How Japanese Feel About Oppenheimer and Nuclear Weapons | Street Interview

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  • Опубліковано 12 чер 2024
  • The views expressed in this video do not represent that of Asian Boss or the general Japanese public.
    Have you wondered how ordinary Japanese citizens feel about Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer, which did not get released in Japan? Asian Boss hit the streets of Tokyo to find out if people even know about Oppenheimer and what the invention of the nuclear bomb means to Japanese people.
    0:00 - Preview
    0:19 - Intro
    1:09 - Do you know the movie “Oppenheimer”?
    4:12 - Why hasn’t Japan released the movie yet?
    8:24 - Should Japan release Oppenheimer?
    10:00 - Would you watch Oppenheimer?
    11:30 - How sensitive are Japanese toward things related to the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings?
    15:26 - What did you learn in school about the nuclear bombings in Japan?
    18:20 - Was Japan at fault for the atomic bombings?
    21:16 - Thoughts on today’s conflicts and nations that own nuclear weapons
    25:01 - Message to leaders of nuclear-weapon states
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 3,7 тис.

  • @RealTaIk
    @RealTaIk 9 місяців тому +6149

    I'm a German and I've watched probably over 50 ww2 movies, series and documentaries. We also have a whole school year of history class dedicated to ww2 and the atrocious things we Germans have done during that time (visiting a concentration camp is mandatory btw.). We also never tried to justify the things that have been done and knowing everything about it, ensures that we will try everything in our power to NEVER let that happen again.
    Did I feel bad for what has been done? YES of course, but I never felt bad being a German because of the way Germany handled everything afterwards.
    I would hope for Japan to come to terms with their past because this will also help them understand the feelings of other countries towards them.

    • @gyg8853
      @gyg8853 9 місяців тому +166

      I’m not 💯 but I’ve heard that they teach a certain version of what happened in Japanese schools..

    • @cher6624
      @cher6624 9 місяців тому +786

      japanese history classes and books downplayed the atrocities they inflicted in Asia to save face. i am very glad germany took a different path, the past is surely behind Germans.

    • @Brevard1986
      @Brevard1986 9 місяців тому

      Germany has been amazing in its handling of the history of World War 2 in relation to educating its own population. It's not perfect but it's definitely something all nations should pay attention to. Frankly, I feel Germany has done a better job than any country including the western powers like the UK.
      Too much is brushed under the carpet by all nations - some worse than others. Nanking, Poland and the Red Army, Invasion of Siciliy by Allied forces, German invasion by Allied and Soviet forces, just the whole Pacfic front etc. have seen many instances of cruelty and suffering to civilians alongside other war crimes. Some nations are (much) worse than others but we as the current generations need to look at the past and seek the truth and accept the reality no matter how much it hurts us to know about it.
      I wish more nations followed Germany's path in this manner - and for everybody to do better/improve upon it.

    • @mikan2055
      @mikan2055 9 місяців тому +72

      @@gyg8853 That is not true. Have you ever taken any history classes at school in Japan?

    • @PremierCCGuyMMXVI
      @PremierCCGuyMMXVI 9 місяців тому +82

      Sure, but I still don’t know how this justifies the use of the bomb on civilians when it wasn’t necessary at all

  • @1stHalf
    @1stHalf 9 місяців тому +4383

    This just proves this information isn't being taught in Japanese schools.

    • @user-sn1bp8eg8e
      @user-sn1bp8eg8e 9 місяців тому +395

      as I know history is select course in Japan. Unless student wanted to become a historian or archaeologist etc, they will drop it for more focus on subject can help them enter the college. This is one of the reason that many teens in japan didnt know what happen and what japan have done in WWII. (If I get wrong, please tell me)

    • @annaairahala9462
      @annaairahala9462 9 місяців тому +587

      tbf, before the movie most Americans wouldn't even know who Oppenheimer is

    • @Alert111
      @Alert111 9 місяців тому +511

      I bet 80%of American think Einstein made the bomb

    • @star-lord653
      @star-lord653 9 місяців тому +320

      We Japanese are taught about Japanese war crimes in Nanjing, the Philippines, the Malay Peninsula, and the Manhattan Project. Throw away false stereotypes😊

    • @SwitchMaxFX
      @SwitchMaxFX 9 місяців тому +85

      @@annaairahala9462 Correct. Source, am american and some of my friends didn't even know who he was before the movie was released.

  • @Kaarssteun
    @Kaarssteun 9 місяців тому +1816

    (very minor spoiler ahead)
    I think it's very important to note that Oppenheimer does not even focus on the Japan bombings - basically at all. We don't see it taking place, we only hear about it from a radio broadcast for a few seconds. The entire other part focuses on the emotional stress perceived by Oppenheimer. If anything, I would guess this appeals to those deciding when the film airs in Japan. It's not disrespectful, rather quite generous in recognizing the atrocities this one man "made possible". The villain in the movie is someone else entirely, and massive shade is thrown to the US president.

    • @A.A1891
      @A.A1891 9 місяців тому

      Japan is a cringe weeboo country.
      They need lslam and sharia law to fix their country.

    • @supdevan6413
      @supdevan6413 9 місяців тому +158

      I agree. And some Japanese citizens might even find it offensive how little the movie spends on Japan and the effects of the bomb on their country.

    • @japanesefilipinorinsan
      @japanesefilipinorinsan 8 місяців тому +9

      If someone don't watch well leave it, don't insist

    • @MidnightEkaki
      @MidnightEkaki 8 місяців тому +40

      I still think the film focusing so much on someone who invented the bombs and did little to think about how he was contributing to the death of many people in Japan wouldn't sit well with Japanese people.

    • @AJ-fn3ug
      @AJ-fn3ug 8 місяців тому +9

      @@MidnightEkakiwho cares

  • @ruthkatagami4011
    @ruthkatagami4011 9 місяців тому +721

    I’m from Hiroshima. Censoring what we are allowed to watch is wrong. The censorship is what bothers me over the actual film. Why are we not allowed to watch it? Just because it will offend others? Let them be offended. We should be allowed to have the freedom to watch what we like in Japan, and formulate our own opinions/thoughts on the events of WW2.

    • @scottgleeson4905
      @scottgleeson4905 8 місяців тому +59

      The odd thing about this is simply that the film is really about Oppenheimer the man - far more than the bomb itself. And it is VERY far from being a positive representation of the atomic bomb. In fact, the central theme in Oppenheimer was the moral horror he feels having brought the atomic bomb into the world.
      The censorship in Japan speaks to the difficulties Japanese culture sometimes has with dealing honestly with this particular part of history. Many foreigners don't understand this aspect of modern Japan at all, but some of us do. There's a fear of re-opening a past which was both traumatic for the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki (not to mention countless others who were bombed or died in battle) - and which is a source of shame for the Japanese nation, given how Imperial Japan behaved in the nations it invaded. All this in a culture which places a lot of emphasis on not upsetting public order and decorum - and not shaming others or doing anything that would shame yourself or your family. It is much easier to censor the film - to not speak too much about the war at all, except when absolutely necessary.
      If a generation of young Japanese could find a way to better explain this to the world, but especially those nations where there are people who still have some anger towards Japan, it would be a sign of real progress.

    • @popoch2
      @popoch2 8 місяців тому +11

      based

    • @life4trinity
      @life4trinity 8 місяців тому +54

      I never liked how Japan tries to hide what happened during WW2

    • @Sango-po5pi
      @Sango-po5pi 8 місяців тому

      Because the politicians today are direct descendants of the people who ordered all Japan's attrocities to be done. That's why they censor even textbooks in classrooms. It's their idea of protecting their name and their family's "honor". As a foreign English teacher I cannot begin to tell you the shock and disbelief I felt when I realised the kevel of censorship and white washing of HISTORY. And since I'm foreign I'm powerless. I can only look on and feel sorry for the young people who are being lied to by way of omission.

    • @peterparker9954
      @peterparker9954 8 місяців тому +11

      I thought Japan was a "free" country
      Sounds like China with democracy to me

  • @martiddy
    @martiddy 9 місяців тому +3218

    In my opinion, the elderly woman had the most insightful and smart argument about all the respondents. I totally agree with her.

    • @gurugurumawaru7869
      @gurugurumawaru7869 9 місяців тому +180

      I concur, her informed opinions were very mature throughout the whole interview. She definitely had deep understanding on the nuances of the situation as a whole.

    • @erickguize
      @erickguize 9 місяців тому +114

      +1, and also the guy that travels to Korea has a good point aswell in his answers

    • @IceQueenaliasIQ
      @IceQueenaliasIQ 9 місяців тому +68

      I thought the exact same. She knew the history of her own country within the broader international historical context and formulated an opinion that I can understand and do in fact share.

    • @Tuturial464
      @Tuturial464 9 місяців тому +7

      But the fact that Japan didn't deserve the bombings is another story. If this was nazi Germany then Japan wouldn't say that

    • @martiddy
      @martiddy 9 місяців тому +71

      @@Tuturial464 If the nuclear bombs would have been used in military targets only, that would have been a different story. But both Hiroshima and Nagasaki were cities full of civilians. I don't care what people said about the justification of those nuclear bombs, it's still a war crime to kill civilians, especially when they killed hundreds of thousands.

  • @1stHalf
    @1stHalf 9 місяців тому +3626

    The lady with the mask said it best, whoever invented it first would've used it first. Japan would've used it on America if it had the chance. It's crazy how there is backlash against the movie. Know your history and your country and all of it's deeds.

    • @Tuturial464
      @Tuturial464 9 місяців тому

      Japan was in development of the Japanese supersubs which were meant to attack the us mainland

    • @tobehonest4332
      @tobehonest4332 9 місяців тому +1

      That’s a little difficult as America has re written a lot of history compared to all the world, America is the most evilest one out of the entire world.

