Yasukuni

by | Jun 2, 2022 | Religion, Travel | 140 comments

Yasukuni Shrine

STRAFFINRUN

Yasukuni shrine in Chiyoda ward, Tokyo is a magnet for reftist activitists that don’t rike it’s enshrinement of 14 Class A war criminals from Imperial Japan’s miritary.  My buddy and I took a trip there last Golden Week to check it out for ourselves.  It certainly had a different vibe than the other Shinto shrines I’ve visited.  I get why people object to the 14 people, out of 2.4 million that are enshrined there, whose souls are floating around.  The problem arises when you realize that according to Shinto, once a person is put on the list at a shrine, they are there forever.  You can’t just go in and delete them like a bad tweet.  Feel free to debate that and I’ll just show you the pics.

“Honden” or Main Hall. This is where you go to ? for the souls of those lost in the war.

Sit. Good boy!

Lion Dogs guard the entrance.

Wooden door with the Chrysanthemum seal towers over us.

The Mitsubishi Type 0 Carrier-Based Fighter Model 52. A formidable foe.

Gimme that gorgeous profile.

Specs.

The pilot seat looks a tad uncomfy.

Type 99 20mm machine gun carried by the Zerosen.

105mm Howitzer.

One is always bigger than the other.

Kamikaze pilot. As a sayonara for their fatal mission they’d tell their fellow pilots, “We’ll meet again at Yasukuni.”

Gift shop. Imperial Japan cookies.

Or maybe some hard candy or curry?

These are “Kamon” or family crests. Love these.

Miniature katana with real blades.

A peaceful *wink* walk around the perimeter.

About The Author

straffinrun

straffinrun

Don’t forget to smash the notification bell to get all the latest videos of me doing Brochettaward’s mom.

140 Comments

  1. Animal

    The Mitsubishi Type 0 Carrier-Based Fighter Model 52. A formidable foe.

    From what I’ve read, the Zero was a formidable foe early in the Pacific war. By late 1943/early 1944, they were being hacked out of the sky by F4U Corsairs and F6F Hellcats.

    • Rebel Scum

      Lack of armor and self-sealing fuel tanks is a bitch.

      • Sensei

        They didn’t want the weight. Bad decision.

    • DEG

      There was the Thach Weave which helped out Wildcat pilots.

      • EvilSheldon

        It is amazing how much of Thach’s work was redone by Col. Boyd in his Aerial Attack Study.

        ‘Pit your strengths against the enemy’s weaknesses,’ is pretty universal, I guess.

    • Drake

      From ’41 to ’45 Japanese military technology was relatively static compared to the American military that advanced dramatically during the period.

      I have an Arisaka rifle. It was state-of-the-art in 1905 during the Russo-Japanese War, and an obsolete relic when they were being used in WWII. Rather than reverse engineer captured Garands or M1 Carbines, the Japanese bumped it up to 7.7mm ( because Americans were shooting them with 7.62mm bullets?) and kept producing obsolete rifles. I assume because they did not have the machining capability and/or capacity to produce something like a Garand.

      Same thing happened with aircraft and many other tools of war.

      • Bobarian LMD

        I had a chance to break down a Japanese WWII machine gun some years back and discovered it was a complete functional match for an M240, right down to the three sided gas plug.

        That gun was based off the German MG-42 and the BAR, so they definitely were doing some RE.

      • Drake

        I assumed that the real problem was getting them into mass-production while maintaining quality requirements.

      • Sensei

        I’ve seem to have also read that it was difference in the tactics the infantry employed. Much more command and control.

        The Nambu pistol was also basically cerimonial. The 1911 is much superior.

      • Animal

        It always comes down to logistics, though. We had a massive industrial base in 1941. Once it moved into wartime production, the Japanese were hosed.

        I remember an apocryphal story of a Brit Colonel watching American ships unload in Africa during Operation Torch. After watching the endless stream of vehicles, men, equipment and supplies being unloaded, he commented that “the Americans don’t so much solve their problems as overwhelm them.”

      • Shpip

        “Quantity has a quality all its own.”

        — Some American general, probably

      • Animal

        “One Panzer is worth four American Shermans. The problem is, the Americans always seem to have five.”

        – Some German general, probably.

      • Zwak, who counted all his blessings, and counted only one.

