In World War II, the Japanese army was quite crazy, and the increasingly inflated Japan still wanted to fight the United States, and later in order to force Japan to surrender, the United States dropped two atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, resulting in the death of 200,000 civilians. However, the Air Force general who dropped the atomic bomb said, "There are no wronged souls under the atomic bomb." This sentence seems heartless, but if you know what Japanese women did for the emperor at that time, I am afraid you will feel chills. During World War II, militarism prevailed in Japan. Everyone was brainwashed by the mood of war. You definitely don't believe how "crazy" Japanese women are.

In Japan, the emperor is supreme. His words and deeds convinced the people of the whole country. At that time, the whole country of Japan was very supportive of Emperor Hirohito's war of aggression, and it can be said that the whole country was preparing for the war, especially the Japanese women volunteered to serve in the army and inspire soldiers to serve the emperor. In their view, if the family can contribute to the war, even if it dies, it will be the honor of the country and the honor of the family. Therefore, the lives of loved ones are not important at all in the eyes of Japanese women.
There is a newlywed couple in Japan. The husband was forced into the army because he was unwilling to give up his wife, so he expressed some reluctance to go to the battlefield. As a result, the wife ended her life that night in order to give her husband peace of mind to kill people on the battlefield. It's ridiculous that this is widely advertised in Japan as a positive example. In addition, many Japanese cynically criticized the defeated and surrendered Japanese soldiers as cowards and traitors.
During World War II, another Japanese woman sent her 14-year-old daughter into the army. At the time, we all thought Japanese soldiers were crazy and inhumane on the battlefield, but we didn't expect these Japanese women to be more "crazy" than they were. At the end of World War II, although Japan had already lost the war, it was still keen on war. At that time, the United States dropped a large number of leaflets before the air raids, warning civilians to evacuate, but we did not expect the Japanese women to kill their husbands who wanted to evacuate, because she thought it was a betrayal of the emperor.