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Well, Patience tried to 'protect' me from reading your post, but I am the protector of this system, not Patience, and I will not stand by and see my country trashed by someone who can't tolerate being put right about some facts concerning WW2.

So you weren't attacking anyone eh? Well it sure sounded like it to me! How would you and other Americans like it if I wrote a whole lot of your 'bad history' up in detail on an Australian Forum, and said your country was as bad as the Nazis and the Japanese war criminals, and that your soldiers got butchered because it was 'karma' for what they did to their Native people, and their African American people?

You might not mind, because as you said, you'll never pay allegiance to your country, but I'll bet there are a lot of other US citizens out there who would be deeply upset and angry.

You ask:

"My point is how does the treatment our countries inflicted on the Aborigines or the Native Americans differ at all from the treatment that the Japanese or Germans inflicted upon their victims? "

It differs a hell of a lot, and if you can't see that, then you are in denial. You've not seen or heard a thing that has been said here. You've also not done your research very well. All you've seen is what YOU want to see, and you've shut your eyes and ears to anything, no matter how true it is, that doesn't fit in with your particular picture of WW2. You don't like the horrid truth, and you don't want to look at it for what it is. You make excuses by finding other people to blame - or to fob it off by saying 'but you did this' - and making unfair and unbalanced comparisons. This is the old 'yes, BUT' syndrome of reasoning. It is at best, denial, or avoidance, and at worst, projection. You draw attention away from what is at the centre of the matter by pointing accusingly at someone else.

Aborigines WERE treated abominably, and that is Australia's disgrace, but we are making changes. Most Aborigines today live in cities and are educated teacers, doctors, lawyers and even court judges as well as ordinary working people. They live in suburbia and have a good life. They are not all living in slums! We do have those on settlements, (which is where THEY prefer to live) and that is where the problems are. Most of the problems are alcohol related. We are trying to rectify this. Our Aborigines are OUR problem, not yours. Why don't you come to Australia and see for yourself? We don't tell you how to handle your Native Americans.

Since you are comparing what we have done to our Aboriginals with Nazi and Japanese war crimes, let's take another look. Let's see how many of the things that were done by the Nazis and the Japanese in WW2 were done to our Aborigines

Australians, since the times of the early settlers, have never butchered or massacred Aborigines.

We did not use Aborigines for bayonet practice.
We did not put them in torture camps and refuse them even a drink of water.
We did not make their women stand for hours in the sun and then beat them with rifle butts when they could no longer stand.
We did not use their women as sex slaves.
We were never guilty of the things the Japanese did to our POW's.

We are not, today, denying the terrible things that WERE done in the past. We are making reparation; returning land rights and respecting their sacred sites. They run them themselves.

YOU are the one who made this personal by attacking another person's country in a mud-slinging manner and comparing it to other nations' most horrific atrocities in modern history! Then, when Patience responds with her own opinion of your words, you say you are the one being privately attacked. Geez! (incidentally, I think Patience's post was a very loving one and I'm sure others on this forum will agree. She told about those Japanese and Germans who showed compassion, and did not speak against the Japanese people, but their officials.)

We saw how your people treated your black people when they were here in WW2, and I'd say that our Aborigines at that time had it a lot better than those poor blokes did.

You think you have the right to display our dirty linen on this forum in order to score points, well, we have a little more decency than that, so I won't be telling those stories about your countrymen's treatment of Afro-American Servicemen. I won't, because I respect the American people and all the hard work that has gone into changing these things.

All I will say is, if it was 'karma' due to our ancestor's treatment of Aborigines that caused our troops to suffer so terribly at the hands of the Japanese, then, crikey, I shudder to think of what is yet in store for you!

You know something Linda, - death isn't the worst thing that can happen to you.

Patience and I never said anything about Japan that isn't true. If you don't like that, then that's your problem.

Percy.

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I believe it all comes down to "Learn from the past".

Pretty much every county in the world has some sort of atrocity that has been committed in it; at some point in time or the other. And holding any animosity or prejudice against a people because of what was done in the past is just plain silly!

As a Christian, I cringe when reading accounts of early "missionaries". But then on the other hand, there was the slaughter of Christians by the Romans. I cannot affect either of those issues, but I can learn from both mistakes and try to go on and be a better reprsentative of the Christian faith.

The same goes for being a white US citizen (one from the deep south at that!) I feel horrible for the things that were done to slaves - but I didn't do them, and don't deserve to pay for them. But I can look at that past and understand why there is still animosity in some parts - and hopefully use that information to better my relationships.

