Merkel, who has flooded Germany and Europe with fake Islamic asylum seekers responsible for countless crimes on millions of European women, goes shopping in complete safety, protected by four security agents. She must rot in prison.
“To those who only know the Nanjing Massacre narrative — have you ever read the Chinese newspapers from that time?”
This image shows that a Chinese-language newspaper dated December 15, 1937 carried an article reporting the restoration of public order in Nanjing, the return of civilians, and the Japanese army’s efforts to preserve historic sites
Its headlines read:
“Public order restored in Nanjing”
“Citizens returning one after another”
“The Japanese army is making every effort to preserve historic sites”
The article also states that civilians who had evacuated were beginning to return, shops were reopening, and administrative institutions and schools were being restored
Of course, this single newspaper article alone cannot settle the entire historical debate over Nanjing
But at the very least, it is a primary source that does not fit the simplistic image that immediately after the fall of Nanjing, the entire city was destroyed and civilian life had completely disappeared
History should not be judged from one testimony or one photograph alone
If we are serious about history, we should examine it through multiple primary sources — including those that may be inconvenient to our assumptions