In the Second World War, they're talking about the Japanese traitors and putting them into concentration camps. But companies like DuPont had factories in Germany turning out stuff for the German Army.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
It's all well and good to say that Germans were all responsible for the concentration camps, but I don't think they were. I think that was the work of a small group of fiends.
There would be a paragraph about some veteran digging tunnels for the Germans in a slave labor camp, or something like that. Finally I decided to look it up and go further into it.
In basic training we had been told to watch out for Japanese spies.
I am not saying that factory farming is the same as the Holocaust or the slave trade, but it's clear that there is an immense amount of suffering in it, and just as we think that the Nazis were wrong to ignore the suffering of their victims, so we are wrong to ignore the sufferings of our victims.
I could never understand how we could put 120,000 Japanese behind a fence in World War II. I remember being bewildered about that.
After the Second World War, people in Japan no longer died for their country, and even that expression was no longer used.
Technological things, that Germans and Japanese would get real excited about.
During World War II, law-abiding Japanese-American citizens were herded into remote internment camps, losing their jobs, businesses and social standing, while an all-Japanese-American division fought heroically in Europe.
Man, it seemed, had been created to jab the life out of Germans.
Factories not what they used to be - they're all extremely high-tech.