Peace in the world is never going to happen until people of all races and nationalites quit pulling the "you did this to my people, so we deserve to do the same" rationality. Forgive and forget is an irresponsible reaction. Remember, learn, and forgive would be the better way to go.

Last edited by Harmony; 05/22/07 08:27 AM.

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Linda,

Percy got in with a response before I could, so here is my reply .

Originally Posted By: Spirituality
Patience..

I was not attacking anyone. I was merely pointing out that none of our countries are blameless when it comes to oppressing others.


Linda, if this was all you intended to do, then why not simply point out that the early settlers in Australia gravely mistreated and killed the Aboriginal people? Why copy from the internet such a long, detailed account as this:

Quote:
I give you.. The Aborigine people of Australia...

Prior to colonization which began in January 1788, the Australian Aborigines lived a lifestyle based on their Dreamtime beliefs. They had survived as a race for thousands of years and their lifestyle and cultural practices had remained virtually unchanged during that time. We refer to this as the traditional period.

However colonization imposed changes on the Aborigines as people who lived in areas that were being settled by the Europeans, were forced off their land as towns and farms were developed. We identify the period in which the changes took place, as the historical period. The sort of changes that took place usually commenced with explorers entering the area of a tribe and being challenged by the people for trespassing on their land. The Europeans often (usually) responded by shooting at the people. Many were killed. When settlers followed the explorers and began felling trees and building farms, they restricted the ability of the Aborigines to move freely around their land. They also destroyed their traditional food sources.

These changes took place throughout the continent at different times. They began in the Sydney and Parramatta districts from 1788; in the Cowpastures (Campbelltown / Camden)area from the early 1800s and in the Illawarra district from 1815. Gradually - but with increasing speed colonization spread throughout the entire continent.

The settlers had arrived in this country to build a new life for themselves and their families and had 'no time for the Dreamtime'. In other words most were not interested in the affects colonization was having on the Aborigines. In fact they were often considered to be a pest and a nuisance. Many were killed by diseases such as influenza. Thousands were massacred to make way for farms and settlements.

On the other hand some Aboriginal people adapted to the Whitman's laws and the new lifestyle. In doing so, many were reduced to pauperism and were beggars. Others broke the traditional tribal lore's by accepting Brass Plates and by moving into the traditional lands of other tribes. In many cases they had no option in doing this as they were facing starvation or the gun.

Overall, the Australian Aborigines went through stages of being conquered through an 'invasion' and taking of their lands. Many adapted to the new lifestyle (when many became reliant on alcohol, tobacco and handouts of food and clothing. However the settlers were often contemptuous of the Aborigines and separated them from their society and the people became the fringe dwellers of society. Others were removed from their families and placed into institutions. From the late 1830s the remnants of the tribes in the settled areas were moved onto Reserves and Missions where they were 'managed' by Whitemen and were forbidden from teaching their children their language and customs.

During the 1900s separation was an official government policy which lasted for many decades and today, many Aboriginal people do not know their origins. In other words, which tribe they are descended from or the names of their parents and or grandparents. They are a lost generation.


It sounds to me like you were making as stong a case as possible to show EVERYONE on this forum just how wicked Australia was, in order to prove your point. It does not fit in with your comment that you were "merely pointing out that none of our countries are blameless". You didn't include a similar lengthy account of what was done to your Native Americans! Compare your bit about what your country has done with the above. Not even three lines! Now that is hardly fair! Your quote about Australia occupied all but 12 and a half lines of your post!

You wrote:

"Now, the USA isn't any better with what we did to the Native Americans here.. Pine Ridge Reservation home of the Lakota in South Dakota is one of the most poverty stricken areas in the States."

I saw it as a personal attack on my country, and so would other Australians.

And this quote below is just as nasty and condemning as what some Christians say when they tell us that we will go to hell. This quote is like saying: "You deserved it".

"if we insist on bullying our own people, we really can't complain when someone tries to bully us in return."

I respect you being a pacifist. I made that clear in my post before your response to Percy.

Certainly we had strong things to say about the Japanese war lords and the recent 'white washes' of the facts of WW2 by their officials. I don't like liars.

I have nothing more to say.

Patience.


Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passions, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.
John Adams


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Patience and Percy will not be returning to this forum. As the only other adult here, I am writing this as an 'epilogue' to show that what was told as truth was called lies or propaganda, and the original question asked was never answered, and finally their own country was put on trial instead of WW2 Japan, which was the topic being discussed.

This is how the discussion began - with a statement:

Quote:
Never can war ever be justified


Percy then asked a question:
Quote:
I would also like to ask you what we were SUPPOSED to do? Are you saying that we should have 'turned the other cheek' and allowed these aggressors to invade our countries, raped and butchered our women and children, or stood by and done nothing when we saw other countries being brought into slavery, especially when they cried out for help?


