong Kong in the 60's Made In USA Colgate was 20% more expensive than Made in England Colgate and he would rather pay more. When he died I couldn't wait to dumped my Ford and bought my first Toyota Highlander. The feeling and the emotion faded with time, but easily arousable when you heard that Japanese changed their history books or had border disputes with Taiwan or China.
























Vacys Motuzas

Wai Lee prieš 4 mėnesius (redaguota) The opening scenes were not dramatic enough. My father witnessed Japanese fighters flying at tree top level chasing civilians with their machine guns for the best fun. He thought he could hit the planes with a long pole and he saw one pilot smiling, obviously having fun. He wanted to return the courtesy someday but failed to get into the nascent Chinese air force. They put him on a spin at a children's playground for 3 minutes, and he had to run on a straight line for 50 meters, then peeped through a hole on a box to line up a chopstick in the left hand inside the box to touch the tip of a chopstick held by the other hand. He failed the last part and was welcomed to the 6th branch of the Central(National) Military Academy in Guilin, for mud crawlers, and became a second lieutenant in 6 months, as he had one year of college. Chinese lost more than 100,000 second lieutenants in the 8 year war. 8 branches cranked out 8,000 second lieutenants every 6 months. He personally killed hundreds. He was one of 20 divisions armed by the US and he loved to face the Japanese one on one with his Thompson submachine gun(example here at 1:03:19) at close range. He used to pee into his pants holding a Made in China single shot rifle facing a Japanese soldier shooting at him at bayonet range with a multi-shot, semi-automatic, rifle similar to the M1. He only had one chance and if he missed he had to fly with his bayonet toward the other guy, hoping to be faster than bullets. Japanese love bayoneting the Chinese soldier as they all knew it was a 3 to 1 odds in favor of the professional Japanese soldier vs a Chinese farm boy when it came to close encounters. However, Chinese were so poorly equipped that bayonet fighting was still their best odds after being shelled by Japanese artillery and machine gunned by Japanese planes. The biggest dicks most Chinese troops had were mortars. That all changed when the US entered the war 4 years later. My dad would be 102 this year, if still alive. He fought the battle of Changde and was one of 86(out of 9,000) survivors of the 57th division, but Japanese lost 3 times more soldiers.



Vacys Motuzas

Wai Lee prieš 4 mėnesius Yes, I was told the same history of death, pain, and suffering, again and again by my dad, my mom, uncles, aunts, my older second cousins, dad's war buddies, family friends ....etc. I remember I was 5 to 8 years old and one of my neighbors loved to hug me every time she saw me and pet my head while she cried. She sold street food for a living in Hong Kong and always gave me a little of leftover (or saved up) food I like, but not to my brothers. Her stupid husband left his family to join up, and died as a volunteer soldier. All 4 of her kids died in her arms, one after another from starvation and illness related to malnutrition when they fled the "kill all, loot all, and rape all" Japanese soldiers. She was starving and had no breast milk for her youngest son. She told my mom time and again she felt so guilty but she did everything, including sex for food. Years later I was looking at some old photos and suddenly remembered her and asked my mom why she cried every time she saw me and loved me so much. I really looked like one of her sons. No wonder she said I was the cutest and most lovely boy on earth. My mom told me her story when I was 22 and I cried. My mom cried too. My eyes are wet when I am writing this. How could I forget. No one living through the war in China and their next generation would ever forget. The message was: "don't forget what they did, hate them, don't buy anything made in Japan, do the same to them if there is ever the opportunity". My dad never bought anything from Japan. He only bought "Made in USA" in return for his Thompson submachine gun that saved his behind many times, to wit: in Hong Kong in the 60's Made In USA Colgate was 20% more expensive than Made in England Colgate and he would rather pay more. When he died I couldn't wait to dumped my Ford and bought my first Toyota Highlander. The feeling and the emotion faded with time, but easily arousable when you heard that Japanese changed their history books or had border disputes with Taiwan or China.





Žymės: #https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DMWQ32vwMxI
Komentarai: 36

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