        I was watching a review of Apocalypse Now the other day, and the reviewer made reference to overwhelming force as being unfair in battle. I turned it off at that point. If someone is that stupid re how to win a battle, they are too stupid to review a movie about war.

      • Sensei

        Funny that. There is an anime reviewer that I used to watch because he had good criticisms and observations about anime and sometimes pointed me to interesting things I may not have watched or noticed,

        He’s always been woke, but generally small comments here and there. In one particular show the main character is falsely accused of sexual assault. He spends five minutes explaining how it works well as plot device and is completely plausible, but OTH, in real life “we must believe all women”.

        At that point I turned it off and unsubscribed. It’s a bit of shame, but I’m done.

      • Toxteth O'Grady

        Wanda Gershwitz: Oh yeah, like no one in England never lies! Like Margaret Thatcher never lies!

      • UnCivilServant

        Not just tech, the way the americans engaged the japanese changed to play to the disadvantages of the Zero’s design (once they’d figured those out) It was also the teaching of tactics, as the US tended to pull the best from the line to train new recruits while the Japanese best kept fighting. So while attrition was wearing down the top line of the japanese forces, the american minimum aptitude for fighting zeroes was rising.

    • db

      The Zeros continued to be more maneuverable and I think had higher climb rates than the US fighters, but the increased power and armor of the US planes allowed better outcomes against the Zero later in the war. The Zero’s lack of armor in critical areas contributed to its decline. They couldn’t up-armor them, either, because it would have reduced their other advantages to an unacceptable degree.

  2. Animal

    Also, Straff, every time I see your walkabout views on Zoom, you make me miss Japan. We’re hoping that tourism travel opens up again before too long.

    • Fatty Bolger

      straffinrun
      Don’t forget to smash the notification bell to get all the latest videos of me doing Brochettaward’s mom.

      Damn, son.

      Show us on the doll where he firsted you.

      • Fatty Bolger

        Oops. That was supposed to be in the main thread.

      • EvilSheldon

        I don’t think the doll has those parts, anyhow…

      • Bobarian LMD

        Neither does Brochettaward.

  3. Sean

    Neat.

  4. Sensei

    Thanks straff!

    I’ve been wanting to do a post about Yasukuni as well. The other thing is that it has what we can call a “selective” discussion of the history within its museum. I would say it’s notable for what it omits instead of what it actually says.

    For Japanese politicians it’s become a political litmus test on visitation. Everytime one visits it will bring howls from China and Korea. So some years some politicians go and other years they simply send a note and “donation”.

    • Fatty Bolger

      I looked up “Class A war criminals”, and it isn’t what you would expect. The definition is:

      (a) Crimes against peace: (i) Planning, preparation, initiation or waging of a war of aggression or a war in violation of international treaties, agreements or assurances; (ii) Participation in a common plan or conspiracy for the accomplishment of any of the acts mentioned under (i).

      Class B is the typical war crimes (shooting prisoners, murdering civilians), and Class C is things like genocide and massacres.

      • Sensei

        Interesting. So essentially many world leaders over many time periods.

  5. Not Adahn

    Class A war criminals</blockquote.

    So the S tier ones were too evil to be put in?

    • Sensei

      Can we add a few in the US?

      Unit 731

      American grant of immunity
      Among the individuals in Japan after its 1945 surrender was Lieutenant Colonel Murray Sanders, who arrived in Yokohama via the American ship Sturgess in September 1945. Sanders was a highly regarded microbiologist and a member of America’s military center for biological weapons. Sanders’s duty was to investigate Japanese biological warfare activity. At the time of his arrival in Japan he had no knowledge of what Unit 731 was.[68] Until Sanders finally threatened the Japanese with bringing the Soviets into the picture, little information about biological warfare was being shared with the Americans. The Japanese wanted to avoid prosecution under the Soviet legal system, so, the next morning after he made his threat, Sanders received a manuscript describing Japan’s involvement in biological warfare. Sanders took this information to General Douglas MacArthur, who was the Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers responsible for rebuilding Japan during the Allied occupations. MacArthur struck a deal with Japanese informants: He secretly granted immunity to the physicians of Unit 731, including their leader, in exchange for providing America, but not the other wartime allies, with their research on biological warfare and data from human experimentation. American occupation authorities monitored the activities of former unit members, including reading and censoring their mail. The Americans believed that the research data was valuable and did not want other nations, particularly the Soviet Union, to acquire data on biological weapons.

