Tuesday, May 24, 2016

How Japanese react to black-on-yellow violence - DailyKenn.com

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Another one of President Obama’s sons? When he visits Hiroshima will he apologize for this? Once again it takes a foreign newspaper (in this case the UK Telegraph) to tell us what is really going on in the USA and /or on U.S. overseas military bases. The elephant in the room that no one is allowed to notice is that the overwhelming majority of the assaults, robberies, rapes and murders of Okinawan and Japanese citizens committed by U.S. Servicemen in at least the last 50 years have been committed by black U.S. Servicemen. For that matter we are not supposed to notice that there is a wave of black on white violent crime inside America. Notice how even The Telegraph fails to mention that the suspected murderer of the young Okinawan woman is black. We know full well by now that had the suspect been white and the victim been black, the race of both suspect and victim would have been identified within the first paragraph of any newspaper article. Clearly the Telegraph adheres to the Leftist Cultural Marxist narrative on race that asserts that blacks are the oppressed proletarians and whites are the bourgeoisies oppressors. Period. Black even exceeds yellow in the Politically Correct hierarchy of needs. So unless a story supports the narrative the Leftist controlled news media will ignore it as much as possible. It’s likely the only reason the Telegraph reported on this crime at all was because it embarrassed the U.S. Military, which the Left, both foreign and domestic, despises and considers to be the real threat to world peace.  

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Black-on-white violence is routinely ignored in the United States. Virtually every day a white American is murdered by a black thug. They media resounds with silence, pretending the epidemic is non-existent. 

Not so in Japan. 


In a society accustomed to order and respect of others, the introduction of American servicemen adds elements of violence previously unknown in Japan. Virtually all the offenders have been black. 
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Most recently a black veteran employed at a U.S service base admitted to strangling a young Japanese woman and dumping her body. That crime has heightened the frustration of the Japanese with black crime which the media consigns to the American military presence inclusively. 


Imagine thousands of white Americans rallying in protest every time a white person were murdered by a black thug. 


Kenneth Franklin Shinzato, 32, was arrested by police on suspicion of abandoning the body of Rina Shimabukuro, a 20-year-old office worker, who disappeared last month.

Japan's unease with US military presence deepens as former marine admits murdering woman in Okinawa 
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Protesters shout slogans during a demonstration in Naha, Okinawa island, southern Japan. More than 2,500 participants gathered in Naha Omoro town park to protest against the construction of a US Marine Corps air base in Nago's Henoko district, the day of the 44th anniversary of the island's reversion from the US. 
Protesters shout slogans during a demonstration in Naha, Okinawa island, southern Japan. More than 2,500 participants gathered in Naha Omoro Town Park to protest against the construction of a US Marine Corps air base in Nago's Henoko district, the day of the 44th anniversary of the island's reversion from the US.  CREDIT: EPA/HITOSHI MAESHIRO
20 May 2016 • 9:33am
An American military base worker has admitted strangling a young woman found dead near a roadside in Japan’s southern Okinawa region, according to local media reports.
Kenneth Franklin Shinzato, 32, was arrested by police on suspicion of abandoning the body of Rina Shimabukuro, a 20-year-old office worker, who disappeared last month.
The arrest comes at a particularly sensitive time in US-Japan relations, with Barack Obama, the US president, due to arrive in Japan next week for the Group of Seven summit in Mie Prefecture.
Mr Obama will be hoping that tensions surrounding the arrest and protests in relation to the presence of American military in Okinawa will not overshadow his visit, during which he plans to become the first acting US president to visit nuclear-hit Hiroshima city.
U.S. Ambassador Caroline Kennedy leaves after her meeting with Japan's Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida at foreign ministry in Tokyo. Japanese police have arrested an American working on a U.S. military base in Okinawa on suspicion of abandoning the body of a woman who had been missing since last month. U.S. Ambassador Caroline Kennedy leaves after her meeting with Japan's Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida at foreign ministry in Tokyo. Japanese police have arrested an American working on a U.S. military base in Okinawa on suspicion of abandoning the body of a woman who had been missing since last month.  CREDIT: KOTA ENDO/KYODO NEWS VIA AP
Shinzato, a former US marine who is currently a civilian worker at Kadena Air Base, reportedly admitted to disposing of her body, telling police that he abandoned it in a wooded area after she stopped moving, according to Kyodo News agency.
It’s hard to forgive such a heinous act -Yoshihide Suga
The case has prompted widespread outrage across Okinawa, an area where anti-American sentiments were already running high among local communities due to the concentration of military bases across the region.
Okinawa hosts the majority of the 38,000 US troops currently stationed across Japan, with locals regularly complaining of problems relating to loud noise, pollution and rising crime rates.
In a reflection of the political sensitivity of the region, Shinzo Abe, the prime minister, expressed his “strong indignation” at the crime, with strong protests reportedly sent by Japan’s foreign and defence ministers to their US counterparts.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe answers questions from reporters at his official residence in Tokyo. Abe expressed "outrage" after the arrest of a US military base employee linked to the suspicious death of a woman on Okinawa, a week before a high-profile visit to Japan by President Barack Obama. Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe answers questions from reporters at his official residence in Tokyo. Abe expressed "outrage" after the arrest of a US military base employee linked to the suspicious death of a woman on Okinawa, a week before a high-profile visit to Japan by President Barack Obama.  CREDIT: /AFP/GETTY
“I have no words to express, considering how the family feels,” Mr Abe told reporters. “We urge the U.S. side to take thorough measures to prevent the recurrence of such events.”
Yoshihide Suga, the chief cabinet secretary, added: “It’s hard to forgive such a heinous act.”
Ms Shimabukuro disappeared on the evening of April 28, after messaging her boyfriend to say that she was going to take an evening walk, according to local media reports.
Police arrested Shinzato, who is married with a child, on Thursday and the victim’s body was discovered after he reportedly informed investigators of its location.
The case is likely to fuel further opposition to the controversial relocation of the Futenma Marine Corps Air Station, a repeatedly delayed project which the government has pushed for since the 1990s, despite local protests.
Takeshi Onaga, the governor of Okinawa, who has regularly clashed with central government due to his opposition to the relocation, described his “extreme sorrow” over the incident.
“This incident has occurred precisely because the base is there,” Mr Onaga told reporters, according to Kyodo News. “I don’t know what to do with this anger.”
The spotlight has been cast regularly on the conduct of US military workers based in Okinawa over the years, with previous high-profile crimes including the 1995 rape of a 12-year-old Okinawan schoolgirl by three US servicemen.

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