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Recommendations
For Firefox users, there is media bias / propaganda / fact check plugin.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/media-bias-fact-check/
- Consider including the article’s mediabiasfactcheck.com/ link
Headquartered in then-Japanese-controlled northeast China, Unit 731 and several related units injected prisoners of war with typhus, cholera and other diseases, according to historians and former unit members. They also say the unit performed unnecessary amputations and organ removals on living people to practice surgery and froze prisoners to death in endurance tests. Japan’s government has acknowledged only that Unit 731 existed.
Top Unit 731 officials were not tried in postwar tribunals as the U.S. sought to get ahold of chemical warfare data, historians say, although lower-ranked officials were tried by Soviet tribunals. Some of the unit’s leaders became medical professors and pharmaceutical executives after the war.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unit_731
Warning: extremely unpleasant wikipedia article
I was unaware of this until Stuff You Should Know did an episode about Unit 731 recently. It's one of those terrible-but-necessary things to learn about, but they do a good job of covering it thoroughly and tactfully, so I'd recommend it in addition to the Wikipedia article.
Japan has in general done so so little to make up for all the unspeakable atrocities they did. This includes the history of the Japanese Liberal Democratic Party, which is neither liberal nor democratic and which was, and I swear I’m not making this up, at one point a front for the CIA, which was actively involved in getting terrible war criminals in power and torturing leftists because of the red scare and all that.
Oh, and Nobusuke Kishi, CIA-rehabilitated war criminal and former prime minister, is literally the favourite grandfather of later prime minister Shinzo Abe. It’s as if Operation Paperclip had spirited away Göbbels from war crime allegations and a later prime minister of Germany would have been his grandkid. It’s wild.
It’s even funnier that none of this was related to Shinzo Abe’s assassination, for the record.