      The Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal heard only one reference to Japanese experiments with “poisonous serums” on Chinese civilians. This took place in August 1946 and was instigated by David Sutton, assistant to the Chinese prosecutor. The Japanese defense counsel argued that the claim was vague and uncorroborated and it was dismissed by the tribunal president, Sir William Webb, for lack of evidence. The subject was not pursued further by Sutton, who was probably unaware of Unit 731’s activities. His reference to it at the trial is believed to have been accidental.

      While German physicians were brought to trial and had their crimes publicized, the U.S. concealed information about Japanese biological warfare experiments and secured immunity for the perpetrators.[110] Critics argue that racism led to the double standard in the American postwar responses to the experiments conducted on different nationalities. Whereas the perpetrators of Unit 731 were exempt from prosecution, the U.S. held a tribunal in Yokohama in 1948 that indicted nine Japanese physician professors and medical students for conducting vivisection upon captured American pilots; two professors were sentenced to death and others to 15-20 years’ imprisonment.

      • trshmnstr the terrible

        That whole debacle should really tear to shreds the misconception that it was “better” in the good old days. Even in the vaunted 1940s, the non-political decision makers in our government were flat out evil.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        Shiro Ishii should have been publicly burnt at the stake, but thanks to our betters he lived out the rest of his life in anonymity.

      • Sensei

        One of my Japanese friends was friends with one of the few nurses at the facility who publicly spoke in Japan about what happened there. She’s now deceased. Very few Japanese want to be reminded about this. One need look no further than the Korean “comfort women”.

        OTH, it pains my friend greatly.

      • Raven Nation

        TBF, the average bureaucrats concerned with this case were overruled by the men running The Project.

      • JaimeRoberto (shama/lama/ding dong)

        So Col. Sanders got his secret recipe from Japanese war criminals? Time to cancel KFC.

      • Gustave Lytton

        Also

        ケンタッキークリスマス

      • Tres Cool

        “However, lacking a Caucasian person to imitate MVP Randy Bass, the rabid crowd seized a plastic statue of Colonel Sanders (like Bass, the Colonel had a beard and was not Japanese) from a nearby KFC and tossed it off the bridge as an effigy.”

        Why, I tell ya- those wacky japs

  6. Not Adahn

    I don’t trust anything Straff says about Shinto ever since he lied to me about maple kami.

  7. DEG

    The problem arises when you realize that according to Shinto, once a person is put on the list at a shrine, they are there forever. You can’t just go in and delete them like a bad tweet.

    They just aren’t damnatio memoriae-ing hard enough.

  8. DEG

    Thanks straffinrun! I like the pictures.

  9. Drake

    Biden to address the nation tonight about gun violence.

    No.

    • Sean

      “…there were lungs everywhere…”

      “Terrible.”

    • Sensei

      I’m really not sure what they expect to accomplish. At this point how will this change anything with supporters or engage them further.

      OTH, if you are against gun control is this suddenly going to change your mind. (Excluding the dozen people the MSM will highlight who now have given up most or all their weapons.)

      • Fatty Bolger

        The immediate goal is to rile up supporters for the mid-terms. Those ballots aren’t going to harvest themselves.

      • Drake

        Yep – etither making it the big issue for the mid-terms (rather than inflation gas, losing the proxy and economic war with Russia…) or he’s going to try something unconstitutional with an Executive Order.

      • trshmnstr the terrible

        They don’t need minds to change. They need the groundwork to be laid for whatever they’re going to try next. “We tried to do it the right way, but the wreckers and kulaks at the NRA bought too many lawmakers. Now we have to do the right thing even if we have to break a few rules to do so.”

      • Nephilium

        but the wreckers and kulaks at the NRA bought too many lawmakers

        From local news:

        Gun lobby spent more than $580,000 on political contributions in Ohio since 2010

        From the article:

        NRA ~ $310,000
        Safari Club International ~$90,000
        National Shooting Sports Foundation ~$88,500

        Since they’re going back to 2010, that means on average, there’s a whopping $50,000 (rounded up) in “gun lobby” money spent on Ohio politicians a year.

