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Journal by takyon

BBC Trending: Is this manga cartoon of a six-year-old Syrian girl racist?

"I want to live a safe and clean life, eat gourmet food, go out, wear pretty things, and live a luxurious life… all at the expense of someone else," reads the text on the illustration above. "I have an idea. I'll become a refugee."

The image and caption were posted by a right-wing Japanese artist last month. Now, more than 10,000 people have signed a Change.org petition in Japanese urging Facebook to take it down. The petition, posted by an account calling itself the "Don't Allow Racism Group", claims that several people have reported the illustration and demands that "Facebook must recognize an illustration insulting Syrian refugees as racism."

Although the Japan Times reported that Facebook did not take the picture down, saying it did not go against community guidelines, the artist herself removed the picture. But she remains defiant about her motivations for posting it in the first place. Toshiko Hasumi told BBC Trending that she believed the people signing the petition were left-wing activists. "I draw many political mangas [Japanese comics] which are not favourable to them," she said. "This is why they targeted me."

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The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by juggs on Friday October 09 2015, @04:51AM

    by juggs (63) on Friday October 09 2015, @04:51AM (#247266) Journal

    Many European nations have a long history of embracing refugees and immigrants. A cursory look at that "great" Britain's history for even the last few hundred years to a millennia will show a constant movement by people - either as invaders or as people running away from being invaded.

    The difficulty is not the invasion per se, it is the the time it takes for the normalisation of society that must occur to ingest the invaders or refugees and maintain the society. i.e. everyone is welcome, just don't all come at once and don't shit in your own front yard when you get here.

    At the moment there seems to be a fire hose of refugees from the Mid-East flocking to certain parts of Europe..... OK they are running away from theological oppression with mad beheadings..... I understand that.... I would run too. The question that needs to be asked is - who caused the power vacuum in that region and destabilised it continually for decades and thus caused this fire hose to open?

    Bit harsh to refuse to accept the result of ones own doing no?

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  • (Score: 0, Troll) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 10 2015, @02:59AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 10 2015, @02:59AM (#247681)

    The question that needs to be asked is: Why are they not defending their country?

    They should be standing up for their country. We did. America did. The UK did. France did. Germany did. Countries built their freedom of today on the blood split by their people.

    Will these people die for Germany?

    Why will these people not sacrifice their lives? Is it islam? Are they beaten down, scared, cowards who can not stand up to these bullies with guns?

    If every person who has migrated away from syria gave their life to kill a member of isil then they would not have a problem now. Poison their food. Kill their animals. Steal their weapons. Put water in their cars. Set fire to buildings. Do unto isil as isil does unto others. Destroy their army one soldier at a time.

    Cowards.

    • (Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 10 2015, @07:37PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 10 2015, @07:37PM (#247845)

      They should be standing up for their country. [...] Germany did.

      Not sure if you're referring to World War I, World War II, or the fall of the GDR.

      Suppose Germans had refused to fight in World War I. Surely tthe Central Powers would have lost the war sooner, and the Allies would have had no grounds to demand reparations of Germany? I suppose the Austrians and Hungarians would be displased, but probably the outcome would be better for Germany.

      Now, about World War II. The conventional wisdom is that Germany started it, at least in Europe. Suppose that, having embraced Nazism, Germans refused to go to war. I'm not sure what the outcome would have been, but what actually happened was that around 5 to 7 million Germans were killed in the war, major cities were razed, the country lost territory to Poland and Russia, the remainder was split and many Germans had to live under communism.

      About that, the GDR ended without need for a war. When East Germans committed the crime of Republikflucht, fleeing the country, the communists treated it as a major problem and I think their assessment was spot-on. Once the border fence between Austria and Hungary came down, there was a mass exodus. That, not fighting, destabilised the GDR. Had Germans taken up arms, there would have been a different outcome. Not likely a better one for the country, I daresay. Suppose the refugees from East Germany had been turned back rather than welcomed.

      Now, about Syria. Besides being invaded by ISIS, it's also in a civil war. Plenty of Syrians have taken up arms "for their country" but on opposing sides. That is the reason people are fleeing the country. You advise the refugees to stand up for their country against ISIS, but ISIS is well-armed because it has munitions surrendered/abandoned to it by the Iraqi army. These people who have fled their houses might have what,a rifle or a kitchen knife? ISIS has been winning readily against the militaries of Iraq, Syria, and the USA, and you're telling these civilians to wait in their houses until ISIS' army comes, then fight to the death?