Other war songs: we are going to defeat the enemy for our glorious nation German war songs: about girls and flowers American songs: literal disstracks.
We basically funded the Brits and USSR because we wanted to focus on Japan first but the Germans declared it. So we then decided to go after them first.
Thats true the germans was a bit forced to declare war on the us When Japan declared war withouth telling their allies about the invasion of pearl harbour
They actually did in 1941 on December 11th www.senate.gov/about/images/documents/sjres119-wwii-germany.htm#:~:text=On%20December%2011%2C%201941%2C%20Congress,resolution%20declaring%20war%20with%20Germany.
"There's no yellow in the red, white, and blue!" Damn bro. Its crazy just how willing people were to say stuff like this in those days. Like, weren't there millions of Asians that lived in America? Like, not even counting the Asians that weren't Japanese. Even if there are people today that still say stuff like this, I don't think you'd find any mainstream songs saying things like this nowadays. How the times have changed. lol
Asians as a whole were 0.2 percent of the population, and the USA had 132 million people at the time. As for the Japanese there were only about 130,000 of them here. US was still 90% white then. Rest were predominantly black.
They’re saying there’s no cowardice in the American way. Lol. Saying someone was yellow or yellow-bellied was a super common phrase for calling someone a coward or scared. As an Asian in America, we as a nation were not anti-Asian but anti-the Axis powers and those affiliated with them. My great grandparents and grandparents found many people fond of them because of the close ties with Korea already formed/the mutual wariness of Japan. I can see why it sounded that way and it made the song funnier for how they phrased it but I’d bet good money on the meaning being cowardice. 😂
@@PakEunhye56 I didn't of it that way, but that makes sense! And yeah, Americans at this time did have a healthy respect for groups like the Chinese, Filipinos, or as you bring up the Koreans, who fought Japan. If that WAS what they were saying, then it would be some off-handed joke. Either way, Mainstream American society was just more comfortable saying things like that during this time. That's all I was trying to say. lol
Other war songs: we are going to defeat the enemy for our glorious nation
German war songs: about girls and flowers
American songs: literal disstracks.
They not like us (literally)
That was actually foul, I apologize.
@@ninyaninjabrifsanovichthes45 Hitler struck a cord and it's probably a Jew
The funniest part is that the US never declared war on Germany, it was quite the opposite
We basically funded the Brits and USSR because we wanted to focus on Japan first but the Germans declared it. So we then decided to go after them first.
Thats true the germans was a bit forced to declare war on the us When Japan declared war withouth telling their allies about the invasion of pearl harbour
They actually did in 1941 on December 11th
www.senate.gov/about/images/documents/sjres119-wwii-germany.htm#:~:text=On%20December%2011%2C%201941%2C%20Congress,resolution%20declaring%20war%20with%20Germany.
CORTEX RADIO ? THE FAMOUS TNO PLAYER ? BIG FAN I AM. Also yea technically that's true but we basically supplied their enemies so yea.
@@theplutonimus i dont play tno lol
When the weeb starts speaking:
they took our harbor so we took their empire. mess around and find out.
"There's no yellow in the red, white, and blue!"
Damn bro. Its crazy just how willing people were to say stuff like this in those days. Like, weren't there millions of Asians that lived in America? Like, not even counting the Asians that weren't Japanese. Even if there are people today that still say stuff like this, I don't think you'd find any mainstream songs saying things like this nowadays. How the times have changed. lol
No black in the Union Jack either
Asians as a whole were 0.2 percent of the population, and the USA had 132 million people at the time. As for the Japanese there were only about 130,000 of them here. US was still 90% white then. Rest were predominantly black.
They’re saying there’s no cowardice in the American way. Lol. Saying someone was yellow or yellow-bellied was a super common phrase for calling someone a coward or scared. As an Asian in America, we as a nation were not anti-Asian but anti-the Axis powers and those affiliated with them. My great grandparents and grandparents found many people fond of them because of the close ties with Korea already formed/the mutual wariness of Japan.
I can see why it sounded that way and it made the song funnier for how they phrased it but I’d bet good money on the meaning being cowardice. 😂
@@PakEunhye56 I didn't of it that way, but that makes sense! And yeah, Americans at this time did have a healthy respect for groups like the Chinese, Filipinos, or as you bring up the Koreans, who fought Japan. If that WAS what they were saying, then it would be some off-handed joke. Either way, Mainstream American society was just more comfortable saying things like that during this time. That's all I was trying to say. lol
When you read about the type of shit the japanese did in world war 2 you understand why songs like this get made
This has to be some kind of TNO reference, I'm sure of it
(I suffer from severe brainrot)
It’s a WW2 song, WEEBO
Seems right
@@CrusaderofDeusYou don’t understand, the brainrot is terminal.
it's ironic that after the war, Japan and the U.S became allies
"Allies"
Puppet for 6 years
I like this song.How Nice!
Glad you liked it
Damn, dissed 2 nations at once
Very Funny song. Indeed. New Sub!
Totally new channel that I haven't interacted with before
yes, definitely @@AlternativeBeat1019
(Insert JJJ laugh here)
(Insert NyQuiled Heavenlyfather here)
(Insert hyena laugh here)
Nowadays with this business with ol Xi Jinping I say we remind them chinese that there's no yellow in the red white and blue
There is no yellow in the red white and blue
better than J-Pop and Japanazi Propaganda
US vets fighting Japan after the attack of Hawaii only to hear their grandsons go kawaii