      • one true athena

        lol. They never do the pubsec donations, or Planned Parenthood, or the Arabella-type dark money crap which was probably more than 500k just in 2020.

      • Rebel Scum

        The “gun lobby” are pikers when it comes to political spending.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        Money isn’t their power. It’s getting people to vote on the issue.

        Much like the abortionists.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        Pffftttt……

        The National Association of Realtors spent $1.8M in Ohio in 2020. And the NEA spent $1.25M.

      • Nephilium

        Yeah. The gun lobby one is reaching back and totaling it since 2010. FFS, FirstEnergy (somewhat known to Ohio politicians and voters), still donated almost as much in 2020 alone then the gun lobby had since 2010.

      • Tres Cool

        And “A year after the news officially broke about the scandal, on July 22, 2021, the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Ohio announced that FirstEnergy would be fined $230 million for their part in it. Vipal Patel, the acting U.S. Attorney, said that this was the largest criminal fine ever collected by the Southern District.”

        I wonder what charitable use they found for that money.

      • Nephilium

        Tres:

        Meth, hookers, and Little Kings?

        Cleveland city council has passed a resolution asking FirstEnergy to give up its naming rights to the rebuilt Muni stadium. Note, the city of Cleveland did not offer to return the money they got paid for the naming rights to the stadium.

      • rhywun

        Meanwhile Gov. Hokum is happy to throw a billion tax dollars at the Pegula family for another Bills Stadium and nobody (in power) raises an eyebrow.

    • Rebel Scum

      I’ll watch because I prefer to get the bs from the source.

      And I’ll need something to pick on / bitch about tomorrow.

    • Stinky Wizzleteats

      Here’s hoping he spends an hour aimlessly rambling about cannons and that time he had to confiscate one from Corn Pop at the public pool where he used to hang out and let kids play with the hairs on his legs.

      • kinnath

        Maybe put Hinkley in the audience for a quick laugh.

      • Stinky Wizzleteats

        He’ll probably be indisposed, too busy stalking Jodie Foster. People like Hinkley don’t grow out of their obsessions.

      • Drake

        Probably down at the gun store waiting for his new .22 while his info sails through NICS.

  10. Rebel Scum

    I guess someone needs to sue Ford for that business in Waukesha.

    Just yesterday, CNN reported that Ilene Steur, 49, who was injured in the shooting attack on the New York City subway in April, is suing gun manufacturer Glock over its marketing practices and distribution strategy that she says allowed the suspect to acquire one of the company’s products.

    Steur’s suit names Georgia-based Glock, Inc. and its Austrian parent company as defendants. …

    Steur’s lawsuit follows the landmark $73-million settlement in February paid by gun-maker Remington to families of the victims of the 2012 shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. The families argued that the company recklessly marketed the Bushmaster AR-15-style rifle to young adults.

    If I recall the kid stole it from his mom and killed her.

    • Sensei

      Yeah, but he wouldn’t have stolen it and killed mom if wasn’t for all the marketing.

    • Drake

      If they cared about people, they wouldn’t build red SUV’s.

    • EvilSheldon

      That decision may be the single largest travesty in the history of American jurisprudence, at leastt pre-COVID.

    • rhywun

      Meanwhile, the NYC Subway is promoting how to safely get high on drugs.

  11. ttyrant

    My wife and I planned to go to Japan on our honeymoon last year. My wife’s a big Japanophile and it’s probably amongst the top places I’d like to visit. As it so happens, she got pregnant and thus likely wasn’t going to be keen on the long flights while carrying our child, but it seems the Covid restrictions would’ve prevented us from going anyways. I’ve been following the updates Sensei is posting – it seems they are annoyingly strict on foreign visitors. I haven’t looked at their data recently, but I’d think that they’d have managed better than the US did during the past few years, given Japan seems to be healthier than the US. Is that the case? And also, what are the prospects for them opening up a bit in the next couple years?

    • Sensei

      They haven’t had a vast amount of death from what I’ve read. However, their medical system has its own set of issues. They had empty ICU beds in some places and full ICUs in other places and for political reasons couldn’t match supply and demand.

      Masking is near universal, but as we know that doesn’t do shit. However, on the whole, they’ve managed the disease as well as or better than the US in my opinion.

