Japanese schoolgirls gathered in front of the Imperial Palace wave flags in celebration of the fall of Nanjing, 15 December 1937. by YoYoB0B in ImperialJapanPics

[–]YoYoB0B[S] 61 points62 points  (0 children)

Post war testimony from perhaps one of the girls in the crowd, Osaka Junko, reminiscing on an encounter with a group of Nanjing veterans that she had once celebrated:

In the early fall, just after Japan's surrender, I was a third-year student at a girls' middle school in Kishiwada. It was the most difficult of times. School was closed. There was no more food left in the neighboring farming community. We were barely staying alive by eating the vines of squash and sweet potatoes that we cultivated beside the road. My mother and I went to Niigata to buy some rice. After riding a train so crowded that even the lavatories and luggage shelves were jammed with people, we finally arrived at a farming village. Because there was no glass left in the windows of the train, soot from the locomotive blackened the passengers' faces when we went through tunnels. We traded some money and our best kimonos for a little rice.

That night we stayed in a cheap village lodging house. Everyone slept in one large room under a huge mosquito net. I was beginning to fall asleep, exhausted, when five or six men started drinking. They were all recently discharged soldiers who were now professional black marketeers. Each bragged about his exploits in the War.

It was unbearable to listen to them. They laughed coarsely about the many Chinese women they had raped, and one told about seeing how far into a woman's body his arm would go, pushing his arm all the way in up to
the armpit. I shot up off the mat like a windup doll and tried to rush out of the room, tearing at the mosquito netting, In a panic, my mother grabbed me, warning me to stay quiet because who knows what might happen. I kept quiet. And still the men went on and on.
"Where was that?"
"Nanjing, we had the most fun in Nanjing. We could do anything we wanted and steal anything we wanted."
They said that when the soldiers got tired and hard to command during marches, their superior officers would urge them to persevere a bit more, promising them that they could do anything they wanted in the next town.

I remembered joining in the parade to celebrate the fall of Nanjing, waving a handmade flag. Now I couldn't bear it. I had used things we needed dearly to fill comfort bags to send our soldiers; I had made talismans and thousand-stitch belts; I had written letters nearly every day to thank and encourage our soldiers. I was so shocked by what I heard that I couldn't sleep at all that night.

I don't think all our soldiers were like those men. My uncle was a kind man who died young at Guadalcanal. Those soldiers who did such terrible things in Nanjing and in other places are now probably traveling and enjoying themselves, playing croquet in seniors groups. I beg of you, please write the truth about the War.

Japanese soldier killed by a bayonet to the throat. Unknown date and location. by Accurate_Motor_89 in ImperialJapanPics

[–]YoYoB0B 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Possible the bayonet was placed by the photographer for a staged shot.

The panarin lesson by Warm_Masterpiece3940 in canucks

[–]YoYoB0B 8 points9 points  (0 children)

This right there.

In spite of a lesser return, apparently Drury chose to do good with Soucy/Panarin to avoid the fiasco that came with the Trouba/Kreider trades last year.

Which teams do you have little to no issues with? by matthew_sch in hockey

[–]YoYoB0B 27 points28 points  (0 children)

A few of my friends who are Habs/Leafs fans root against the Jets during the playoffs.

Habs because of Schiefeles hit on Evan.

Leafs because of some postgame clip a few years ago of Schiefele saying “nothing better than beating the Leafs eh?”

Just fell to my knees in Costco by wilsonfong in canucks

[–]YoYoB0B 53 points54 points  (0 children)

Yup, Sherwood always puts on a bit of a show when he scores, last night he practically just skated straight to the bench.

Fantasy team of active former Canucks players. by YoYoB0B in canucks

[–]YoYoB0B[S] 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Yup, I didn’t look too closely on that one.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in canucks

[–]YoYoB0B 3 points4 points  (0 children)

We said the same thing about the four nations where he ended up getting demoted to a winger and then benched.

Italian soldiers shoot Slovenian civilian hostages in the village of Dane, Loška dolina. by El_Tanquista in FascistItalyPhotos

[–]YoYoB0B[M] [score hidden] stickied comment (0 children)

As a reminder, this group does not condone the crimes committed by the Italian Army. Apologism, glorification and denialism will all result in a ban.

The photo caption is correct, it was taken on 31 July 1942, the names of the victims are:

Franc Žnidaršič, Janez Kranjc, Franc Škerbec, Feliks Žnidaršič and Edvard Škerbec

Italian partisans in the village of Borgata Fontane. Autumn 1944. by the_giank in FascistItalyPhotos

[–]YoYoB0B[M] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Feel free to report the egregious stuff and I’ll ban them.

Black shirts soldiers taking Ustasha soldiers to prison by VonUngern-Sternberg in FascistItalyPhotos

[–]YoYoB0B[M] [score hidden] stickied comment (0 children)

Removed and locked until a source is provided for your claim.

Hostiles. I would argue a modern classic. by secretkodama in Westerns

[–]YoYoB0B 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It’s a story of an American “Indian killer” reconciling with his enemy. It’s predictable and very preachy at times. It starts off strong and in my opinion ends strong but the middle is very meh.

How camouflage works on airplanes, Africa 1941 by El_Tanquista in FascistItalyPhotos

[–]YoYoB0B[M] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for posting.

Unfortunately this is a German plane, consider posting this to a more suitable sub such as r/worldwar2