Interesting, if not sick, arcade game...

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RE: *Update!*

damn those japs sure are characters. they got us thinking they're dumbasses when they take us on in WWII (especially when they fight the whole war without a sub machine gun and end up getting their tit's lit by the A-bomb). then we think their pretty damn smart when they pretty much revolutionize worldwide business corperations. And now this. why can't those fuckers just stick to something simple like karate movies.
 
RE: *Update!*

>damn those japs sure are characters.
> they got us thinking
>they're dumbasses when they take
>us on in WWII (especially
>when they fight the whole
>war without a sub machine
>gun and end up getting
>their tit's lit by the
>A-bomb). then we think
>their pretty damn smart when
>they pretty much revolutionize worldwide
>business corperations. And now
>this. why can't those
>fuckers just stick to something
>simple like karate movies.

And they won't apologize to China for or even acknowledge the attrocities they commited in China and other Asian countries that mades even the Nazis sick.

Never let anyone tell you that Japan was the country that suffered because of the war. Read this:

"On Dec 7, 1941, Mitsuo Fuchida led Japan's attack on the US base at Pearl Harbor. It was Fuchida's airplane from which was transmitted the infamous radio signal 'Tora! Tora! Tora!,' indicating that a successful attack was underway.

"Then on Aug 6, 1945, Paul Tibbets had flown the Enola Gay, the B-29 bomber that dropped the atomic bomb, little boy, on Hiroshima, Aug. 9 another bomb, fat man, on Nagasaki. Aug. 15 Japan surrendered.

"18 years later the two men had a chance of meeting each other at the MacDill Air Force Base when Japan's Self Defense Force sent a contingent to observe US Air Force equipment and operations.

"Tibbets recalled that Fuchida told him; 'You did the right thing. You know the Japanese attitude at that time, how fanatic they were, they'd die for the Emperor. Can you imagine what a slaughter it would be to invade Japan?' Fuchida continued. 'It would have been terrible. You did the right thing. The Japanese people know more about that than the American public will ever know.' Paul Tibbets has been credited by thousands of former prisoners-of-war and military personnel with saving their lives."

Japan had also just issued the command to have all POWs killed near the end of the war. The two A-bombs that dropped on Japan were most likely responsible for saving the lives of all POWs that survived the war in Japan.

-Xotor-

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RE: *Update!*

Where is this quote from? My grandfather is a Pearl Harbor survivor, and I know he would just LOVE that.
 
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