    • @kutchi2270
      @kutchi2270 9 місяців тому +1

      クレイジーだと言い切るあなたの発言も偏っている。
      日本が発明したら日本が最初に原爆を使ったはずだ、とか、そういう話ではない。
      どの国であれどの時代であれ、原爆を使ってはいけなかった。オッペンハイマーが原爆を作った人だと聞いて、そのことに対してポジティブな印象を抱かないことについて、それは当然そうなってもしようがないことだ。
      何をもってクレイジーだと言ってるんだ。
      そういう発言をしたがるあなたの感性がネジ曲がってるってんだ
      また、あなたが、日本の歴史、国、行為をすごくよく知っているような言い方をしているが、なぜそういえる?
      あなたが知っている日本についての情報は全て正しいかもしれない。しかしそのような発言をするという時点で、あなたは自分がこれまでたまたま得たその一部の情報のみで、それ以上の情報を向上心をもって得ようとしたわけでもなく、偏った目線で有頂天になって上から目線でものを言っているだけだ。
      ちなみに、その映画はどういうものかは見ないとわからない。見てみないと評価も感想も出てこない。だから公開したほうがよいと私は思う。

    • @PremierCCGuyMMXVI
      @PremierCCGuyMMXVI 9 місяців тому +215

      True but the bombs were not necessary to end the war.
      Yes Japan has history denial, but so does America.

    • @jeffluo9591
      @jeffluo9591 9 місяців тому

      There would never be a good reason to massacre civilians.

  • @ClassyJohn
    @ClassyJohn 8 місяців тому +622

    I really like the elderly lady's view on this topic because you can tell shes more informed. The fact that shes aware of Japan's war atrocities during that period and doesn't try to hide it or justify it as "good". Hearing her points really restored my faith a bit in Japanese people.
    I also really like the opinion of the guy that travels to Korea. You can tell that he thought a lot about how other countries think of Japan and their atrocities.
    I think, on a personal level, every person should try to travel internationally. Its honestly a really good learning and growth experience. I think governments tend to be evil and want to groom their citizens a certain way.
    Great job with these interviews and questions, Asian Boss! I love your content.

    • @TsugMt
      @TsugMt 8 місяців тому +24

      I really find amazing how people hate other countries and people with so much openness as if you thinking that hating others makes you a hero or more progressive when in reality, it just makes you a racist person who complaints about a country that doesn’t even affect you in any way shape or form, it’s impressive how obsessed people are towards Japan and hating that country like…that sounds like you neeed some mental help…..
      Common, even me, as a Mexican who HAS LIVED through the racism the present day racism of the US, seen their actions by putting dictators in LATAM and supporting coups in LATAM and just being shitty neighbors…I don’t hate them….how can I, a third world country citizen can be more aware and mature than people who supposedly have better education systems and even better values, because if you hate Japan means you think you have better values than them, so I will tell you, I have better values than you, and Japanese people too….because they don’t hate like you guys….the arrogance

    • @1eyeddevil929
      @1eyeddevil929 8 місяців тому +1

      Eiji Tsuburaya, Ishiro Honda, Hideo Kojima: Our Anti War shows are a joke, i guess

    • @Manas-co8wl
      @Manas-co8wl 8 місяців тому +18

      @@TsugMt If this sounds like hate to you, you need to go see a therapist. Or are you sympathizing with what Japan and the Axis did in WW2?
      If anything, this just shows that you have no right to speak for other countries/races just because you're a minority of another.

    • @irecordwithaphone1856
      @irecordwithaphone1856 8 місяців тому

      There are always good people living everywhere, it can be hard to remember that fact but I think there are many more good people than there are cruel ones. They're just a lot quieter living their lives. I have a lot of respect that she's informed on her country's past as well

    • @binabi
      @binabi 7 місяців тому +4

      ​@@TsugMt I hate how people always repeat the same thing everyone says until it becomes accepted, even when it's not 100% true and correct. It really shows you who's being brainwashed and who's the sane, that doesn't mask atrocities of neither side. I feel so disgusted when I see people wanting to justify mass murder (this is happening right now with the Israel and Hamas situation) and spread the myth that USA and european countries are the good guys that saved the world, when they are far worse than any other country I've seen. The only country I've seen admiting their mistakes is Germany.
      But sure American, keep talking about how Japanese people don't recognize their past and want to hide what they done to other nations. I trust 100% that you care about innocent lives!

  • @nicolesudjono
    @nicolesudjono 8 місяців тому +39

    To be fair, the movie didn't touch much about Japan. It's the perspective of the inventor, who came to realize how deadly his weapon was....is.

  • @skierdude95
    @skierdude95 9 місяців тому +1911

    There are a lot of misunderstandings about this movie. One, it isn’t pro nuclear weapons. At all. One of the main takeaways from the movie is the amount of guilt Oppenheimer felt in creating the atomic bomb. Second, it wasn’t just an American movie. On Wikipedia, it’s listed as both a British and American film. Half of the actors in the movie were non American including the guy who played Oppenheimer (he’s Irish). Christopher Nolan the director is British. Finally, Japan needs to own up to the fact that they were the main aggressor in the Pacific War. Every country has dark parts of their history and there’s no shame in acknowledging it. Hardly anyone thinks less of modern day Germany because of the Holocaust and Germany has great relations with its neighbors. To contrast, one of the main reasons why Japan still has sour relations with its neighbors while Germany doesn’t is because so many Japanese still see themselves as the victim. The atomic bombs were horrible, but they don’t make Japan a victim of the war they started. Japan would likely have much better relationships with its neighbors if they owned up to their past the way Germany has.

    • @shinylatios6
      @shinylatios6 9 місяців тому +96

      Factual....sad

    • @svennielsen633
      @svennielsen633 9 місяців тому

      Propaganda garbage. Oppenheimer was WELL AWARE what he was doing, but he did it anyway. The Danish scientist Niels Bohr was another contributor, who allowed science to be used to created a weapon for mass destruction.

    • @jayq2571
      @jayq2571 9 місяців тому +81

      You lost me at "The atomic bombs were horrible, but they don’t make Japan a victim of the war they started"

    • @sambatra6162
      @sambatra6162 9 місяців тому +24

      Well said🙌🏻🙌🏻

    • @homeland1128
      @homeland1128 9 місяців тому

      Exactly, japs todays and back in the days are pretty much the same, full of soy boys who only brave to hide shits and stuff lol

  • @jasonswitzer1748
    @jasonswitzer1748 9 місяців тому +170

    9:47 this guy gets it. It’s never a bad thing to be shown multiple perspectives. That’s the best way to get a true understanding of events.

  • @Kabutoes
    @Kabutoes 8 місяців тому +49

    “It’s understandable that it would be banned because 200,000 died in the atomic bombings of Japanese cities” but the movie isn’t about those bombings or cities, it’s about the man who made the bomb and making the most destructive weapon in human history and its consequences

    • @BronzeAgePepper
      @BronzeAgePepper 7 місяців тому +6

      probably just as problematic for people whose families were rended over generations in the 200,000 deaths to humanize the man who built the weapon used to carry out that massacre

    • @Mialikesthings
      @Mialikesthings 7 місяців тому +12

      @@BronzeAgePepperit doesn’t humanise him though just tell the stories.Your argument could also be proven quite meh if we are gonna consider how the Japanese people humanise themselves and ignore the horrific travesties done to the Chinese people by the Japanese

    • @ketchup901
      @ketchup901 6 місяців тому

      @@BronzeAgePepperThose people don't have to watch the movie. There are countless of movies made about the holocaust but I don't see Jews offended at them.

    • @nnnnnn496
      @nnnnnn496 4 місяці тому +5

      @@BronzeAgePepper "Humanize" like Oppenhiemer was an Alien from mars. Even terrible things are part of 'humanity'. Plus the movie is more a deconstruction nd impact of such a creation. It is not an outright justification of anything. Just an attempt to portray what happened through cinema.

  • @pjiho17
    @pjiho17 9 місяців тому +340

    As a Korean person living in Japan these interviews are super valuable to understand Japanese people. Please keep doing the good work!

    • @A.A1891
      @A.A1891 9 місяців тому +1

      Japan is a cringe weeboo country
      Korea is a cringe GAY country
      You guys need lslam and sharia law to fix your country

    • @popopopooo1453
      @popopopooo1453 2 місяці тому

      日本から出ていってくれ

  • @vgt
    @vgt 9 місяців тому +1179

    I was surprised to hear the one lady say that Japan did some bad things during World War 2 and that Japan was not in the right. I really appreciate that as someone from an Allied country. I've seen reports of how Japan as a whole doesn't really educate its people on the country's wrongdoings during the war (Unit 731, The Rape of Nanking, etc), with people like Shinzo Abe going as far as denying that such things even took place.
    I respect her opinion that the atomic bombs were not justified, but people will have to agree to disagree on that point.

    • @seandown6531
      @seandown6531 9 місяців тому +125

      This is actually such a stereotypical so-not-true impression of Japanese people. In fact they all learn and know what their country did during the war, and most of the people still even feel guilty although it’d happened way before they were born. Some teachers even teach kids to be ashamed of being Japanese.
      Also Japan’s government has apologized and paid compensations to other Asian countries literally tons of times.
      However some of the “victim” countries only accept money and never accept apologies, and keep blaming Japan’s past so that they can keep getting money whenever they like forever, which I think is the biggest reason why so many people around the world still believe Japan’s not facing their past and doesn’t educate people about their war crimes in the history.

    • @1stHalf
      @1stHalf 9 місяців тому +90

      She actually also stated that whoever invented it first. She is basically saying Japan would've used the nuke too. Especially since Japan didn't shy away from ANY methods.

    • @1stHalf
      @1stHalf 9 місяців тому

      @@seandown6531 You are clearly Japanese lol. None of the young people being interviewed knew of Oppenheimer.

    • @star-lord653
      @star-lord653 9 місяців тому +105

      I am Japanese. Whenever I look at the comment sections of videos of Japanese wars, I feel that Japanese people are being stereotyped incorrectly. I think this is mainly due to the bias of the media in each country. Most young Japanese people of course know about Hakenkreuz, they also know about Nanjing, and they have been educated. Rather, I think Americans and Koreans don't know about massacres and rapes in the Vietnam War....🤔

    • @nurlindafsihotang49
      @nurlindafsihotang49 9 місяців тому

      Yeah, and allied countries are peak of righteousness. So righteous, after WW2 WALTZING TO ASIA TO DIVIDE THE COLONIES.
      Dont ride your high horse to asia. We sick of you people.

  • @seeyouinawhile
    @seeyouinawhile 9 місяців тому +72

    I really appreciate everyone in this video for sharing their honest feelings, insights, personal experiences. Many of them, not only are aware of these issues, but also clearly had gone through some processes and reflections that made up how they think about these issues. I just find it really beautiful and inspiring. Thank you for this intriguing interview. Great job!

  • @riza4564
    @riza4564 9 місяців тому +234

    That woman is telling the truth, if Japan was the first who was able to discover nukes then it would be a tragic disaster.

