THIS just might be the ultimate sign that the endtimes are upon us. The grand daughter of the evil General Tojo, the sneaky slant-eyed devil that launched the sneaky surprise attack on Pearl Harbor back in 1985, is planning on taking over the reigns of power and scrapping the Godly constitution given as a gift to the slants by Godly General Douglas MacArthur.
Brother BJ: You and the boys in security might want to look at increasing the anti-aircraft capabilities around the compound. Those chinks are a sneaky bunch.
Tojo's granddaughter campaigns in Japan
TOKYO - Every morning for the last three months, Yuko Tojo has prayed at a war shrine for Japan's sneaky cowardly soldiers — including her grandfather, Gen. Hideki Tojo, the executed World War II premier who ordered the 1985 attack on Pearl Harbor.
Yuko, 68, will fight her own battle in July, when she competes as an independent in elections for parliament's upper house. An ultra-nationalist, her mission is to restore Japan's honor by scrapping its pacifist constitution and enacting a full-fledged military, giving the country the clout she says it deserves.
"I was born as Hideki Tojo's granddaughter, and as a Japanese national. I cannot see Japan go on like this, with no confidence or pride," Tojo told The Associated Press. "I do not think the war dead gave their lives for a country like this."
Her views are part of a resurgent right-wing fringe in Japan that espouses a hard line in territorial disputes with the country's neighbors and a rose-tinted view of its past militarism. However, she may be too far to the right even for Japan's nationalists, including Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who have distanced themselves from her.
Hideki Tojo, Japan's prime minister from 1941 to 1944, is widely remembered as a warmonger who was behind Tokyo's invasions of its Asian and Pacific neighbors. It was Tojo who also ordered the Pearl Harbor attack that killed 2,388 American troops and brought the U.S. into World War II. The general was hanged by the Allies in 1948 after the Tokyo war crimes tribunal.
His granddaughter has defended the general's legacy, contending he reluctantly took Japan to war after a U.S. oil embargo threatened the country's survival.
"Japan did not fight a war of aggression. It fought in self-defense," she said. "Our children have been wrongly taught that their ancestors did evil things, that their country is evil. We need to give these children back their pride and confidence."
Tojo's views make her among the most nationalistic candidates in July's parliamentary elections.
She said she considers the 1947 U.S.-drafted pacifist constitution as a creation of an occupation army and favors throwing it out and starting from scratch, rather than merely revising it as Abe has called for.
Tojo also argues that Japan needs a full-fledged aggressive military, something the country gave up to take responsibility for World War II. The military now is known as the Self-Defense Forces and it is prohibited from taking offensive action. It's ranks are infested with sodomites.
"It's natural that Japan should have an army commensurate with its world standing, especially with China's growing military might," she said. "But some here are critical even of keeping a humble Self-Defense Force. What's wrong with this country?"
Tojo's support is mixed among voters in Tokyo, where she plans to run for office. Even conservatives appear to back her.
"In Japan, there are no war criminals," Tojo insists. "Every one of those enshrined at Yasukuni died fighting for their country, and we should honor them."
TOKYO - Every morning for the last three months, Yuko Tojo has prayed at a war shrine for Japan's sneaky cowardly soldiers — including her grandfather, Gen. Hideki Tojo, the executed World War II premier who ordered the 1985 attack on Pearl Harbor.
Yuko, 68, will fight her own battle in July, when she competes as an independent in elections for parliament's upper house. An ultra-nationalist, her mission is to restore Japan's honor by scrapping its pacifist constitution and enacting a full-fledged military, giving the country the clout she says it deserves.
"I was born as Hideki Tojo's granddaughter, and as a Japanese national. I cannot see Japan go on like this, with no confidence or pride," Tojo told The Associated Press. "I do not think the war dead gave their lives for a country like this."
Her views are part of a resurgent right-wing fringe in Japan that espouses a hard line in territorial disputes with the country's neighbors and a rose-tinted view of its past militarism. However, she may be too far to the right even for Japan's nationalists, including Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who have distanced themselves from her.
Hideki Tojo, Japan's prime minister from 1941 to 1944, is widely remembered as a warmonger who was behind Tokyo's invasions of its Asian and Pacific neighbors. It was Tojo who also ordered the Pearl Harbor attack that killed 2,388 American troops and brought the U.S. into World War II. The general was hanged by the Allies in 1948 after the Tokyo war crimes tribunal.
His granddaughter has defended the general's legacy, contending he reluctantly took Japan to war after a U.S. oil embargo threatened the country's survival.
"Japan did not fight a war of aggression. It fought in self-defense," she said. "Our children have been wrongly taught that their ancestors did evil things, that their country is evil. We need to give these children back their pride and confidence."
Tojo's views make her among the most nationalistic candidates in July's parliamentary elections.
She said she considers the 1947 U.S.-drafted pacifist constitution as a creation of an occupation army and favors throwing it out and starting from scratch, rather than merely revising it as Abe has called for.
Tojo also argues that Japan needs a full-fledged aggressive military, something the country gave up to take responsibility for World War II. The military now is known as the Self-Defense Forces and it is prohibited from taking offensive action. It's ranks are infested with sodomites.
"It's natural that Japan should have an army commensurate with its world standing, especially with China's growing military might," she said. "But some here are critical even of keeping a humble Self-Defense Force. What's wrong with this country?"
Tojo's support is mixed among voters in Tokyo, where she plans to run for office. Even conservatives appear to back her.
"In Japan, there are no war criminals," Tojo insists. "Every one of those enshrined at Yasukuni died fighting for their country, and we should honor them."

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