      I’d think they are going to suck it up and mostly open up by year end or spring next year. But that is guess based on the pressure from their tourist industry. It’s not insignificant. Pre-plague it was $38bn down to $3bn last year.

      • ttyrant

        Thanks Sensei, that’s good to know. I think one of the few things that could get my wife to flip her decision on the vaccination front would be denial of entry to Japan, as she loves visiting that country so much, so I’m hoping you’re right and they relent a bit over the next year or two.

  12. MikeS

    Very cool pics. Thank, Straff’!

  13. robc

    I am sure most of you have seen this:

    https://www.smbc-comics.com/comic/2011-12-28

    I just made this comment on another site:

    “As an aside, I think most people get the wrong message from the SMBC graph. Most people take the message as ‘be humble and quiet when you have a little bit of knowledge’.

    My take is the exact opposite: you need to go thru the process, and that includes shouting from the top of Mt Stupid. You need to be beat down into the pit of knowledge on the other side of the mountain. The key is to be open to learning and changing your mind. That is the only way to advance past the mountain.”

    • robc

      This is the great thing about the internet, you can opine stupidly semi-anonymously. If you don’t say the stupid things you think, how will you ever get corrected?

  14. grrizzly

    I usually find it interesting to learn how the same history is taught in different countries. So, I was happy to visit the history museum at Yasukuni and read about the Nanking incident of 1937 (elsewhere known as the Nanking massacre) and similar events.

    • robc

      In “Dave Barry Does Japan” he has a serious chapter in the middle where he visits the Hiroshima museum.

      He says that it basically treats the atomic bombs as a natural disaster, sort of a “and then one week, two bombs fell on us.” Not directly blaming the US, but also not acknowledging Japan’s role.

      • Shpip

        In Martin Caidin’s A Torch to the Enemy, the author raises the fact that the Hiroshima and Nagasaki missions totaled only about three percent of the destruction visited on Japan by B-29s. But the damage was huge for being done by only one aircraft. After the first two bombings, US diplomats told Japan that they could expect atomic raids weekly if they did not capitulate. It was a bluff, but it worked.

        I you’re wondering why the author’s name sounds familiar, he wrote Cyborg, the basis for The Six Million Dollar Man TV series. And now you’ve got that Steve Austin Nananana bionic sound effect playing in your head.

      • Fatty Bolger

        It was a bluff

        Only slightly. They had another almost finished, and enough in the pipeline for a bombing every week or two over the next couple of months.

      • Drake

        It was also a warning to the Soviets. When Japan surrendered, MacArthur told them the go to hell when they demanded that they be allowed to occupy half of Japan. The nukes helped prevent a permanent communist North Japan.

      • Fatty Bolger

        Yeah. Jesus, what a nightmare that would have been. Bad enough that President Dementia the First gave them half of Europe.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        ???

        And the Japanese certainly didn’t want the Soviets in there after the rather extensive history of ill will between them.

      • EvilSheldon

        I highly recommend the book Hell to Pay: Operation Downfall and the Invasion of Japan, 1945-47, for anyone interested in the strategy and politics surrounding the atomic bomb and the invasion of the home islands.

      • grrizzly

        I haven’t been to Hiroshima but visited Nagasaki. A peaceful city was destroyed by an atomic bomb. That’s the message. The US wasn’t blamed, true. I believe the groups of Japanese children there were specifically instructed to be super friendly to Americans. When they were going so super friendly on me, I’m like, kids, I’m not an American. I hadn’t even applied for naturalization at the time.

      • Sensei

        From my readings the “peaceful” city part is true. The US wanted to see what the bomb was going to do to an urban area. It wasn’t selected because of its industrial or military value. They wanted a mostly untouched urban city.

        If anyone know more or differently I’m curious.

        I believe at the time it also had the highest population of Christians too. That wasn’t generally well known either. The history Christianity and where it was and wasn’t practiced in Japan is an article in itself.

      • Fatty Bolger

        The US wanted to see what the bomb was going to do to an urban area

        That was Hiroshima. Nagasaki was picked as a military target to replace Kyoto, which was removed due to its historical significance. Nagasaki was actually the secondary target the day of its bombing.

      • Sensei

        So you’re telling me I mixed the two?