    • @rodrozil6544
      @rodrozil6544 8 місяців тому

      USA even threaten to bomb China at one point. Do you know that. They are using Oppenheimer as to show they are on higher moral ground.

    • @MidnightEkaki
      @MidnightEkaki 8 місяців тому +19

      it was a tragic disaster regardless

    • @wes9809
      @wes9809 8 місяців тому +20

      It's easy to look in hindsight. But was it really? What the Japanese were doing was horrific and tragic. When they started a war and would use every means necessary to win - there's nothing 'tragic' about the ones they declared it upon by doing what was necessary to win. If Japan conquered the US they would not have been nearly as nice to the population as the US was to them (as seen in China/Korea/Australia... war is tragic.. but doing what was necessary to win was not@@MidnightEkaki

    • @pauloazuela8488
      @pauloazuela8488 8 місяців тому +2

      It will happen if they gather resources which they are struggling in the midst of ww2. It's either Germany or US whose in the race.

    • @zir456
      @zir456 8 місяців тому

      ​@@MidnightEkaki It would be very far from Tragic Disaster if Japan was the first who discover Nukes, even if a country ahle to create It too then what??? China, Korea and many more already nuked and that said country cannot even use the nuke bcz They would be nuked too, that's why US can use Nukes bcz They are the only one who had It and why Soviet only have Nuke as Threat to US🥴💀

  • @sambeawesome
    @sambeawesome 9 місяців тому +541

    I appreciate the guy who admitted that Japan's movies on wars reflect them in a softer light, just how US movies do that with our country's war history. We really paint a brush over our atrocities. I do think it's valuable to see the outside criticism of how others felt during war time, and learn that things weren't so black and white. That said, I know dramatized movies are one of the worst ways to learn history, but I also know it's the most common and approachable method. It at least starts the conversation. Very interesting video.お疲れさまでした!

    • @Tuturial464
      @Tuturial464 9 місяців тому

      In America we learn about our past and even now there are those who are fighting against those who white wash history and remove monuments of racists and insensitive leaders.
      Japan elects prime minister who deny it ever happen and still shrines for war criminals.

    • @oo0OAO0oo
      @oo0OAO0oo 9 місяців тому +20

      The Pentagon is literally involved in scripts and equipment for Hollywood movies. It's not some conspiracy type of thing, just to mention that.
      I think people should know about this and talk about it more. Propaganda is more alive than maybe ever these days and especially movies are a great tool to get into people's heads.
      American culture is one of the most influential in the world, especially because of all those Hollywood movies.
      The issue I take with that is, that the government has no business to be doing that, in my opinion. Soft power games, manipulating, deceiving people and literally portraying a different picture from reality for this malicious reasons is immoral and I strongly oppose it.
      Growing up in Germany, with Serbian roots, I always had to question stuff. And it really helped me to not be a blind nationalist. But I know that there are plenty of people out there which are even more nationalistic with that kind of upbringing. And generally speaking, it doesn't matter what your roots are if you grow up in a different country. I've seen that with all kinds of nationalities.
      But we obviously need different perspectives and opinions to get an understanding of each other and to fill our blind spots. I sometimes just question the honesty of the approach.

    • @peterparker9954
      @peterparker9954 8 місяців тому +5

      A few American films have been critical of America as well .... look at Oppenheimer itself....it showed how much of an evil Truman was.... but the Japanese would not recognise their brutality during world war 2
      Only Korean films depict Japanese brutality to its core
      If you want to learn about Japanese brutality through films, watch Korean films

    • @dingleberry4234
      @dingleberry4234 8 місяців тому

      @@oo0OAO0ooYup, the exponential advancement of media definitely propelled propaganda to a new level. It’s just people don’t know how to identify it or they can’t believe they consume it. Propaganda is too heavily associated with authoritarian regimes to the point that everyone else believes they cannot be victims of it.

    • @lightup6751
      @lightup6751 7 місяців тому +15

      @@peterparker9954
      Dude. American movies are always depicting their soldiers as heroes.
      Every movie about Iraq, Afghanistan and the Middle East in general makes it look like the invaders are the heroes while hundred thousands died from bombings of the occupiers.
      Japan does propaganda as well.
      But this happens in Hollywood every day. US movies are notorious for their war movies with propaganda.

  • @sXsKidd
    @sXsKidd 9 місяців тому +360

    It's weird that they feel a certain way about nuclear weapons, but when showed the swastika, younger people had no clue what it was. I wonder if they know about what kind of war crimes japan did in the WW2

    • @trollof229antthevariable9
      @trollof229antthevariable9 9 місяців тому +80

      They probably have no idea or are taught about the war crimes of the allies.

    • @mr523592891
      @mr523592891 9 місяців тому

      @@trollof229antthevariable9”fake news”, in the extreme right japs knowledge book

    • @kevinwijaya9613
      @kevinwijaya9613 9 місяців тому +9

      these are civillians, of course the don’t know.

    • @derekdu5613
      @derekdu5613 9 місяців тому

      @@kevinwijaya9613 I bet every German civillians knows about the crimes of fascism and most people dislike Nazis, but the Japanese don't know that they don't have the correct historical education

    • @star-lord653
      @star-lord653 9 місяців тому +56

      I am Japanese.
      I think most Japanese young people know Hakenkreuz. If there is a video of an interview with a young man who says he doesn't know about it, it's an intentionally very biased one that piggybacks on the typical stereotype that the Japanese are completely uneducated about their past war crimes😅

  • @darkevilazn
    @darkevilazn 8 місяців тому +11

    The whole point of the movie was to show how complex a character Oppenheimer was. It neither vilified him nor portrayed him as a hero. It was a bio-pic simply for the purpose of letting you make your own conclusions about the whole thing.

  • @hashijouzu
    @hashijouzu 9 місяців тому +87

    The reason Asian Boss is the best street interviews in Asia is because they offer a wide range of thoughtful opinions within a single video. Not many channels do that.

  • @kimcheeseller
    @kimcheeseller 9 місяців тому +38

    “What would you say to the leader of a nuclear weapon state?”
    “watch anime”
    dude’s a real one LOL

  • @A_Dane_Downunder
    @A_Dane_Downunder 9 місяців тому +25

    I watched this movie for two weeks ago. It is not about the Manhattan project or dropping the nuclear bombs on Japan. The movie is about the person Oppenheimer. I think most people don’t realise that before they have watched the movie including myself. I don’t think it glorifies anyone but it tells the story about Oppenheimer. In that light I don’t it can offend any Japanese.

  • @shastablue221
    @shastablue221 7 місяців тому +108

    I'm Korean and I was born and raised in Hong Kong. One of my best friends when I was growing up was Japanese. We both loved manga and anime so we were really close. One day, I learned about the things that happened to my grandparents during the war, when Japan colonized Korea. My grandma worked under Japanese companies and she went through a lot of horrible stuff. I was only a 6th grader at the time so I didn't think much when I asked my friend if she knew about the war and what happened. She obviously didn't know and asked her parents about it and they told her whatever I told her was untrue. They knew that Japan colonized Korea but they said it was a good thing, that they helped to develop the country during that period. My friend came back to me and told me I was a liar and we had a huge argument about it. The things I mentioned were true happenings that traumatized my relatives and she couldn't understand if such horrible events occurred why none of her family knew about it. She was told Koreans kept lying about the Japan war because we were jealous and we hated them. Through that experience I learned we had totally different views and that it was something I shouldn't really bring up. We eventually forgot about it and never mentioned it again but it did made me wonder what was taught in Japan's history books.

    • @ims3312
      @ims3312 5 місяців тому +10

      People who do not learn from history will never get better. This is Japan. When the U.S. military leaves, Japan’s bad guys will immediately show their fangs, and those ignorant good people will become accomplices of bad people.
      You didn‘t do anything wrong, but you have to remember those things, tell your descendants, and let them always beware of the Japanese. One day, they will reveal their nature and get involved in the peninsula.

    • @grzegorzach3891
      @grzegorzach3891 5 місяців тому +13

      Since decades many countries in Europe have mutual agreements to align history teaching between countries. I know Poland has this kind of agreement with Germany (since 70s)- textbooks are reviewed by historians from both countries etc. and this was in place even before we were all parts of the EU. Similar project was started between Poland and Russia (discontinued by Russian when Putin got to power) or Poland and Ukraine (now on hold because of the war). I think it would be great if Japan and Korea would do something similar - as both are allies, both are western democracies, it should not really be a problem and would benefit everyone.

    • @hareecionelson5875
      @hareecionelson5875 5 місяців тому +2

      To be fair, I have no foot in either camp, but I wish I didn't know the details of what Imperial Japan did pre-WW2 and during. Even the Nazis were appalled

    • @yudistiraliem135
      @yudistiraliem135 5 місяців тому

      @@ims3312Jaoanese don’t have the manpower to project beyond Japan and Korea. They literally needs everyone to take care of the basic economy and the elderly, also they are neighbour with China even if they have twice the manpower they currently have they could not spare any resources to project their powers abroad.

    • @user-ig1iz5ov5g
      @user-ig1iz5ov5g 5 місяців тому +8

      I’m so sorry about that
      In my story, my relatives said how Japanese government were horrible at that era he was saved his life by Russian soldiers. So my mother always said how we are lucky America came after ww2 GHQ changed us.
      But I know one Japanese man he was my professor he always mentioned Japanese mind lost after GHQ came.
      I don’t say anything anymore but please don’t categorize us as one country. Even among Japanese we have a different perspective

  • @lostintranslation2985
    @lostintranslation2985 8 місяців тому +16

    I don't think modern people who weren't living through the war really have context for how it must have felt. I can only imagine how overwhelming it must have been

    • @Tuturial464
      @Tuturial464 8 місяців тому

      Clearly the people in Japan were misinformed and brainwashed by the government. It was at least a month before Yamamoto (Pearl Harbor mastermind) death was notified to the public. But does it mean they were completely ignorant?

    • @darkevilazn
      @darkevilazn 8 місяців тому +2

      You can have some idea. You just need to listen to stories of holocaust survivors and Japan Occupation period survivors and the stuff they had to go through. So long as you have some form of empathy, you can understand it and know how they feel. And I'll even throw in a bone, and add in atomic bomb survivors too, because they were also civilian victims.

    • @Vinedwall
      @Vinedwall 2 місяці тому

      When I was a child, I saw the documents of Nanjing Massacre and I was deeply hurt by those stories and pictures. I think it's not that hard to understand their feelings actually.

