Japan and Its Empire Tempted Fate... 84 years ago, Sunday morning, today.
Times have changed in one short life span. Long life span. My father is 88, and blessed, and remembers a ton of the past. Seeing Harry Truman elected on the local TV in his hometown of Massachusetts. 1948. Three years after the same man who succeeded Roosevelt dropped the H-Bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
In my shorter lifetime, as a formative teen in the 1980s, Japan seemed like a nation and economy that threatened U.S. supremacy in the world. We did not fear or feel intimidated so much by China in those years as we did by the productive and formidable Japan. The place that we forced to submit with the atomic weapons when they struck us so forcefully four plus years before, that fateful Sabbath morning. Then came Korea, and Vietnam.
Later the Middle East became part of the mix of our opponents in world competitiveness and violence.
Always somewhere must pose a threat. If not the grand Soviet Union, nor Communist China of the People, then a nation or a group must rise up against the United States and its allies. Sometimes it is within. We ourselves become our mortal enemies.
We compete one with another in matters of finance, money, estate, property, trust. We legislate laws and attempt to enforce them to keep us safe and avoid being preyed upon. Internally, domestically, we take care of ourselves. We try.
There are public and private threats, and we always look for the foreign angles of infringement upon us. Latin American drug runners, the Chinese pushing precursors that funnel through Mexico or possibly Ecuador, other countries.
Japan is a big friend now, an ally, a buffer to China and other notorious threats from around the globe.
We lost 200,000 men and some women against Japan in the early 1940s. We still recover their bodies this past year. 231 from the fiscal year of 2025, many from World War II.
Because of the threats from abroad, the Japanses first, then the Germans, with their European cohorts.
May we always stay vigilant and strong, may we continue to be friends of Japan, and help them help us.
We need all the help we can get.
Till next year.