Answers to an honest question:
Quote:
I agree that there is no easy answer Percy...
But I still have to say that war is not ever the answer


Percy asks the question again:
Quote:
How exactly would you have stopped the Japanese war machine that was set on the conquest of every country in Asia/Pacific?

Quote:
If you still think you could have prevented it, or stopped it, I'd really like to know how


Percy's questions are sidetracked (not answered) by introducing another question to lead away from what Percy was asking:
Quote:
Apart from the moral questions involved, were the atomic bombings militarily necessary? By any rational yardstick, they were not.


Then another sidetrack from the original question by introducing Stalin into the discussion:
Quote:
In fact, the atocities that Joseph Stalin commited were worse than those that Hitler committed.


Percy brings the discussion back on topic:
Quote:
Linda, are you suggesting that no action should have been taken to try to stop the carnage the Japanese were inflicting on China?
How else were they going to stop these murderous atrocities? What other measures which did not involve military action were possible please?


These questions were never answered. Instead, the focus was shifted to other areas:

Quote:
Was it any more wrong of Hitler to exterminate the Jews than it was for us to kill over 200,000 Japanese citizens? How can you justify that kind of carnage? Would what the Japanese did to the Chinese have been any less devastating than what we did to them?


and...

Quote:
Look at what we are doing in Iraq?


Percy again asks that you stay on topic:
Quote:
And we are talking about WW2 not any conflicts that have followed. What is happening in Iraq is a totally different subject.


So then Percy's source of information is brought into question and he is told that he hasn't accurate knowledge and ought to pay attention to the Japanese version. (Still no answer to his original question)

Quote:
Perhaps you should go online and read about the war from the JAPANESE perspective. The story is very different.


and...

Quote:
You are looking at the whole thing from an Allied point of view.
You aren't looking at the fact that Stalin ran rampant through Europe

(another sidetrack from the original topic.

More introductions of unrelated topics to the point in question, which is "What were we supposed to do about the Japanese advances and invasions?"

Quote:
People are starving all over the world Percy... and what are the leaders of our countries doing to help prevent that? This war we are fighting is costing billions of dollars that could be used to help the starving rather than to create more of them.


and...

Quote:
Sorry Percy.. there is no justification for what we did in Japan.. none. You can believe what you want to believe, but I would suggest that you do a THOROUGH search of what the leaders of our country were saying and doing at that time,.......And while you are at.. check out the atrocities of "Uncle Joe Stalin."


Sidetracking and side stepping everywhere to avoid the main issue.

So Percy brings you back on topic yet AGAIN:

Quote:
If you go back to my original question, which you have not answered (except for the one relating to how WW1 might have been prevented, with which I agree) you will see that I asked you how you proposed that the war with Japan might have been prevented, considering that you had said that it was an unnecessary war.

I still await your answer.


Quote:
So how would you have stopped the Pacific War from happening?


Quote:
Again, I ask, HOW do you stop war? You are the one, along with other pacifists who have said it is possible, so I'd like you to tell me how?


Percy received this response:

Quote:
I still hold by my initial statement that both wars could have been prevented.


And then, an answer, of sorts!

Quote:
My suggestion.. and you are going to hate this one..lol.. is to put women completely in charge of the world. I think that you would find that things would change drastically and that women would seek and find alternatives to killing one another.


This of course is NOT a logical, workable answer .

Patience then enters the discussion to clarify things, and closes with this statement;

Quote:
May there one day be true peace in our world, but sadly I can't see it happening in my lifetime. I hope you young ones will see it in yours.


Then comes this 'response' (for lack of a better word) which goes right off the page as far as logic is concerned and turns the discussion, and Percy's 'unanswered question' - which pacifists on this list said there WAS an answer to - into an attack on the way Australia treated its Aboriginals many years ago. I copy it again here so that those who are reading this post can see it.

Quote:
So Percy.. You feel that Japan deserved to get hit by an atom bomb because of their cruelty to their own people and to the countries they were trying to invade. Correct?

Well, maybe you should look to your own history. It seems to me that a country who needlessly slaughters their fellow countrymen, and then on top of that steps in and separates children from their parents, all for no good reason... hasn't got a whole lot of room to talk about the atocities that were committed by others.

I give you.. The Aborigine people of Australia...

Prior to colonization which began in January 1788, the Australian Aborigines lived a lifestyle based on their Dreamtime beliefs. They had survived as a race for thousands of years and their lifestyle and cultural practices had remained virtually unchanged during that time. We refer to this as the traditional period.