    • @coronagaming3942
      @coronagaming3942 Місяць тому

      If my self proclaim pro instinct take over, i feel like japanese ppl just got bad/s*ck fate, they quite enjoy it, but when the atomic bomb hit, they manage the pain through embarassment and self negative claim thts why many is suicide

  • @safeguardjeff
    @safeguardjeff 9 місяців тому +528

    Germany teaches WW2 history in a way to remember the atrocities they committed during the war, so they are never committed again.
    Japan on the other hand, prefers to ignore the atrocities they committed, under the false pretense that it is anti Japanese to talk such things and would rather ignore the horrendous acts committed during WW2 like they didn’t do them. Very sad. Seems doubtful the film will release there.

    • @svennielsen633
      @svennielsen633 9 місяців тому

      Garbage. The US and the UK have been silent about how they bombed German cities with only civilian women and children while all men were at the front. Dresden was destroyed more than 95%, so was the city Narva in Estonia by the Soviet Union. Because the Allied bombed German towns they were not able to produce processed food enough for all. So, when you see pictures of starved concentration camp prisoners, remember: THE ALLIED DID THIS - but they falsely blamed the Germans during the Nuremburg war trials.

    • @wolfensniper4012
      @wolfensniper4012 9 місяців тому +8

      ​@@kevinmiller9760no matter what that was equally unacceptable, it was 1930s, not 1730s

    • @ghostfacepacifist6046
      @ghostfacepacifist6046 9 місяців тому +46

      ​​@@kevinmiller9760lol what genocides & ethnic cleansing have been a thing before the naziz, not to mention the scale of rapes in Nanking & the unit 731 is something the Japanese government always try to downplay

    • @thedemongodvlogs7671
      @thedemongodvlogs7671 9 місяців тому +45

      ​@@kevinmiller9760do you know what Unit 731 was?

    • @GMAV3RICK
      @GMAV3RICK 9 місяців тому

      @@thedemongodvlogs7671I do! It was when the Japanese used the Chinese for live experimentations by literally slicing them in to pieces and infecting them with dangerous pathogens to study its effectiveness.
      Then, the United States government collected all of that evil data after the war in exchange for not punishing the Japanese generals who authorized it.
      Why? Because America was planning on experimenting on humans too in the future.
      *_The more you know_* 💫

  • @tasseiviews2947
    @tasseiviews2947 9 місяців тому +147

    I've seen Oppenheimer and I didn't think it was anti-Japanese at all. The people involved in the creation of the atom bomb almost seemed to have alarmingly little awareness of the Japanese side of WW2. In that sense the movie felt more anti American, if anything. As such, I think it will be released in Japan at some point.
    I honestly fear that this movie will only serve to keep Japanese people oblivious of the dark side of the Japanese regime at that time. Although painful no doubt, I think learning about its' fascist nature is an important history lesson. World War 2 also wasn't a pleasant time for Japanese people by a long shot, mind you.
    The rest of the world could do with a history lesson about the pacifist path Japan took after the war but that's a different issue.

    • @samwallaceart288
      @samwallaceart288 6 місяців тому

      Yeah they thought they were making the bomb just to scare the Germans into submission; Japan wasn't even on their radar until it was already out of their hands

    • @Firepulser
      @Firepulser 6 місяців тому +3

      The "pacifist path" you speak of was forced into the new Japanese Constitution as a surrender condition by the USA to prevent Japan from ever making war again. We took away their ability to have an army and even then the Japanese found a legal loophole in order to create the JDF. You don't give the Japanese Hawks enough credit. Peace within doesn't mean peace towards others.

    • @jadesx96
      @jadesx96 6 місяців тому +2

      Even listening to Nolan talk about the film he stresses the project was started in retaliation to the Nazis looking into doing the same thing

    • @kevinprzy4539
      @kevinprzy4539 5 місяців тому +3

      there isn't Anti Japanese or Anti American sentiments.

    • @Mickey-1994
      @Mickey-1994 2 місяці тому

      I won't say Nolan got anti-American, but I think he's another naive modern-day liberal.

  • @michellesp7805
    @michellesp7805 7 місяців тому

    I appreciate the respondents thoughtful remarks

  • @araararaara9256
    @araararaara9256 3 місяці тому +5

    My country was invaded by Japan , I read many history books and watched local movies made by my country. I was told by some Japanese friend they do not have this information in schools. But I don't hate Japanese people. In fact I read and bought Japanese novels and a big fan of manga and anime. For me, it's knowledge, everyone should gain knowledge and it is up to you to choose if it is bad or good and how to use it. Also you need to understand how you react and how you formulate your own thoughts on a topic. It is one way to grow and it can be a chance to be a better human being in this world. Treat people like how you want to be treated.

  • @WhatIsThis-zq4hk
    @WhatIsThis-zq4hk 9 місяців тому +248

    Even AFTER both bombs were dropped, many people in Japan's government were STILL against surrender and tried to remove the emperor to prevent a surrender. They would rather every last man, woman, and child fight to the death rather than surrender. Whenever I hear people criticize the use of the bombs, I never hear what they think the allies should have done instead. A land invasion against a country with such insane leadership would have been so horrific that the death toll would have dwarfed the death toll of the bombs. The death of innocent civilians is horrible, but I honestly don't know what else they expected the US to do to end the war.

    • @br8745
      @br8745 9 місяців тому +36

      ​@user-bt4er7lv8p So your argument is that more Japanese should have died via invasion, and Japan should have been split in two (Soviet were invading Manchuria and Japan was next). The nuclear bombs killed less than the fire bombing of Tokyo, yet get more attention. War is awful, but the whole point of using nuclear weapons was to end it faster and save the lives of those that had to fight it. If Japan had surrendered earlier, then it would not have been used.

    • @kotenoklelu3471
      @kotenoklelu3471 9 місяців тому

      USA are cowards. Just admit it. They even invented sociocide

    • @a.leuchat3168
      @a.leuchat3168 9 місяців тому

      i feel so sad when i read this kind of comment... i mean, just read a few book. The government in Japan were military who didn't listen a bit to the Tenno, he DID ask for surrender before the bombs were dropped. Because Japan has already lost the Pacific war, Okinawa was already in the us army's hands, the whole "the japanses won't ever surrender" thing is pure propaganda. it was really just unnecessary to drop these TWO bombs, there is no way you can even excuse that. And obviously Japan was very far from having the ability to create the atomic bomb themselves. people need to see the big picture about how and why the Pacific War came to be in the first place. Geopolitics and History are not a dumb "who's the good guy" question

    • @WhatIsThis-zq4hk
      @WhatIsThis-zq4hk 9 місяців тому +43

      @@kikuteto Again, you refuse to give an alternative for what the US should have done. And Russia started the war against Ukraine and is committing war crimes, so no they are not justified in using the bomb. Russia can end the war immediately by leaving Ukraine. Japan started the war against the US and was committing war crimes across asia.
      "it is my opinion that Japan would have surrendered even without the atomic bombings."
      You criticize our "theories" but then say this completely false fact. Even AFTER the bombs were used, they barely wanted to surrender. The minister of the Japanese Army Korechika Anami said "would it not be wondrous for this whole nation to be destroyed like a beautiful flower". He would rather Japan be destroyed and everyone die instead of surrender. You underestimate just how insane Japan's government was at the time. It was a death cult.
      If the war went on any longer, then the USSR would have gotten involved and Japan likely would have been split like North and South Korea.

    • @Tuturial464
      @Tuturial464 9 місяців тому +1

      @@kikutetoproblem first, Japan caused a chain reaction by attacking Asia and,Pearl Harbor. Second these Japanese citizens were involved in war crimes and became soldiers. Third, Japan tried to cover up their mistakes.
      Fourth Japan even planned to attack the u.s. mainland with chemical warfare. Look up Japanese supersubs

  • @jamosss
    @jamosss 9 місяців тому +198

    The Japanese algorithm is gonna be working overtime with this one😭😂😂

    • @Masamoone
      @Masamoone 9 місяців тому

      Not even funny バカやろ

    • @adrian333dev
      @adrian333dev 2 місяці тому +2

      😂😂😂

    • @jayc33day
      @jayc33day 13 годин тому +1

      You mean ccp

    • @adrian333dev
      @adrian333dev 12 годин тому

      @@jayc33day what? The video is about nuclear bomb dropped on Japan

  • @yothiga
    @yothiga 9 місяців тому +7

    The white t-shirt guy at 14:31 has a lot of deep thought about this issue. The fact that he watched Japanese-Korean wars movies probably effect his idea about this subject a lot.

  • @mrg4847
    @mrg4847 5 місяців тому +11

    Nanjing Massacre is also banned.

  • @emiliebaudat4650
    @emiliebaudat4650 9 місяців тому +11

    Very interesting video. As a french history teacher, I really appreciate to see the relationship between people and their own country history.

    • @lawtraf8008
      @lawtraf8008 9 місяців тому

      I wish France would teach their terrible history instead of teaching a fake downplayed history in their curriculum like Japan does.

  • @amaya3107
    @amaya3107 9 місяців тому +4

    I was hopeing for a street interview regarding Oppenheimer in Japan. Thank you Asian Boss

  • @jessesmith-garcia5313
    @jessesmith-garcia5313 3 місяці тому +1

    This was a very insightful video, Some of the opinions in this video were very enlightening. The older lady spoke very well about things, and the young woman at the end spoke very well, especially about letting your inner warmth come out or listening to your "Inner Warmth", I thought that was beautiful.

  • @watchitallburn
    @watchitallburn 8 місяців тому +12

    Ask them about Korea, Nanking, Singapore, Phillipines, etc etc...

    • @olleydrum9016
      @olleydrum9016 5 місяців тому +1

      They threw babies in the air and used bayonets

  • @antinapay
    @antinapay 9 місяців тому +214

    Sins of the parents are not the sins of the children. But it is so hard to forgive and forget. My great grandfather was buried alive, and my grandmother was almost raped. She fled to the forest to escape, jumped into a stone well, gashing her leg in the descent, and had the scar until she died. The japanese emperor started it. The japanese soldiers, your ancestors committed war atrocities such as throwing babies in the air and catching them with bayonets. They could have just imprisoned my forefathers, but decided to have brutal fun.

