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To: Mary Cluney who wrote (61975)4/14/2005 11:08:50 AM
From: RealMuLan  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 74559
 
No one said China is looking for fight. Where can you read that message from my post? And unfortunately to you, yes, I am representing most of Chinese opinion. No we are NOT right wing. We just want justice!

Compensation will be paid in many forms, if nothing else, boycott Japanese product can be count as one. Many of us start doing it now!

Not only Chinese do this, Koreans have been boycotting Japanese product more eagerly. Chinese are just catching up<g>



To: Mary Cluney who wrote (61975)4/14/2005 11:09:11 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Respond to of 74559
 
"All hot heads are willing to die for what they believe in":

Uh, uh. They are willing to have somebody else's kid die for what they believe in.
Rat



To: Mary Cluney who wrote (61975)4/14/2005 11:14:20 AM
From: shades  Respond to of 74559
 
They beat 3 kids for some guy approving a textbook - sounds really non violent to me - listen up - you keep this shit up - cowboy bush gonna come in with the big stick - texas style and open up the can of whuppass and take all the oil for the USA in the name of preserving the peace and spreading democracy of course - The USA THE ONLY country with the guts to blow up the kiddies with the nukes - don't mess with texas. (all in jest of course - hehe)

voanews.com

China-Japan Dispute Hits Cyberspace
By Luis Ramirez
Beijing
14 April 2005

The growing animosity between China and Japan has entered cyberspace, with Chinese Web sites calling for thousands to join new anti-Japanese demonstrations in the coming days. The protests have been prompted by what many in China see as Japan's attempts to whitewash the atrocities its troops committed before and during World War II.

The war of words escalated Thursday, when Japanese police said they were investigating whether Chinese hackers might be linked to an attack that disabled police and defense Web sites for a short time earlier this week.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang denied any government connection.

"The hackers' behavior violates cyberspace ethics. The Chinese government consistently opposes this unethical behavior," the spokesman said.

Japanese officials sought to ease tensions Thursday, saying the two sides needed to hold discussions to resolve their differences over various issues, which also include a territorial dispute.

Tokyo was responding to a protest earlier Thursday by the Chinese government over possible Japanese plans to drill for gas in a part of the East China Sea that China also claims. Japan on Wednesday said it would start reviewing applications by Japanese companies that want to explore the area's natural gas fields.

The animosity of recent days has been triggered in large part by publication in Japan of two new textbooks. Critics in China and elsewhere say the books downplay atrocities committed by Japanese troops during Japan's occupation of China in the 1930s and '40s.

Violent protests broke out in several Chinese cities over the past week, and protesters called for boycotts of Japanese products. Three Japanese students were beaten in Shanghai.

Chinese officials this week several times repeated Beijing's long-standing suggestion that Japan be denied a permanent seat on the U.N. Security Council until it takes full responsibility for its wartime record.