        I recall Kyoto was partially spared because of its cultural significance as well as one of the bigwigs in military who honeymooned there and loved the place.

      • Fatty Bolger

        Yep. The first targets were selected for maximum destruction and maximum psychological effect, and Nagasaki wasn’t on the original list. When they took Kyoto off the list, they added Nagasaki as a strong military target that I think was still largely intact for some reason (poor bombing target, maybe).

  15. The Late P Brooks

    Did you drink beer in the parking lot?

  16. Shpip

    Since the Glibs who have seen the sequel all appear to have enjoyed it, here’s a little blast from the past:

    Top Gun, but only the lines of Commander Tom “Stinger” Jordan.

    What I want to know after seeing this is: how big was the box that the director had Tom Cruise stand on to make it look like the 5’6″ James Tolkan only came up to Cruise’s chin in their scenes together?

  17. Gustave Lytton

    Thanks straff. I was going to visit it while the missus was at a quilt show at Tokyo Dome but went to a nearby garden instead.

    • trshmnstr the terrible

      TMITEbot execute recession routine. Beep. Boop.

      if recession.likelihood > 0.8:
      >if president.party == “D”:
      >> generate_press(topic=”Recession”, sentiment=positive)
      >if president.party == “R” :
      >> generate_press(topic=”Recession”, sentiment=negative)

      • rhywun

        NullReferenceError: Variable ‘president’ not set to an instance of an object.

    • Raven Nation

      So predictable and tiresome. Find some “important” person to explain how something bad will turn out to be good. I forget who it was that, during the Obama years, extolled the benefits of “funemployment” for people who had lost their jobs.

      • Nephilium

        Wasn’t that Pelosi explaining how great it was that people could feel free to work on their artistic ambitions instead of going to some stupid job?

      • Raven Nation

        I think she was talking about breaking “job lock” with Obamacare.

      • Toxteth O'Grady

        I swear up and down that in 2002 I saw someone write “funemployed” on an application.

      • Toxteth O'Grady

        (rather, blood-donation form)

    • Raven Nation

      Caveat: a recession WOULD be a good thing, just not for these idiotic reasons AND assuming, companies were actually forced into bankruptcy.

  18. The Late P Brooks

    Who else can we piss off?

    China’s government on Thursday accused Washington of jeopardizing peace after U.S. envoys began trade talks with Taiwan aimed at deepening relations with the self-ruled island democracy claimed by Beijing.

    Talks that started Wednesday cover trade, regulation and other areas based on “shared values” as market-oriented economies, according to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative. It did not mention China but the talks add to gestures that show U.S. support for Taiwan amid menacing behavior by Beijing, which threatens to invade.

    Trade dialogues “disrupt peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait,” said a foreign ministry spokesman, Zhao Lijian. He called on Washington to “stop negotiating agreements with Taiwan that have sovereign connotations and official nature.”

    Team Biden is like bunch of idiot kids taunting the neighbors’ dogs and throwing rocks at hornets’ nests.

    • Sensei

      Look we’re sorry…

      Joe Biden No Longer Wants Vladimir Putin Ousted as Russia Leader

      On Tuesday, The New York Times published an op-ed from Biden where he stated unequivocally that the U.S. would not attempt to remove Putin from power in Moscow.

      In March, the White House had apparently scrambled to clarify Biden’s remarks after the president said in Warsaw, Poland that Putin “cannot remain in power” following the invasion of Ukraine.

      “We do not seek a war between NATO and Russia,” Biden wrote. “As much as I disagree with Mr. Putin, and find his actions an outrage, the United States will not try to bring about his ouster in Moscow.”

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        Germany is revolting against the plan.

        I can hear Nuland and Sullivan ranting and cursing from here.

      • Swiss Servator

        “Biden wrote” – I wonder which staffer actually authored that?

      • Gustave Lytton

        Why would Russia trust those statements? A little too late to close barn doors.

      • rhywun

        Remember, Trump was considered the child who shoots his mouth off.

    • Swiss Servator

      Ah, The CCP has veto power over our trade relations now?

      • R.J.

        Oh yeah. Ever since Biden won.

  19. The Late P Brooks

    From my readings the “peaceful” city part is true. The US wanted to see what the bomb was going to do to an urban area. It wasn’t selected because of its industrial or military value. They wanted a mostly untouched urban city.