    • @Tuturial464
      @Tuturial464 9 місяців тому +24

      In the end, it’s important to learn your past and your sins

    • @halloweenist664
      @halloweenist664 9 місяців тому +95

      Well, in Chinese there’s an ancient saying “A dutiful son is obliged to pay his fathers' debts”. Every year, the Dutch King apologises for the country’s historical role in slavery. In terms of Japan, as long as the Japanese government still refuses to apologise to all the victim countries, as long as their politicians still worship in Yasukuni Shrine where 1000+ convicted war criminals are buried, I say their ancestors’ sins live on.

    • @theoc007
      @theoc007 9 місяців тому

      ​@@halloweenist664ok that is a flat faced lie, Japan has apologized for the war multiple times and especially recently the shrine that honors every soldier to ever serve Japan is going to have war criminals every country has war criminals. I mean China had their cultural revolution killing half a million to a million people on the basis they were landlords and rich while still giving the Chinese war criminals burial in Babaoshan Revolutionary Cemetery (cannibalists, burning children alive on the basis of being children of the rich).

    • @lydia9531
      @lydia9531 9 місяців тому +45

      This. My grandma told me her uncle was buried alive by Japanese soldiers, and that wasn’t even the most brutal thing they’ve done. The atrocities are hard to forgive and forget, especially when you learn that the Japanese government has downplayed the war crime ever since

    • @NO1xANIMExFAN
      @NO1xANIMExFAN 9 місяців тому +39

      it is hard to forgive when the aggressor doesn't even acknowledge that anything happened. the amount of japanese revisionist "history" books in japanese society is revolting. japanese textbooks paint japan as the victim, and their politicians visiting shrines with A class war criminals to "pay respects" is disgusting

  • @Graghma
    @Graghma 9 місяців тому +68

    It was really nice to see how the people interviewed all knew of the events and seemed to genuinely want to understand better or understood how hard the question was... knowing there are many sides of such a complicated world event.

  • @nottomentionanyone
    @nottomentionanyone 9 місяців тому +3

    Props to the lady with the mask & hat also the man who loves the Japan anime 👏🏻👏🏻
    Their opinions are very mature and have an insight and consideration from outside Japan

  • @rei_lo
    @rei_lo 9 місяців тому +12

    Appreciate this discourse. I've been curious as to whether Oppenheimer will be released in Japan ever since the launch of the film here in the states, and I'm interested in hearing their reception. These were thoughtful questions accompanied by insightful responses from a variety of perspectives.

  • @gll9830
    @gll9830 9 місяців тому +104

    Fr history should not be censored or edited in any country. What happened has happened, and everyone has the right to know authentic history

    • @msmissy9976
      @msmissy9976 9 місяців тому +9

      Absolutely 💯 Good or bad... thats how we learn from mistakes and evolve as a species~

    • @dothetwist298
      @dothetwist298 9 місяців тому +8

      Not gonna happen as long as there are humans.

    • @lawtraf8008
      @lawtraf8008 9 місяців тому +8

      Tell that to conservative white Americans.

    • @mayoiko
      @mayoiko 8 місяців тому +2

      you know, i agree but then again, many people just cant handle knowing history, they would get butthurt and get all hateful, even though they should know that the sins of the ancestors/fathers are not the sins of the children, and yet they would agony over it. just few comments above is someone saying its hard to forgive, like what is there to forgive when the people in present day have done nothing at all? these people are people who live life just fine and then be all victim the moment they learn history the next day. so yeah, the correct sentiment to history is to learn the lesson without bearing the hatred nor guilt, but many people cant do this.

    • @SwaggMessiah69
      @SwaggMessiah69 8 місяців тому

      That's impossible, but that's why we have the internet. What's important is critical thinking, bias detection, and reduction of ultra-nationalism and blind patriotism, which will work as a loop to stop censoring and editing of history as the population would be too knowledgeable.

  • @annaairahala9462
    @annaairahala9462 9 місяців тому +34

    The lady with the mask and hat seems to understand it well despite knowing nothing about the guy

  • @nanavstheworld
    @nanavstheworld 5 місяців тому +2

    "I felt that the war could have been like this, regardless of people's own will. I wonder if it's just something that starts without our permission" - I felt this deeply as someone from a country who's done and is still doing terrible things

  • @greendogg83
    @greendogg83 5 місяців тому +7

    Ask them what they know of "Unit 731" next

  • @Wooster77
    @Wooster77 9 місяців тому +189

    They all seem to have a reasonable and balanced view on this, which is encouraging to see. I think you might get some different viewpoints if you interviewed some old men that were alive during WW2. They might say things like “we should have finished the job”, which I personally heard an old Japanese man say in Tokyo years ago.

    • @ramonemiliochaconperdomo7225
      @ramonemiliochaconperdomo7225 9 місяців тому +19

      You are making an absurd generalization about people you never talk with

    • @GazeRUKI4eva
      @GazeRUKI4eva 9 місяців тому +1

      I would believe that tbh

    • @parodynet3004
      @parodynet3004 5 місяців тому

      @@ramonemiliochaconperdomo7225 Most Japanese people think that way. They write all these racist comments against Chinese, Koreans, Filipino etc. (essentially everyone who is not from Japan) but you won't find them since they're all written in Japanese. Most Japs think that they didn't do anything wrong and it's all fabrication whilst blaming the US for everything. It's not an absurd generalization.

    • @kristinesharp6286
      @kristinesharp6286 2 місяці тому +1

      79 years ago it ended. My MIL was alive for the attack on Pearl Harbor living in Hawaii. Her mother carried her into a sugar cane field. They didn’t know it was coming and which or all habited islands effected. But she was 2 months old at the time. For a man to be of fighting age assuming teens involved a person would have to be well over 90.

  • @elvytan4682
    @elvytan4682 9 місяців тому +10

    I think this is one of the most interesting street interviews ever done by Asian Boss. Good job! Most of the respondents gave good answers, but I found the ones from the lady with the mask and the man in the white tee (14:36) to be the best of all.

  • @TheEzio1991
    @TheEzio1991 8 місяців тому +3

    The film barely covers the actual bombing and mainly follows Oppenheimer’s curiosity in making the bomb, then his struggle to cope with the effects of what he helped create. Much like forms of media like Chernobyl, this should be available in some form to every country so people can be informed more about our history.

  • @rosagonzalez6604
    @rosagonzalez6604 9 місяців тому +1

    This are the impressions about the film, we need to know. 👏👏👏👏

  • @davehue9517
    @davehue9517 9 місяців тому +128

    As usual, very impressive interviews. I've seen this movie and it explores alot of Oppenheimer's personal life and his emotional struggle after he realizes what he's helped create. My grandfather was in the US Navy and always said using the Atomic bomb in Japan saved his life as he was in the planned invasion of Japan if there was no surrender...

    • @user-oz4nn3jw8p
      @user-oz4nn3jw8p 9 місяців тому +1

      “ invasion of Japan” ? Your grandpa should slap your face.🤭

    • @nataliegrn17
      @nataliegrn17 9 місяців тому +21

      And the Japanese were planning to fight to the last man, woman, and child. How many people would that have been? What an unspeakable loss to the world.

    • @BH-ix7nq
      @BH-ix7nq 9 місяців тому +9

      I was in Kyoto recently with it being a melting 43°C outside. It was brutal and oppressive. We were sightseeing and it was around 1pm when I saw this Japanese guy jogging like it was nothing. Just a normal day, just a fun jog. And that's when it dawned on me. That's when I thought "this is why they decided to drop the bombs. They never would've surrendered." 😅

    • @avamusic8176
      @avamusic8176 9 місяців тому +19

      Well, in fact, the Japanese government was looking for a good surrender condition half a year before that, and was trying to approach the Soviet Union, and the United States was also aware of this...because of the surrender conditions that were favorable to the Allies. America dropped the atomic bomb. Well, saving a lot of soldiers and people is just a justification that America loves😂

    • @anniemihn
      @anniemihn 9 місяців тому

      And for that reason he was ok burning babies alive. That's a falacy.

  • @samuelodhuu5410
    @samuelodhuu5410 5 місяців тому +4

    Imagine if Hollywood decided to release a movie about Project 731 aka Maruta.

    • @Parkkh2239
      @Parkkh2239 5 місяців тому

      Japanese will boycott that movie

  • @Ron-qi8hz
    @Ron-qi8hz 5 місяців тому +2

    Very smart and insightful people in these interviews, well done to you and them.

  • @radenakbar
    @radenakbar 8 місяців тому +9

    Meanwhile, as someone from a country in South East Asia that was conquered by Japan as they say to us that THEY were our Big Oni-sama to free us from the Oni Western Imperialist but infact did far more worst in 3.5 years compared to almost 350 years of European colonialism. These include my Grandfather/Grandmother family members became poor due to Japanese occupation and the fact some of their relatives and family members were killed due to the Japanese Romusha (forced labor) and Death March (to hid their demonic war crimes)
    But now many people are now dreaming of going and tasting the unique Japanese culture, absorbed in Otaku world and idolize Jpop/Rock/Idol throughout the whole country.
    The mentality of each nation are different...

  • @Mickaelasama
    @Mickaelasama 9 місяців тому +19

    Never forget I love Japan but they should never forget what they have done to many Asian countries! It’s very sad and horrible what happened to them but if they were no the bomb attack, Korea would have been Japanese. Without mentioning the horrible crime they did to philippine and China.

    • @setsuna7618
      @setsuna7618 9 місяців тому +7

      Even in Malaysia... Basically any place they went, was done dirty

    • @channe3049
      @channe3049 9 місяців тому +1

      ​@@setsuna7618They even planned to invade Australia and India as well, if the bombing didn't happen.

  • @skateata1
    @skateata1 9 місяців тому +6

    I loved the film. It made me smile, cry, and feel inspired.

  • @balsarmy
    @balsarmy 8 місяців тому +11

    Interesting interview.
    I think it wasn't just experiment in the end. It was politically motivated.
    That's why I respect those who stopped nuclear projects. For military person, I think, nuclear weapon shows no bravery or decision genius. It is just destruction. The smartest strategy is where you receive enemy's territory that doesn't need rebuilding.
    But ww2 was insane as a whole, so... it was crazy for many

  • @EpicKaiwaii
    @EpicKaiwaii 9 місяців тому +6

    Definitely interesting to see their perspective not only about the movie but the event of the past. Because like someone mentioned, they probably were not educated as seriously unless they went to Hiroshima or Nagasaki. For sure it can be one sided, but the past information missing about why Americans drop them, but not just anywhere, has an answer to why twice in those locations. Experiments did happen, but an Island unfortunately leading to the catastrophes in Japan. I love history and war should not be one sided because the truth is missing.

