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洋奴其实是美国的祸害

火烧 2010-12-25 00:00:00 网友时评 1030
文章指出美国杀害34名华人却判无罪,违背人类良知,批评洋奴为美国辩护是祸害。强调事件性质与美国司法问题,引发对人权和正义的反思。
洋奴其实是美国的祸害
送交者: YDX 2010年12月24日09:41:57 于 [天下论坛] 
34名中国人被美国人杀害,美国政府还隐瞒,这是外交问题。
这两者根本扯不上。

比如说,美国进行肯特州立大屠杀,机枪扫游行的美国大学生,
中国无权干预。伊拉克战争的时候,有个中学生写了一首反战诗,
结果学校把老师都开除了,引发美国人民示威游行,美军同样是猛扫。
虽然是橡皮子弹,我看那些美国人民被打中之后,也很惨。
而且这种事情,美国主流媒体是绝对不会报道的,所以我们过了几年才知道这事。

但美国人无故杀害中国人、谋财害命,还判无罪,性质就不同了。

任何在这个问题上替美国人的这种缺乏基本素质的问题狡辩的洋奴,实际上都是美国的祸害。

因为,这件杀害34名华人却判无罪的事明显违背了人类社会的基本原则与良知。

洋奴们呢,他们对这种美国人自己都感到可耻的事情也要嚷嚷,这就像某个人偷了东西,干了坏事,他家的狗却叫个不停。为什么呢?这些洋奴吃了主人的食,不叫几声,觉得对不住
吃的食物。但这些狗不懂人话,搞不清场合。

所以,其实这些无用洋奴对美国来说不是废物,而是祸害。
 
附:
 
美国陪审团的觉悟
送交者: YDX 2010年12月24日07:57:43 于 [军事天地]

http://www.ohs.org/education/oregonhistory/historical_records/dspDocument.cfm?doc_ID=5AAC99B2-DA97-A22B-5D8146345304E51C

This newspaper article was originally published in the Wallowa Signal and later reprinted in the Union Oregon Scout on April 20, 1888. It describes one of the most horrific mass murders in the history of the American West, the 1887 Snake River Massacre.

In October 1886 a group of Chinese miners began prospecting for gold on the Oregon side of the Snake River upstream from its confluence with the Imnaha. Far from any settlements, this remote section of Hells Canyon was visited only by the occasional party of Indians, stockmen, prospectors, and outlaws.

Sometime around May 1887 a gang of white horse thieves met near Dug Bar about a half mile below one of the Chinese mining camps. Upon discovering the miners, the seven outlaws decided on a plan to rob them of their gold. They snuck up on the mining camp, laid an ambush, and proceeded to fire at the miners, killing them one by one as they tried to run away. The outlaws, not satisfied with murder, proceeded to brutally mutilate the bodies of their victims, which they then threw into the river.

The details of what happened in the initial attack are not clear, but according to the deathbed account of one of the participants, the killing spree continued the next day. Eight more Chinese miners arrived at the camp of their slain countrymen and were murdered in a similar manner. The killers then traveled by boat to another Chinese camp and murdered thirteen more miners. Accounts of the total death toll vary, but more than thirty men were probably slain over the course of those two bloody days.

The following month another group of Chinese miners discovered the massacre site and fled in horror to Lewiston, where they reported the crime to the authorities. The Chinese consul in San Francisco and the Chinese Six Companies began an investigation as soon as they got word of the tragedy, offering a $1,000 reward.

The ringleader, Bruce Evans, was eventually arrested for stealing livestock in the Wallowa Valley, but he soon escaped and fled the state, possibly to Montana. C.O. LaRue left the region shortly after the crime—it was rumored that he was later killed during a gambling dispute in California. J.T. “Tigh” Canfield was also arrested but he either escaped or was released on bail. It is thought that he served time in the state penitentiary in Kansas for another crime, then returned to Idaho where he worked as a blacksmith.

Although four of the other men involved in the massacre were captured and tried in September 1888, the jury found them not guilty. George Craig, a local rancher who had discovered some of the miners’ bodies, later commented that “if they had killed 31 white men something would have been done about it, but none of the jury knew the Chinamen or cared much about it, so they turned the men loose.”

Further Reading:
Highberger, Mark. “Snake River Massacre.” Old West, Winter 1997.

Stratton, David H. “The Snake River Massacre of Chinese Miners, 1887.” In A Taste of the West, edited by Duane A. Smith. Boulder, Colo., 1983.

Written by Cain Allen, © Oregon Historical Society, 2005.

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