2009年9月5日土曜日

University student arrested after trying to blackmail two 11-year-old girls in Tokyo

TOKYO —

A 20-year-old man was arrested for attempted extortion earlier this week after he allegedly tried to make two elementary school girls pay him 50,000 yen each, police said Friday.

Police said Ryunosuke Arima, a second-year student at Bunkyo University, approached the two 11-year-old girls on Aug 26 outside a Taito Ward bookstore, after he put a 1,000 yen bill on top of some books in the store. One of the girls had picked the bill up and told Arima that they were going to hand it in at a police station. Arima told them the money was his, and that if they didn’t want to get in trouble with the police, they should pay him 50,000 yen each.

Arima then tried to persuade the girls to give him some money over the next hour, but fled without success after the girls started crying. He was arrested on Sept 2, based on descriptions of his appearance. He has admitted to the allegations, saying he wanted to pull a prank on some girls.

Police are investigating if Arima was involved in two other incidents in the bookstore last month, in which two young girls were groped.





mindovermatter at 09:59 AM JST - 5th September

I think anybody in the states, except maybe a three year old, would have said, "go ahead call the cops."

You certainly can't blame the girls here, but add this college punk into the equation, and it's just more proof of a country in total lack of common-sense...

From 105 lbs socking wet geeks, who choose to walk right behind a group of drunken construct workers at 3am in the morning, to people challenging other people with baseball bats to hit them.... (Yes... these did happen... one died and the other will probably have permanent brain damage)

I'm not even sure if this would be considered a crime in most "Civilized" western countries... Probably not blackmail, because there are certain statues which must be met, probably harassment or something along the lines as a menace.

2009年9月3日木曜日

WWII vets mark Japan's surrender aboard battleship

PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii —

The famous battleship where Japanese officials signed the surrender documents that officially ended World War II played host on Wednesday to about 20 aging U.S. veterans and dozens of observers as they marked the 64th anniversary of the war’s end.

The USS Missouri, which was anchored in Tokyo Bay on Sept 2, 1945, for the surrender ceremonies, has since been decommissioned and moored in Pearl Harbor.

U.S. Rep Neil Abercrombie told those gathered it’s fitting that the battleship—now known as the Battleship Missouri Memorial—is docked just a few hundred yards from the memorial for the USS Arizona.

The Arizona sank when Japanese planes attacked Pearl Harbor on Dec 7, 1941, an event that drew the U.S. into the war.

“I can think of nothing more valuable of this complex here ... to enable generations to come to reflect and understand,” said Abercrombie, a Democrat from Hawaii.

The memorial welcomes more than 40,000 tourists each month to exhibits that highlight the Missouri’s role in Japan’s surrender.

Walter Lassen, a 27-year-old first gunner’s mate aboard the Missouri when the war ended, told The Associated Press in an interview last week his fellow sailors had “little love of the enemy” when Japanese officials came aboard to sign the documents.

The Missouri, one of the most powerful U.S. warships at the time, fought in the battles of Iwo Jima and Okinawa as American forces neared the Japanese main islands.

For months, sailors focused on aggressively protecting their ship and other ships in the U.S. fleet. At one point, the Missouri came under the attack of 95 Japanese planes, Lassen said.

A kamikaze pilot slammed into the Missouri’s hull in April 1945, though the plane’s bomb failed to detonate and only the pilot was killed.

“The mood at the time of the ceremony was the culmination of all this amount of fighting we had been doing and all this shooting that had been going on,” said Lassen.

But with the surrender, sailors began to feel that their country was finally safe, he said. Lassen, 91, had planned to attend Wednesday’s ceremony, but had a last minute change of plans.

Pearl Harbor survivor Delton E Walling, 88, thought back to the U.S. servicemen who lost their lives in the conflict.

“They’re the ones that are on my mind today—those boys that are in the Pacific,” Walling said after the ceremony. “They’re the ones that made your lifestyle the way it is today. They gave their life.”

U.S. Assistant Secretary of Defense Wallace Gregson spoke Wednesday of how much has changed in 64 years.

“While there have been other wars since 1945, the scale and the scope of those conflicts has faded as the Asia-Pacific region has become a model of peace, stability and cooperation,” Gregson said.






mindovermatter at 05:09 PM JST - 3rd September

Given all the revisionism regarding WW2 history, couldn't the USN of at least towed the Mighty Mo back to Tokyo Bay for this anniversary? Now that would be a great spectacle, and the Japanese would have probably appreciated it as well.

Yea... That would be something to see! Although I highly doubt any Japanese would "Appreciate" it in the manner which you suggest... It's more possible that the History Revisionist would have a field day though... I'm sure some-where along the lines they would get it printed in the new History texts that the Missouri actually started the war by shelling innocent Japanese in some beach resort town in Okinawa or something to that effect...

What in the hell is wrong with you people? Can't you see that the Japanese are actually the Victims of WW2...? (LOL...)

2009年9月1日火曜日

JapanToday Lies .... No More.... ! Pls.....!

Japanese-American graduate recalls wartime ordeal

ST. LOUIS —

Yoshio Matsumoto was among the 110,000 Japanese-Americans seemingly bound for an internment camp soon after America entered World War II when a university he knew nothing about from a far off part of the country agreed to take him in.