  • @tuomasholo
    @tuomasholo 9 місяців тому +85

    Before Hiroshima, the Japanese rejected the Potsdam Declaration of unconditional surrender. The Japanese in decoded diplomatic messages from Tokyo would only consider a negotiated peace with many conditions where the islands would be unoccupied by foreign forces. Truman would only accept unconditional surrender since they were the aggressors in the war.

    • @shikamaruthehokage
      @shikamaruthehokage 9 місяців тому

      Lol would a weakened US accept an unconditional surrender from China in a hypothetical war?
      Japanese were undoubtedly the aggressors but it wasn't as black and white. US embargo'd Japan and warned of war if they didn't vacate China, all while the Brits, French, Dutch, Portuguese had various colonies all over Asia. Somehow allied colonialism was okay but Japanese colonies were not.

    • @RafaelFigueredo87
      @RafaelFigueredo87 9 місяців тому +1

      But Japan already knew they lost the war with the soviets atack on Manchuria. They were ready to surrender on aceptable terms. They just wanted to negotiate the conditions. The real reason America drops the bomb was just to send a message to the soviets and guarantee their supremacy after the war.

    • @anniemihn
      @anniemihn 9 місяців тому +1

      😂😂

    • @sarasasasa1894
      @sarasasasa1894 9 місяців тому +9

      They only have "one" condition, that is to keep basic member of imperial constitution, but unsurprisingly, those basic member made another condition for their conditional surrender, lol, basically they try to make a loophole, exploit it to make another loophole, then another loophole, then another loophole, and so on.

  • @nchance1
    @nchance1 9 місяців тому +49

    My grandfather was standing next to Japanese tourists visiting the Pearl Harbor memorial. They Japanese were stunned to learn they attacked Pearl Harbor first.

    • @svennielsen633
      @svennielsen633 9 місяців тому +16

      Another myth. The war started long before when US and other Western imperialists attacked and occupied both Mainland China and Asian islands. If you do not know about the Nanking, Tientsin, Peking and Chefoo Agreements you know NOTHING about Western imperialism in Asia that started long before Japan reacted to it and decided to liberate Asia from Western imperialism. Let me remind you: the US had already occupied Hawaii, Guam and the Philippines in 1898 and illegally occupied Midway, Wake and the Johnston Islands. The time between 1842 and 1942 is one long period of Western imperialism in Asia. Only then did the Japanese strike back - and in my opinion it was JUSTIFIED! The US still holds an ILLEGAL EMPIRE in the Pacific Ocean to this day!

    • @ryanlucht6625
      @ryanlucht6625 9 місяців тому

      @@svennielsen633Japan liberated asia from western imperialism by torturing and raping everyone in their path lets see what the chinese koreans and filipinos think about your analysis

    • @user-oz4nn3jw8p
      @user-oz4nn3jw8p 9 місяців тому +10

      Free Ryukyu@@akiraaaaaaaaaaa

    • @cakeyummy9391
      @cakeyummy9391 9 місяців тому +4

      Hopefully you realize that Hawaii literally voted to be an American state right? There are more white Texans that want independence than there are native Hawaiians or people with some native ancestry like me who want independence. @@akiraaaaaaaaaaa

    • @cakeyummy9391
      @cakeyummy9391 9 місяців тому +1

      @@akiraaaaaaaaaaa Of course it was. We had a whole unit in school showing us how US businesses overthrow the monarchy in Hawaii by buying off land and then inviting in the US military to make bases in order to combat other European powers like Britain who we threatened out of the area. Afterwards an vote was held and most people voted to become a U.S. State. Because that way they would get federal aid to get schools, police departments, fire departments, medical aid, and local elections where they can decide their own laws. It was mainly opposed by conservatives in the US government who didn’t want non white people(Hawaiian natives) voting in US presidential elections and becoming government officials.

  • @oo0OAO0oo
    @oo0OAO0oo 9 місяців тому +5

    WOW.
    That was impactful. Those people which were being interviewed impressed me. Although we share the same perspectives and even thoughts on it, I didn't expect to see all those people with different, but yet very intelligent perspectives on the matter.
    It honestly gives me faith in humanity.

  • @jims_ON
    @jims_ON 9 місяців тому

    I like that man who relates the war to Covid-19 pandemic. I can sense his emotion while expressing his opinion on the topic. Insightful. 👍👍👍

  • @callmeneutrino7136
    @callmeneutrino7136 9 місяців тому +309

    The gentleman in the plain white t-shirt who spoke about Korea as well seems so sensitive and insightful, I would love to have a long conversation with him, on this and many other subjects. What an amazing person!
    Also, the woman with the grey hat was also really brilliant with a wonderful, “big picture” perspective . I feel like she and I could be great friends and talk for hours and hours, if only I had learned Japanese when I had the chance!

    • @aaronmoiche330
      @aaronmoiche330 9 місяців тому +28

      Agree, the guy seems like a genuine good person through and through, like walking and living embodiment of peace

    • @miyalys
      @miyalys 9 місяців тому +23

      Yeah, I'm impressed with how open and vulnerable he is daring to be, while also being wise, kind-hearted and eloquent.

    • @rgreyes515
      @rgreyes515 9 місяців тому +10

      I share the same thoughts too. They gave the most Insightful perspective of things. Also, the lady with a Caucasian friend on the side.

    • @localmilfchaser6938
      @localmilfchaser6938 9 місяців тому +4

      Same. We have very similar ideas. I’d love to have a whole philosophical discussion with him. Sadly I don’t have any friends who care about discussions of that level and complexity. I have done a lot of college level work in high school about these kinds of things though

    • @localmilfchaser6938
      @localmilfchaser6938 9 місяців тому +1

      @@miyalyspretty rare for a Japanese

  • @CHAP_SEC
    @CHAP_SEC 9 місяців тому +137

    I would like to say that Japanese curriculum don’t teach about the war atrocities that Japan (at the time) committed.
    I’ve had conversations with Japanese friends about what happened in WW2 and they were all shocked to hear about it and super apologetic. (I always said “it’s not your fault it happened. So please don’t apologise”)

    • @msmissy9976
      @msmissy9976 9 місяців тому

      I hate that this happens. It even happens in the US. The curriculum belittled the tragedies that the American Govt sanctioned and was a huge part of. They try to hide the truth so as to not incite a pushback against the govt. I absolutely hate that they try to hide the truth from us.

    • @krenx
      @krenx 8 місяців тому +18

      It is true that it is not the fault of the younger generation. But we do need to be critical that they learn what actually happened.

    • @TsugMt
      @TsugMt 8 місяців тому +4

      @@krenxthough they’re not bad people and I doubt they will be able to wage any wars in the future, they need to be rather than critical, informed and knowledgeable about what their country did in the past… I think there’s no need for them to apologize for what their shirt grandparents and government did

    • @user-hu4yo5kj4u
      @user-hu4yo5kj4u 8 місяців тому +5

      The United States dropped atomic bombs on urban areas where civilians lived.
      ①The United States knew that Japan would soon surrender.
      In order to prevent Japan from being occupied by the Soviet Union due to the Soviet Union's participation in the war,
      The atomic bomb hastened Japan's surrender.
      ②The United States is the site of two types of nuclear tests (Hiroshima type and Nagasaki type).
      Without hesitation, he chose an urban area where non-white people lived.
      ③The American leader at the time said, ``Now that we are at war, it is OK to drop atomic bombs on civilians who are complicit in the war.'' 56 years later, terrorists who were at war with the United States dropped a new type of bomb, two hijacked planes, on the same citizens of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

    • @kahrine1115
      @kahrine1115 8 місяців тому +6

      戦争残虐行為が何を指しているのかわからないけど、南京大虐殺とか慰安婦に関しては普通に習ったよ
      この人の話自体、本当わからないけど、

  • @SongShiyu
    @SongShiyu 9 місяців тому +21

    How ordinary Japanese citizens feels about the rape of Nanking?

    • @ucchau173
      @ucchau173 9 місяців тому +3

      Not only nanking but in all china and south east Asia...they steal rice and food make 2 million việt nam people (8% việt nam population at that time)dead from 1944-1945,kill 4-5 million Indonesia (6-7% Indonesia population at that time) kill 1 million Philippines (6% Philippines population at that time)... Kill 20 million china population (3.5% china population at that time),kill 1 million korea(both north and south) 😡😡😡😡

    • @CrimsonCharan
      @CrimsonCharan 9 місяців тому +9

      They probably never heard of it. Hell, even I never heard of it until very recently.

    • @Tuturial464
      @Tuturial464 9 місяців тому +6

      Ask their former prime Minister Shinzo Abe. Oh wait you cant

    • @user-vw8it9oo8h
      @user-vw8it9oo8h 9 місяців тому +10

      I will answer as a Japanese. Many Japanese people know about the Nanjing Incident, and even among Japanese people, some even weep and prostrate themselves because they believe the Chinese government's theory that 300,000 people were massacred. There are various people who think that it was a massacre of 10,000 to 30,000 prisoners of war, as Japanese researchers think, some who think it was a massacre of 100,000 people, and some who think that such an incident did not occur at all. I love Japan's diverse and free speech space. In the end, I think the truth about Nanjing lies in one of these.

    • @ucchau173
      @ucchau173 9 місяців тому +2

      @@user-vw8it9oo8h not only nanjing but 20 million Chinese people (3.5% China population at that time),2 million Vietnam people ( japan steal rice and food make 8% of vn population dead at that time),4-5 million Indonesia (6%-7% Indonesia population at that time),1 million Philippines (6% Philippines population at that time) ,...is kill by japan 😡😡😡😡

  • @KZ-kl8fx
    @KZ-kl8fx 3 місяці тому

    15:10 the way his face lights up from the clouds dispersing helps sell his enlightenment

  • @nocookienolife
    @nocookienolife 5 місяців тому

    Good video and interviews. If you were to just read comments before watching the video (a mistake I’ve done) you’d think the everyone in the video had nothing of substance to say. It’s like half of the comments are from people who didn’t even watch more than a minute. I recommend it. It’s interesting.