    I have a vague recollection of that.

  20. Swiss Servator

    “Imperial Japan’s miritary”

    *narrows gaze*

    • Sensei

      Plus I just noticed the bio:

      Don’t forget to smash the notification bell to get all the latest videos of me doing Brochettaward’s mom.

      • Gustave Lytton

        Do we get those notifications first?

    • Gustave Lytton

      That’s not the only r/l substitution.

  21. Rebel Scum

    Boogity boogity boogity let’s go racing woking!

    The world-famous auto racing and operating company, headquartered in Daytona Beach, Florida, marked the first day of LGBTQ+ “Pride Month” with a unique version of the pride flag along with a message apologizing for actions it deemed uncharacteristic of its mission.

    “As we celebrate the LGBTQ+ community, we acknowledge that recent actions have not aligned with NASCAR’s mission to be a welcoming sport for all,” the company wrote.

    “We remain steadfast in our commitment to create a more inclusive environment — in our workplaces, at the race track & in the stands,” it added.

    Last Sunday, Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott waved the green flag ahead of the All-Star Race at Texas Motor Speedway.

    I don’t know if the two are related but it would not be surprising.

    • The Last American Hero

      Are they going to let nonconforming vehicles compete if they identify as a NASCAR?

    • rhywun

      My brain hurts from that but… the connection NASCAR seems to be trying to make is that Texas is unfriendly to people who want to drug or surgically alter their kids and that’s bad because reasons so we’re sorry?

      SMDH

  22. The Late P Brooks

    Ah, The CCP has veto power over our trade relations now?

    No. But the Bidenettes seem to feel obligated to go out of their way to give anyone and everyone a gratuitous thumb in the eye.

  23. kinnath

    Some happy news for today

    Michael Avenatti, the brash California lawyer who took on then-President Donald Trump, was sentenced on Thursday to four years in prison for defrauding his best-known former client, the porn actress Stormy Daniels.

    A federal jury convicted Avenatti in February of wire fraud and aggravated identity theft after a two-week trial, agreeing with prosecutors that he embezzled nearly $300,000 in book proceeds intended for Daniels.

    • Fatty Bolger

      But he seemed so trustworthy.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        The hardcore Dem loons loved that guy.

      • Rebel Scum

        They thought he was going to slay the Mad MAGA King.

      • rhywun

        He’s their kind of asshole.

  24. Sean

    https://www.salon.com/2022/06/01/doug-mastrianos-largest-donor-is-shake-shacks-bread-maker_partner/

    Huh.

    Sandra Mailey is a retired kindergarten teacher in Franklin County, the rural and heavily Republican community where the Martins’ family business is headquartered. Mailey remembers that a member of the Martin family came to help out in her classroom many years before Trump was elected. “She was lovely. We certainly did not talk politics,” says Mailey, who is now chair of the county’s Democratic Party. But that was a different era. “It’s a very extreme time. It really is,” she adds.

    Emphasis added.

    • DEG

      I’ve always liked Martin’s Potato Rolls.

      Now I like them even more.

    • trshmnstr the terrible

      There is no purpose for this except to get shake shack to ditch this supplier. It is a hit piece, nothing more.

      • Sensei

        Winner, winner. Shake Shack is very popular in NYC (and I imagine other liberal enclaves) so they want to be able to eat there guilt free as well.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        Yup. Assholes, everywhere.

    • rhywun

      I use Martin rolls almost exclusively. I didn’t know they had icky politics.

    • MikeS

      But that was a different era. “It’s a very extreme time. It really is,” she adds.

      Yup, and why do you suppose that is? Who was it that started cranking shit up in late 2016?

      • kbolino

        The crank started turning in earnest a lot earlier than that (e.g., Operation Fast & Furious, Operation Choke Point, Title IX Inquisition, etc.) but we weren’t supposed to notice. Part of the reason things are so “extreme” is we’re being punished for paying attention.

  25. Tundra

    Neat-o.

    Thanks, straff. I appreciate the tour!

    Nice that the freaks can’t tear it all down. Something to be said for cultures that measure in millennia.

    • Scruffy Nerfherder

      ???

      • Sean

        Possibly.