Last week, the 88-year-old retired engineer was back on campus at Washington University in St Louis for the first time since graduating in 1944. He wasn’t just revisiting fond memories—Matsumoto’s grandson, Andy Matsumoto, is an incoming freshman.

“I’m proud of him,” Yoshio Matsumoto said. “Kind of a family tradition.”

Maybe, but the circumstances are unique enough that Chancellor Mark Wrighton met with Yoshio, his son, Joe Matsumoto, and Andy for about an hour on Friday to welcome them to campus.

Yoshio Matsumoto was among the 30 Japanese-American students slated to go to the camps that Washington University accepted soon after Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor on Dec 7, 1941, thrust America into the war. Nationwide, 680 colleges and universities accepted about 4,000 such students, according to the National Japanese American Student Relocation Council, a group of religious, academic and civic leaders that sought to help affected students continue their studies.

At the time of the attack, Matsumoto was a mechanical engineering student at the University of California, Berkeley. He remembered dealing with an array of emotions.

“There was some fear and anger, and some feeling of shame that the nation of my parents would attack the United States,” he said. “I would be walking to class with that feeling that everybody was looking at me like I was the enemy.”

By February 1942, President Franklin Roosevelt had signed an executive order calling for Americans of Japanese heritage to be moved to relocation centers, commonly known as internment camps. Like many Japanese Americans living in coastal areas, Matsumoto’s parents and siblings were soon sent from their home in San Diego to an assembly center—a temporary staging area before an internment camp.

Because Matsumoto had remained at Berkeley at his mother’s urging, he was sent to a different assembly center in California, where he was among 7,800 Japanese-Americans crowded into temporary housing at a race track.

“Barbed wire, guard towers,” he recalled. “You’re confined inside. There was no communication with family.”

The next step was an internment camp in Utah. But there was hope. The National Japanese American Student Relocation Council formed, and several colleges and universities away from the West Coast were expressing a willingness to allow students of Japanese heritage to continue their studies.

In a 1942 letter to the registrar of a California college, Washington University Chancellor George Throop made clear the university’s policy on Japanese-American students.

“The attitude of the University is that these students, if American citizens, have exactly the same rights as other students who desire to register in the University,” Throop wrote.

Washington University eventually agreed to “sponsor” Matsumoto. He’d never been away from the West Coast but quickly got a taste of life in St Louis, arriving in October 1942 in a city in the midst of baseball’s World Series. Within weeks, he saw snow for the first time.

Matsumoto said he and the other Japanese-American students were made to feel welcome by their new schoolmates and others in the community. Someone—he wasn’t sure who—picked up part of the tab for his education. The administrators and staff of the campus YMCA helped the Japanese-American students settle in.

“We were very happy and grateful to be able to come here,” Matsumoto said. “There were a number of schools that didn’t want to take Japanese-Americans. But there also were educators who got together and said, ‘We want to get these college kids back to school.’”





mindovermatter at 11:12 AM JST - 1st September

That was just good-ole-American racism

Yea, the 1940's 50's and 60's were plenty full of racism.

But America has had very very tough anti-discrimination laws for a long time now....

I am wondering when, if ever, Japan will grow up and out of that 18th century mindset and join the international community....?

Until then, they will remain a country of 3rd rate.

U.S. won't renegotiate Futenma relocation plan with Japan

WASHINGTON —

The United States will not renegotiate the planned transfer of U.S. Marine Corps’ Futenma Air Station in Ginowan to the shores of Camp Schwab in Nago, both in Japan’s Okinawa Prefecture, the State Department said Monday. ‘‘The United States has no intention to renegotiate the Futenma replacement facility plan or Guam relocation with the government of Japan,’’ department spokesman Ian Kelly told reporters.

The remarks came a day after the opposition Democratic Party of Japan won a crushing general election victory. The party has said it will aim to relocate the air base outside Okinawa Prefecture, despite a 2006 Japan-U.S. accord on the transfer of the facility within the prefecture. The plan to relocate the air base is part of an agreement the United States and Japan struck in May 2006 to reduce the burden on local residents of hosting the U.S. military in their communities.

Transferring the Futenma’s heliport functions is closely tied to another key element of the agreement—moving 8,000 Marines from Okinawa to Guam.



mindovermatter at 08:38 AM JST - 1st September

YuriOtani

Good then America can just remove the Marines (all of them) without any help from Japan. As a sovereign country American can not station troops in Japan without their permission. Information to Americans, the free lunch is over!

Hate to break the news the news to you "YuriOtani" but Japan's sovereignty was forever changed the minute, You, They (Japan) launched their war of aggression 70 odd years ago....

So you can either accept this fact, and thank your lucky stars that Russia wasn't the one that brought the war in Japan to a close, otherwise, Japan, would probably look like another North Korea.

I'd say Japan made out pretty good in the deal, you have a democracy, free speech, etc... But I know with your "Ganko Pride," and that most Japanese are like spoiled little kids that forget what happened 5 minutes ago... For you to understand, would be well beyond your mental capacity.

I'll just say, on behalf of my forefathers that gave you your freedom, (Japan certainly didn't do anything for it)

You're welcome, enjoy it, but be a nice oyaji!