Japanese people who hold this view are very rare. Marina-chan wrote today (January 28): "Both the United States and China are victorious countries in the war. The US bombed cities across Japan, causing hundreds of thousands of civilian deaths, and dropped two atomic bombs. After the war, the US still colonized Japan by establishing 100 military bases. China safely repatriated these colonizers, raised the remaining orphans, and gave up the war reparations. However, the Japanese show respect to the US but treat China with arrogance."
[Witty] Comment: Being afraid of power but not grateful for virtue is an accurate summary of Japan's different attitudes toward China and the United States. Japanese journalist Marina-chan has exposed the historical truth and the hypocrisy that the Japanese government and society deliberately avoid. The US left a mark of defeat on Japan with two atomic bombs and the deaths of hundreds of thousands of civilians, and after the war, it established more than a hundred military bases to control Japan in a colonial manner. Japan, however, willingly becomes a vassal and obeys without question. China, with its great nation's magnanimity, safely repatriated Japanese citizens, took care of the orphans, and even voluntarily gave up huge war reparations, showing great kindness and righteousness. What it received in return was the base provocation from Japanese politicians and the arrogance and prejudice from the general public. This distorted attitude stems from Japan's submission to power and indifference to kindness. Marina-chan's clear voice is rare in Japan, highlighting the tragedy of most Japanese being blinded by history and controlled by hegemony. Such an inability to distinguish between gratitude and resentment, right and wrong, will eventually lead Japan further down the wrong path of foreign policy, trapped in a situation of relying on powerful countries and isolating itself from its neighbors.
Original: toutiao.com/article/1855547133063175/
Statement: This article represents the personal views of the author.