  • @JoaoPedroFPerez
    @JoaoPedroFPerez 9 місяців тому +30

    7:17 I like this guy, interesting to see a japanese person willing to see things from a non pro-japanese perspective and actually aknowledging the mistakes that Japan made in the past

    • @JoaoPedroFPerez
      @JoaoPedroFPerez 9 місяців тому

      acknowledging* pardon my english

    • @eunseokbang8884
      @eunseokbang8884 5 місяців тому +3

      By a victim country‘s perspectives by Japanese imperialism, I only respect this guy among the interviewees. It‘s hard to accept Japanese saying bothsidesism.

    • @jamkp1685
      @jamkp1685 Місяць тому

      We Japanese people learn about Japan's past mistakes during compulsory education, so it's hard to find a Japanese person who thinks Japan wasn't bad at all.
      I want Chinese and Korean people to not be swayed by their own country's propaganda, get accurate information, and live their lives looking toward the future rather than the past.

    • @JoaoPedroFPerez
      @JoaoPedroFPerez Місяць тому

      @@jamkp1685 agreed, but again, acknowledging the past is always the first step. The pro-palestine events that happened in Japan are really important. I hope the japanese people become more and more critical of the capitalist regime and become a true brother of all of their asian brethren.

    • @jamkp1685
      @jamkp1685 Місяць тому +1

      @@JoaoPedroFPerez The Japanese government supports the Palestinian Authority, criticizes Hamas, and provides support to the Palestinian people. I believe it is important to eliminate war not only in Asia but in the world, and for all of humanity to live in harmony.

  • @mfmr200
    @mfmr200 5 місяців тому +6

    do this, how japanese feel about unit 731

  • @RapinatorOhYeah
    @RapinatorOhYeah 6 місяців тому +2

    In the anime "High School Prodigies Have It Easy Even in Another World". There is a scene where the Japanese Characters launch and detonated a nuke. It was super cursed 💀

  • @hontame
    @hontame 2 місяці тому +4

    Almost all Japanese know what the Empire of Japan (the Kwantung Army to be exact) did during World War II.
    Btw, do you think atomic bombs should be dropped on the UK, who opium-soaked the Qing, or the US, who slaughtered Native Americans and stole their land?

  • @PolarBear_ed
    @PolarBear_ed 9 місяців тому +72

    Millions of people died under Japanese occupation in SEA not because of any bombs. That's even more tragic.

    • @simsgazytech2013
      @simsgazytech2013 8 місяців тому +9

      as Indonesian, my late great grandparents and grandparent were still remember how cruel japanese at that time compare to Dutch at that time. we have a neighbour who are former forced-being comfort woman ( she passed away already) who were takken care by her niece, when she remembered the cruelty of japanese made her almost crazy. These people i guess bring the grudge till they passed away.

    • @scottgleeson4905
      @scottgleeson4905 8 місяців тому +2

      I would recommend against trying to draw comparisons between different traumas in different peoples. It is a fools errand.

    • @sususegar
      @sususegar 8 місяців тому +7

      My grandfather and his brother, who were normal civillians, were victims of the Japanese soldier abuse in Malaysia. They detained and beaten them up trying to get information about the local communist rebels who were defending the people against the Japanese at the time. They also shot his brother dead right in front of him. While the whole world speaks about the Nanking Rape (which itself is already a huge tragedy), less has been said about the additional pain and horrors they caused across SEA.

    • @ryandragoknight
      @ryandragoknight 7 місяців тому

      @@sususegar😂😂😂😂😂

    • @rosemangofairy
      @rosemangofairy 6 місяців тому +6

      @@simsgazytech2013 I'm Indonesian too, and I remember the anguish that my late grandma felt when she remembered the atrocities that the Japanese did to her generation. It's crazy sad. The violence, people forced to wear rice sacks as clothes... There's a reason why there's a saying in Indonesia: "The Japanese enslaved Indonesians for only four years, but its violence was more brutal than the Dutch's 300 year enslavement". I pray for your late great grandparents and neighbour, may they find peace 🙏🏻

  • @hmvollbanane1259
    @hmvollbanane1259 7 місяців тому +22

    Fascinating how different their state/ education approach es the topic from a German pov. Focusing on their own victims, building shrines and museums to their own dead, focusing solely on the crimes committed against them while not even mentioning the people that suffered under them and tearing down the memorials dedicated to them.
    This almost seems like a polar opposite to how my country/ people went about tackling the memory of the war.
    I wonder what lesson Japanese take from that education, that war is wrong or that losing a war is wrong

    • @haroldlipschitz9301
      @haroldlipschitz9301 6 місяців тому +4

      The lesson they take is that losing is embarrassing. The postwar governments wanted to move on as quickly as possible, and were urged by America to do so, as they needed a counterweight in the region economically to USSR/Chinese influence

    • @samwallaceart288
      @samwallaceart288 6 місяців тому +2

      Japan never accepted the defeat the way Germany did. Those statues and memorials are treated like an existential threat to their status quo because to many in the govt, _they are_ an existential threat.

    • @Vinedwall
      @Vinedwall 2 місяці тому

      They still having a topic in highschool: why did Japan lose WWII.

  • @venturefanatic9262
    @venturefanatic9262 5 місяців тому +3

    Give me a break, the Japanese Empire was looking for the Death Ray as well as Nuclear Bombs during the War. If they had them they would of used them freely.

  • @antondzajajurca7797
    @antondzajajurca7797 5 місяців тому +1

    If one doesn't address the past, it is easier to ignore it/admitting it ever happened.

  • @Adam-xy4ny
    @Adam-xy4ny 6 місяців тому +7

    The girl talking about where they chose to drop the bombs clearly doesn’t know as much as she thinks, Hiroshima was a military port city with decent heavy industry and the HQ for the Japanese 2nd Army, not just some sleepy village. Kitakyushu (which was the originally target for the second bombing) was also chosen as it had the largest munitions industry in Japan at the time. Due to poor weather they couldn’t drop it on kitakyushu so they went for Nagasaki, a large ship and arms producing city.

  • @johndole9381
    @johndole9381 8 місяців тому +2

    I did not watch the C Nolan movie, but I did watch one documentary on UA-cam about the A-bomb's development in Las Alamos. Like the Nolan movie, it shows little to nothing about the bombing itself, but just on the processes of developing the bomb, so it should not hurt the feelings of the Japanese people too much....

  • @TheBombayMasterTony
    @TheBombayMasterTony 8 місяців тому +1

    Good points.

  • @knightsnight5929
    @knightsnight5929 5 місяців тому +6

    Unlike the Germans the Japanese have never shown any remorse for the revolting things they did during WW2. They play the victim when the reality is far from this.

  • @Neuvari
    @Neuvari 9 місяців тому +43

    that one person said about korean movie about war with japan, if it ever released in japan, many japanese might ended up hate their country so much lol, even better if they really know what japan did to other countries as well, like in south east asia countries and china

    • @martiddy
      @martiddy 9 місяців тому +6

      But I still don't know why someone would hate their own country for the mistakes of their ancestors, is not like the modern Japan is still the same as back then. No one alive today should be ashamed of learning their own country's dark history, because is not their fault for what people in the past did. I think is worse to not learn it at all. I'm latino, but I don't feel any guilt for all the atrocities that the European colonizers did to the indigenous people centuries ago, even though I have some bloodline related to them. I guess is something among East Asian countries about losing face when learning about the war crimes that their ancestors did.

    • @downtomars6268
      @downtomars6268 9 місяців тому +10

      Maybe but Americans are still very defensive over territory they took from the Indigenous, their genocide let alone multiple wars, Indonesian genocide they instigated.

    • @user-oz4nn3jw8p
      @user-oz4nn3jw8p 9 місяців тому +8

      Japan never truly change. It still illegally occupy Ryukyu. @@martiddy

    • @djoetma
      @djoetma 9 місяців тому +4

      @@downtomars6268 It's not just Americans. It's the western mindset. And Japan back in the 1800s sought to develop themselves and did that with Western influences.

    • @123habsi
      @123habsi 9 місяців тому +3

      ​@@martiddymah they still have to repay the damage they done

  • @ranum2875
    @ranum2875 9 місяців тому +16

    During the bombing, japan was colonizing my country, Indonesia. I'm not saying that event led to our independence, but not long after the bombing Indonesia declared our independence (17 Aug 1945) around 2 weeks after the last bombing in nagasaki. I was totally against the war and didn't support nuclear as a weapon. But, if it didn't happen, Indonesia's independence history could be different.

    • @Shunoski94
      @Shunoski94 3 місяці тому

      I would argue it still would have led to the similar outcome without the bombings. Japan would have surrendered with Soviet invasion in Manchuria and northern Japan alone without nuclear bombing by the U.S.
      Whether dropping the bomb ended the war is debatable, as many historians also claim the Soviet invasion were more impactful on the Japanese government at the time .

  • @KoolMB
    @KoolMB 9 місяців тому

    I saw on a Japanese website that it will come to streaming in Japan later in the year. It's not getting a theater release

  • @pemagurung2325
    @pemagurung2325 3 місяці тому +2

    watching this after Oppenheimer wining Oscars in different categories
    watched it in theater and felt sad for him
    but after watching this video, i feel sad for all those innocent people who lost their lives

  • @kevinv_v9729
    @kevinv_v9729 9 місяців тому +8

    This movie isn’t actually about bombing Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Further, development of nuclear bomb in this movie is just a background context. The movie itself is just a cinematized documentary of the character’s miserable life. So I don’t know why Japanese are so sensitive about this.

    • @user-dn2lk3yu1j
      @user-dn2lk3yu1j 8 місяців тому +4

      日本人はオッペンハイマーに嫌がっているわけじゃない。
      バービーのミームが原爆を茶化していることに怒っている。
      それは日本人が犠牲者面をしているわけじゃなくて、原爆の恐ろしさを知っているからこそ、ジョークに使うことが許せない。

    • @milkbottlesdowncherrylane6703
      @milkbottlesdowncherrylane6703 2 місяці тому

      if there was a film about the pilots who attacked pearl harbour and how they were not given enough credit by their country for "being a hero". what would americans think? Also if the movie never even showed any scenes of the attacks on pearl harbour or never even mentions America much... and instead just shows a scene where there are Japanese politicians sitting around saying "its the only option to bomb pear harbour because if we don't America will keep fire bombing us... bombing pearl harbour will save lives... also we dont need to bomb this city because it has certain cultural importance to America so instead pearl harbour is a good option" and then there's no mention of America again. .. and instead the film focusses on the ways in which the pilots who bombed pearl harbour are not given any praise by their country... for bombing pearl harbour.
      how would Americans feel when they watch this film
      of course you could say that the movie wasn't even about pearl harbour and the victims but instead about the pilots who bombed pearl harbour... why are Americans being so sensitive about a movie not even about them???

