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Jerusalem
Israel-general
Israel
Wirral
United-kingdom
Australia
Wembley
Brent
Welwyn-hatfield
Hertfordshire
Nuneaton
Warwickshire
Para-demolition bombs being dropped on supply warehouses and dock facilities at a port in Wonsan, North Korea by the Fifth Air Force s B-26 Invader light bombers (ca. 1951). From USAF (photo 306-PS-51(10303)), public holdings of the National Archives and Records Administration, cataloged under the National Archives Identifier (NAID) 541959., Public Domain, Link.
Tim Beal is a retired New Zealand academic who has written extensively on Asia with a special focus on the Korean peninsula. His most recent work is the entry on Korea for
The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Imperialism and Anti-Imperialism (Springer Publishing, 2019).
Bombing is perhaps the epitome of modern military power and imperial might, both in symbolism and significance. Consider the medieval knight resplendent in his armor that protected against the enemy, most of whom were poorly equipped peasants. The richer he was, the better the armor, giving a sense of invulnerability and wealth, expressed in ornateness. It is not
United-states
Pyongyang
P-yongyang-si
North-korea
Washington
District-of-columbia
South-korea
Taiwan
United-kingdom
China
Syria
Russia
Fyodor Dostoyevsky wrote,
“Nothing is easier than to denounce the evildoer; nothing is more difficult than to understand him.”
Back in 2010 I had a creditable and very specific death threat from a Neo-Nazi in East Tennessee. The man had a formidable internet presence, many publications online, including articles on how best to assassinate people. So I did my research, figured out who he was and reported him to the FBI. A week later his internet presence disappeared. I don’t know what happened to him, but I watch my back.
Over the past few days I have been helping a Jewish friend who is dealing with many Neo-Nazi threats and harassment for supporting an effort to have headstones replaced at the San Antonio Military Cemetery. The headstones were of German POWs but each had a Swastika and the words “he died for his Fuhrer and Fatherland” on them. The fact is that such words and symbols are not allowed by the German Government on the graves of their WWII soldiers in German
United-states
Kiev
Ukraine-general
Ukraine
Nanking
Jiangsu
China
Japan
Armenia
Rwanda
Syria
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