Sunday, April 8, 2018

Comfort Women new films to be released?


                                                               Link to above video: 
                                          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2-z-WwR1NCo


Comfort Women new films to be released?

The South Korean Seoul City government in concert with Seoul National University released a video of a film they located after two years of research.  The video / film were located at the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration in College Park, Maryland, outside Washington, DC.  The College Park National Archives campus is the repository for U.S. military records. 

It is a 1944 film documents Songshan, China, illustrating women surrounded by Chinese soldiers.  The narrator states “…several young women tremble in fear, they have terrified looks on their faces, and they are all barefoot.”

The women were in fear and terrified because they were just captured by the enemy: Chinese troops.  If they were truly held against their will by the Japanese, they would not have” tremble in fear”….and…”have terrified looks on their faces.”

In two spots in the video / film the women are referred to as “POWs.”  Huh?  If they were truly rescued from slavery they would have been referred to as “recently freed,” or something like that, but not “POWs.”  Why did their Chinese liberators refer to them as “POWs?”  Easy, because they were part of the Japanese war machine enabling the Japanese, and contributing to their morale.  

Earlier this year the clowns at the South Korean Seoul City government in concert with Seoul National University released a video of a second film they located after two years of research at the National Archives outside Washington, DC.

It is a 15 September 1944 film documents Tengchong, China, a trench with a number of dead bodies.  According to the added narration those dead bodies are murdered Korean Comfort Women.  They claim the Japanese murdered them.  

The film was made by the U.S. Army Signal Corps and discovered at the National Archives in College Park, Maryland, outside Washington, D.C.  The reports about this film failed to show the documentation attached to this film by the U.S. Army Signal Corps in 1944. 

That documentation located at the Archives note the following about those dead bodies:

-             Chinese soldiers strip socks off dead Japanese soldiers.
-             Chinese solder loots Japanese dead.

According to the person who made the film it was of dead Japanese, no mention of women of any type. Claiming they were women is a purposeful lie. 

When the research clowns from South Korean Seoul City government in concert with Seoul National University were at the USA’s National Archives fishing for films to misrepresent perhaps they discovered additional films.  The films they will not show are of Koreans held as prisoners of war / POWs during World War Two fighting alongside the Japanese against the USA and the Allies. 

Understand this:  No one claims Comfort Women did not exists, the controversy is how they became Comfort Women.  Koreans claim they were forced, Japanese claim they were recruited.  These films /videos seem to support the Japanese claim.  Could the people at Seoul National University be that stupid as to offer a film / video that contradicts their “sex slave” claim?

Link to the National Archives document:

Link to video without the blocked-out images:

Related articles reporting the misrepresentation of the truth:


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