However colonization imposed changes on the Aborigines as people who lived in areas that were being settled by the Europeans, were forced off their land as towns and farms were developed. We identify the period in which the changes took place, as the historical period. The sort of changes that took place usually commenced with explorers entering the area of a tribe and being challenged by the people for trespassing on their land. The Europeans often (usually) responded by shooting at the people. Many were killed. When settlers followed the explorers and began felling trees and building farms, they restricted the ability of the Aborigines to move freely around their land. They also destroyed their traditional food sources.

These changes took place throughout the continent at different times. They began in the Sydney and Parramatta districts from 1788; in the Cowpastures (Campbelltown / Camden)area from the early 1800s and in the Illawarra district from 1815. Gradually - but with increasing speed colonization spread throughout the entire continent.

The settlers had arrived in this country to build a new life for themselves and their families and had 'no time for the Dreamtime'. In other words most were not interested in the affects colonization was having on the Aborigines. In fact they were often considered to be a pest and a nuisance. Many were killed by diseases such as influenza. Thousands were massacred to make way for farms and settlements.

On the other hand some Aboriginal people adapted to the Whitman's laws and the new lifestyle. In doing so, many were reduced to pauperism and were beggars. Others broke the traditional tribal lore's by accepting Brass Plates and by moving into the traditional lands of other tribes. In many cases they had no option in doing this as they were facing starvation or the gun.

Overall, the Australian Aborigines went through stages of being conquered through an 'invasion' and taking of their lands. Many adapted to the new lifestyle (when many became reliant on alcohol, tobacco and handouts of food and clothing. However the settlers were often contemptuous of the Aborigines and separated them from their society and the people became the fringe dwellers of society. Others were removed from their families and placed into institutions. From the late 1830s the remnants of the tribes in the settled areas were moved onto Reserves and Missions where they were 'managed' by Whitemen and were forbidden from teaching their children their language and customs.

During the 1900s separation was an official government policy which lasted for many decades and today, many Aboriginal people do not know their origins. In other words, which tribe they are descended from or the names of their parents and or grandparents. They are a lost generation.

I admit that perhaps the situation is a bit better for them today.. but from what I understand there are still many of your native people who are living in slums.

Now, the USA isn't any better with what we did to the Native Americans here.. Pine Ridge Reservation home of the Lakota in South Dakota is one of the most poverty stricken areas in the States.

The law of Karma is that what goes around comes around.. if we insist on bullying our own people, we really can't complain when someone tries to bully us in return.
_________________________
Linda Paul


This was the exuse for such a response:

Quote:
I was not attacking anyone. I was merely pointing out that none of our countries are blameless when it comes to oppressing others. And if you reread my post you will see that I did include the US and their treatment of the Native Americans.


Yes, three lines!

I leave readers to decide for themselves.

Ann.






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Koala
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Ok So.... what is the most hurtful think someone has said about your shoes?

Changeing topics because I dont know what goverment and polotics have to do with Spirituality. At lest the shoes has soles in them!!! lol

and yes this is ment to be funny!!! sorry if it offends!!

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grin


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Thank you!!! wink


mmm I guess I will go first!! ok when I was in high school I owned one pair of tennis shoes that were from wal mark and I have worn them for maybe 3 years and I loved them!!! and I also wore jeans from walmark becuase that was what mom could afford and I still to this day dont see why I have to ware cloths with someone elses name on them and pay mega $$$$ to do it!!!

anyways I also wore christian T shirts or just t shirts!!! and one day this girl came up and told me my shoes did not match my jeans and besides that they were old and out of style!!!

At the time I hurt my feeling but now...I wish I had told her her she had out grown her skirt because her butt was hanging out and I could see her holy underware!!!! lol

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LOL

My worst pair of shoes, according to everyone else, is these nursing shoes I got when I first got out of EMT school. I had to stand on my feet for hours. They were mules (which I love, easy in easy out to keep feet cooler) and solid black... and a tad chunky. I wore those things forever. I just got rid of them in February when I went to Minnesotta and realized the regluing of the soles wasn't holding and my feet were soaked from the melting snow and ice.

I miss those ugly assed shoes!


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other than that.. too small but stylish dress shoes where my feet were squeezed a tad too much....

or my jazz balet shoes... they always never looked good when they were tied tight enough.


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LOL.. I had a pair of lace up granny shoes when I was in high school.. They were black with pointy toes and a little heel.. ala wicked witch of the west.. no pun intended.

They hurt my feet so bad I could barely walk in them, but I loved the way they looked. I wore them until the plether finally came off the soles.

Yeah.. I miss those shoes too...


Linda Paul
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