  • @cynthx
    @cynthx 9 місяців тому +19

    Following this, please ask Japanese people about UNIT 731.

    • @thelastdefenderofcamelot5623
      @thelastdefenderofcamelot5623 9 місяців тому +3

      The pictures used for Unit 731 were pictures from the 1911 Manchurian plague mixed with pictures from the Jinan incident. In other words, they used pictures of Japanese victims. We are angry.

    • @cynthx
      @cynthx 9 місяців тому +7

      @@thelastdefenderofcamelot5623 Im sorry that the film has sparked anger to this degree. I have not seen the film, but have done much research into UNIT 731 and its branches along with everything they did throughout WWII. I''m not sure how th efilm depicted those events, but what is true is that UNIT 731 committed some of the most egregious atrocities in history for biological warefare- next to the doctors at the nazi concentration camps.

    • @thelastdefenderofcamelot5623
      @thelastdefenderofcamelot5623 9 місяців тому

      @@cynthx You asked about 731. The pictures used for Unit 731 were pictures from the 1911 Manchurian plague mixed with pictures from the Jinan incident. In other words, they used pictures of Japanese victims. Basically it was a total lie. So what is your definition of truth? We question the authenticity of the source when the photos have Chinese looking soldiers or when they are digitally altered.

    • @sdqsdq6274
      @sdqsdq6274 4 місяці тому +2

      @@thelastdefenderofcamelot5623 what talking you , there already a museum in china dedicated to unit 731

    • @thelastdefenderofcamelot5623
      @thelastdefenderofcamelot5623 3 місяці тому +1

      ​@@sdqsdq6274 Most of Chinese history deliberately ignores a lot of the crimes done by the Chinese warlords and by Chiang Kai-shek's army. The Changsha fire and they blew up a dam that killed a total of half a million people. The gibbetted heads for example were actually crimes committed by Chinese warlords but blamed on Japanese as part of Nanking atrocity. Zyklon B for example was a chemical was developed by Siemens company that was used for the Holocaust program. Such development for deadly chemical was documented and there are a lot of evidences on how its made and where it came from. However when one looks at 731, we ask what company was involved, who provided all the funding, what chemicals were made and what kind of tools were used on the prisoners. I can assure you 99% of the Chinese won't know this answer.

  • @Tetrahedr0l
    @Tetrahedr0l 8 місяців тому +1

    Like how some of them were open-minded and understand the situation.

  • @Aces77777
    @Aces77777 9 місяців тому +6

    It is crucial for the Japanese to learn about their worst moment in their history and prevent it from happening again. the empire of Japan was their darkest moment

  • @Dr904
    @Dr904 9 місяців тому +28

    Watching the movie, I never once felt it criticized Japan.
    If anything, I felt it made sure to portray how regretful those actions were.

    • @channe3049
      @channe3049 9 місяців тому +7

      The movie was simply about Oppenheimer's feelings towards his creation of atomic bomb.

  • @ajmosqueda6698
    @ajmosqueda6698 9 місяців тому +7

    as a filipino after learning that manila was destroy to dust during ww2 imma say they deserve it that time

  • @pmgda
    @pmgda 9 місяців тому +11

    After I found out that Asian boss is Korean, I understood why there are so many contents about Japan.

  • @Kyalee-up3qw
    @Kyalee-up3qw 8 місяців тому +3

    Can anyone please tell me what Korean movie the guy was talking about? I really wanna watch it

    • @JL-bv4tj
      @JL-bv4tj 8 місяців тому +1

      In Korea, there are many movies made based on stories between Korea and Japan. The Age of Shadows, The Battleship Island, Assassination, to name a few

  • @worm4184
    @worm4184 9 місяців тому +106

    If the atomic bomb had been developed first in the Japanese Empire, I am sure it would have been used without hesitation.

    • @nurlindafsihotang49
      @nurlindafsihotang49 9 місяців тому +11

      No. It wont. Because even with how sinister japan was (and soviet add to that) only USA has the stories using it to fellow human. With glee too. 3x. Dont forget Yugoslavia.

    • @kreg857
      @kreg857 9 місяців тому +31

      What are you talking about? Your words are quite difficult to understand. Also, Japan did more damage to China with the Nanjing Massacre, even without the atomic bomb.

    • @Tuturial464
      @Tuturial464 9 місяців тому +1

      The Japanese were In development of a Japanese super submarine to attack the us mainland with biowarefare

    • @nurlindafsihotang49
      @nurlindafsihotang49 9 місяців тому

      @@kreg857 and USA use phospor and agent orange aside carpet bombing many asian countries. Why should we asian preferred one monster to another?.

    • @annaairahala9462
      @annaairahala9462 9 місяців тому +3

      @@kreg857 If we're talking about damage, there were multiple travesties during the war that caused more damage than the atomic bombs. Any one of these is not justification for another

  • @stc9866
    @stc9866 9 місяців тому +13

    I am so frustrated that not a single person mentioned Pearl Harbor, where everything started.

  • @user-su7py8xx3u
    @user-su7py8xx3u 5 місяців тому

    The guy talking at 14:40 really hit it home 😢👊

  • @orngpeelr9017
    @orngpeelr9017 3 місяці тому

    Now that its been announced that Oppenheimer will be shown in Japan beginning later this month, I hope we get a follow up video!

  • @Agent_Frank_Horrigan
    @Agent_Frank_Horrigan 5 місяців тому +7

    All these folks had some really good views on all of it. Im very surprised that Japan doesn't teach more about the bombings. Here in the States, I know we are all taught about it. But it's never a "proud" moment in our history. In fact, at my schools, it's usually on par with the Allies' discovery of the extermination camps in Germany. Hopefully, those in Japan who are interested in Oppenheimer will be able to watch it.

    • @boggless2771
      @boggless2771 5 місяців тому

      When I was taught about it, we had discussions on the justification of the bombs. We talked numbers on how many died from the bombs, other bombings, the island hopping, etc. Its never brought up with a "we won". Its always brought up with an "and it was over". Its quite hard for us to talk about in a positive light, but there is always a little bit of "maybe it was necessary".

    • @Mickey-1994
      @Mickey-1994 2 місяці тому

      Liberals in America today hate the country and can never celebrate America on anything.

  • @xfatoushe-6908
    @xfatoushe-6908 8 місяців тому +67

    Ask Japan how they feel about the Nanking incident . OH WAIT

    • @krozzedx
      @krozzedx 8 місяців тому +18

      they know nothing about it😂😂

    • @prettysureidateyourmom5104
      @prettysureidateyourmom5104 4 місяці тому +16

      Ask them about unit 731

    • @sdqsdq6274
      @sdqsdq6274 4 місяці тому +1

      @@prettysureidateyourmom5104 yea unit 731

    • @vv8842
      @vv8842 3 місяці тому +5

      @@krozzedxI have to point out your mistake. Nanking incident is written in Japanese textbooks of history….

    • @dyflin3246
      @dyflin3246 3 місяці тому +4

      @@vv8842 Yeah just like a very biased paragraph.

  • @velse9869
    @velse9869 8 місяців тому

    @7:50 I believe he is talking about the film "My Way" - really sad movie

  • @modojocorlee2241
    @modojocorlee2241 2 місяці тому +1

    To the guy in the white shirt who wanted to know Oppenheimer's motivation in creating the atomic bomb. During the war, Oppenheimer was told by General Marshal and the Secretary of State that they needed the bomb to end the war. That was his motivation - to end the war without inflicting potentially hundred of thousands of deaths on US soldiers had the US troops needed to land on Japanese islands . I saw a CBS interview of Oppenheimer after the war and he explained that at the time and under such circumstances he felt that that was the only option to end the war but looking back he felt that there could have been other options.

  • @scottgleeson4905
    @scottgleeson4905 8 місяців тому +5

    Asian Boss does great, valuable work. However, I have to say that I do not think asking people who have not seen the film Oppenheimer to opine about it is a productive use of anyone's time - not theirs, not yours, not ours.
    It is not a documentary. It is not a new historical study of the atomic age. It is not a new biography of Oppenheimer. It is not focused on the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings. It is not even an ethical or geopolitical appraisal of the bomb itself - its use in WWII or as nuclear deterrence.
    It is a work of film art. I realize some people have a hard time understanding exactly what that means and tend to approach any and all movies as if they are some kind of political or social commentary on reality. However, that is ultimately an adolescent way to understand what a film is.
    Christopher Nolan is no slouch. His movies are unique in how they use sound, how storylines (and timelines) are constructed, how he borrows from major modern scientific concepts and use them to build story-worlds (instead of simply using them as plot points.) Oppenheimer is ultimately not about the bomb at all. It is an exploration of the moral crisis that entraps a single man and the political ensnarement that ensues when he feels compelled to grapple with his morals in public. Aesthetically, the film is an oceanic barrage of sounds, dialogues and imagery that force the audience swim alongside Oppenheimer as he navigates the impossible moral quandies of the brave new nuclear world he helped to create.
    If the film was not released in Japan, fine. There are plenty of Japanese cultural works that speak to the bomb and post-atomic culture in very profound ways - and still more that only refer to it obliquely. But inviting speculation about a movie which they haven't seen? There's literally no point to that. Sorry Asian Boss. You disappointed me just this once.

  • @NOKMANtube
    @NOKMANtube 9 місяців тому +6

    "In Japan they would be set up like this: they’d have a factory; and then the families, in their homes throughout the area, would manufacture small parts. You might call it a home folks assembly line deal. The Suzuki clan would manufacture bolt 64; the Harunobo family next door might be making nut 64, 65, or 63, or all the gaskets in between. These would be manufactured right in the same neighborhood. Then Mr. Kitagawa from the factory would scoot around with his cart and pick up the parts in proper order." - Curtis Emerson LeMay

  • @gzanirnsiegnize9077
    @gzanirnsiegnize9077 9 місяців тому +3

    “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” - George Santayana

  • @Gee768
    @Gee768 7 місяців тому +3

    In the history of war, different countries are taught from their own perspectives. In fact, victorious nations often emphasize their own viewpoint, while defeated nations may find themselves compelled to accept their fate. History is multifaceted, and understanding different perspectives is crucial.