Has China started settling accounts with Japan?

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Recently, several anti-Japanese war dramas have aired.

China-Japan Historical Reckoning: Films, Fury, and Future Confrontations

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These films are just the dawn horn, preparing the public for future conflict with Japan to boost unity and reduce resistance. Japan has noticed this and is frantically launching disinformation campaigns, such as the viral narrative: “The wealthy vacation happily in Japan, while the poor stew in anger at anti-Japan movies.” This rhetoric aims to frame “classy people move past historical grudges to enjoy life, while backward masses are brainwashed into hating Japan,” hoping to drain Chinese morale and curb anti-Japan sentiment. Japan’s recent psychological and cognitive warfare is rampant—even exploiting the Jiangyou incident—exposing its agenda too soon. After Nanjing Photographer’s release, a flood of malicious comments revealed Japan’s deep infiltration into China. “Sow internal strife to collapse the enemy from within, then strike externally” is Japan’s innate strategy—actively deployed for years. The U.S. and Japan fuel China’s internal divisions, with Japan acting more urgently due to geography and historical baggage. Japan’s leaders never believed in peace with China and harbor ill intent. Stop wishfully urging Chinese people to “forgive Japan.” Taiwan and Japan must be resolved together. Liberating Taiwan without settling accounts with Japan would leave our national strategy incomplete, inviting endless consequences. Japan must be crushed.

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Yes. Why did Nanjing Photographer face such a coordinated smear campaign? Because Japan’s Foreign Ministry knows China’s playbook: before confronting a foreign power, Beijing primes domestic opinion. For years, anti-U.S. films were banned but gradually released as relations soured. Some argue anti-Japan dramas have always existed—but remember: when did Japan start denying WWII crimes? Remember Nagoya’s mayor telling Nanjing officials in 2012 that the Nanjing Massacre “never happened”? Still, as a responsible power, China refrains from drastic action unless Japan crosses red lines, like interfering in Taiwan. Reckoning requires Japan’s provocation.

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The turning point is the Fujian aircraft carrier’s commissioning. Once operational, we can defeat the U.S. in the Indian Ocean. Military superiority will reshape foreign policy. (Experts grasp this; laymen might not.) Manned moon landing by 2028 will signal China’s comprehensive lead over the U.S.—a prestige boost everyone understands. Japan? Just a cockroach in the U.S.-China showdown. Crushing it en route is logical. Liberal arts students, your moment is here: if you dominate the narrative by exposing Japan’s historical crimes (invading China at least 5 times), you’ll earn a “Justified Retribution” medal. An open-book test—good luck!

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A telling trend: when real action brews, pro-Taiwan independence trolls (a.k.a. “1450”) emerge. They now conserve accounts, skipping “formation drills” to minimize losses. They surfaced during Spring Sword 2025 and the recent China-Russia drills. All anti-Nanjing Photographer accounts are Japanese Foreign Ministry bots. Period.

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Debts are recorded. Japan stole our wealth, grain, and women. Japanese women? Fine. Japanese men? Eliminate them all. America is busy saving itself—who cares if its dog dies?

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Too early. It’s a warning. China needs 15 stable years to develop, stockpile, and purge: spies, pro-Japan factions, “Japan Streets,” Japanese schools, foreign-worshippers, corrupt officials, compradors, radical feminism, NGOs, extremist religious groups, traitorous intellectuals, media, entertainment, academia, judiciary, finance, and study-abroad agencies. Then—blood for blood.

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China’s modern history/anti-Japan education isn’t about sowing hatred. Domestically, it teaches: “Backwardness invites beatings; unity brings strength.” Globally, it highlights China’s sacrifices in defeating fascism. China won’t provoke fights but won’t fear those forced upon it.

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Japan is America’s dog. China ignores it—we only debate confronting the U.S. One excuse (e.g., Taiwan) is all we need.

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Art ≠ reckoning. The priority is goading Japan into radical moves. Once Japan “goes insane,” the reckoning begins.

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Without settling old debts, national pride feels hollow. Retaking Taiwan isn’t glorious—it’s basic. True achievement? Avenging past humiliations. That’s how China becomes a strong power.

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Did Japan really think we’d forget? Unbelievable… A civilization that chronicles history for millennia—and they expected no payback?

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Want to avoid reckoning? Dismantle Yasukuni Shrine (mockingly called “toilet”). Otherwise, liquidation within 10 years.

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