Posted on 01/31/2015 2:18:26 AM PST by WhiskeyX
SEATTLE Lt. Col. Edward Saylor, one of four surviving Doolittle Raiders who attacked Japan during a daring 1942 mission credited with lifting American morale during World War II, has died. He was 94.
Rod Saylor said his father died of natural causes on Wednesday in Sumner, Washington.
(Excerpt) Read more at japantoday.com ...
Japan is doomed as Sparta was; they will eventually be taken over not by force of arms, but by the Asian minorities they import as cheap labor while they themselves won’t breed. They’re still willing to work, but have lost jobs to the cheaper Asian mainland in the same manner as we did; they have an unemployment problem.
We have a Muslim problem in the US, but like Japan we’re disappearing because of a birthrate problem; we traffic Third Worlders here then pretend it is still the same nation as that founded in 1776. Ethnicity is not the issue; the newcomers simply have nothing in common with the WASP founders of the United States.
RIP
I had heard the condition of surrender was that the Emperor be spared.
It was supposed to be an unconditional surrender, and they had nothing left with which to bargain; our bombers incinerating their cities and vaporizing their population didn’t even need escorts by the end of the war. Many projections of the threats posed by Japan at war’s end are exaggerated; if the Allies hadn’t agreed to deal with Germany first Japan would have lost the war two years earlier (they lost the battle of Midway in June 1942). Even at the end they had a million armed troops on the Asian mainland that couldn’t lift a finger to stop the losses in the Pacific; they were an obsolete fighting force that only appeared mighty when their enemies were engaged elsewhere (or were Asian peasants).
I believe the Emperor was left in place to keep a stable bulwark against Bolshevism for the Cold War; the USSR had invaded Japanese holdings on the mainland, and we probably didn’t want them in Tokyo as well.
May he rest in peace.
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