We Remember Hitler, We Forget Hirohito
Iran’s Death Cult Is Collapsing. It took atomic bombs to end Japan. This time? The "bomb" will rise from the streets of Tehran.
Ask most people what they know about World War II, and they’ll mention Hitler, the Holocaust, Pearl Harbor, the atomic bombs. Maybe the Blitz. Maybe Dresden. We remember the Nazis—their tactics, their industrial genocide, their calculated cruelty. But we forget about the kamikazes—the Japanese pilots who turned their bodies into weapons. We remember SS officers, but not the Japanese commanders who ordered civilians to commit mass suicide. We remember Hitler’s ideology but forget the cult of Emperor Hirohito, where death was sacred and surrender was sin.
One of the most glaring omissions in popular memory is the role of Australia—a nation that fought alongside America and the Allies from the very beginning. Australian troops battled through North Africa, Greece, and the Pacific, defending their own continent from Japanese invasion. Their sacrifice is barely remembered today—in most World War II histories, not even a footnote.
Some think Pearl Harbor happened, and the next thing America did was drop the atomic bomb. But that’s not how it went—not even close. After Pearl Harbor shocked the United States into war on December 8, 1941, Europe was already burning. France had fallen. Britain was bloodied and standing alone. The Soviets were locked in a deathmatch with Nazi Germany. But the Pacific would become its own hell.
America's first major response to Japan came nearly five months later, with the Battle of the Coral Sea in May 1942. But this wasn’t just a war of territory—it was a war against a death cult. Japanese soldiers were taught that dying for the Emperor was the ultimate honor. Surrender was shame. Survival was weakness. Civilians, too, were trained to fight to the death—women, children, the elderly. Jungle warfare. Kamikaze strikes. Suicide charges. Death was a virtue.
By June 23, 1945—80 years ago today—the last organized Japanese resistance was broken on the island of Tarakan. The battle had begun nearly two months earlier, on May 1, 1945, when Australian forces landed to recapture the island’s vital oilfields. It took seven brutal weeks of fighting before the Japanese position finally collapsed. Japan’s war machine had lost its oil, its bases, its empire. But it still refused to surrender. On Tarakan alone, 1,500 Japanese soldiers died, along with 230 Allied troops. It was the final gasp of a regime that had already lost more than 2 million troops. The Pacific campaign had cost the U.S. over 100,000 lives.



And still—Japan did not yield.
It took 71 more days, two atomic bombs, and firebombing of dozens of cities before Hirohito surrendered on August 15, 1945. The bombings were horrific. Hiroshima killed 70,000–80,000 instantly, with more than 140,000 total. Nagasaki: 40,000 instantly, over 70,000 by year’s end. But military planners estimated a land invasion would have cost 1 million American lives—and up to 10 million Japanese—because the regime planned to fight to the last child.
Japan’s emperor didn’t surrender. It had to be shattered.
The New Axis of Death
We call the Islamic Republic and its proxies “the new Nazis,” and for good reason. Its leaders openly chant for the extermination of Jews. Their missiles are stamped “Death to Israel.” Civilians are targeted with sadistic precision. Its ideology—spread through Hezbollah, Hamas, Islamic Jihad, the Houthis, and the IRGC—is soaked in genocidal obsession.
But Iran is not just a Nazi revival—it is also the worst of Imperial Japan reborn. Like the kamikazes, Iran exports suicide drones and suicide bombers. Like the Japanese youth trained to die for Hirohito, Iran and its proxies grooms child soldiers, gives them “keys to heaven,” and sends them to die. Like the fanatics on Okinawa who used civilians as shields, Iran’s proxies store rockets in schools and mosques, builds terror tunnels under hospitals, daycares and even under their children’s beds. This ideology isn’t just limited to leaders or fighters. Generations have been taught that martyrdom is glory, death is honor, and life is expendable. It’s not just terrorism—it’s theology. A death cult disguised as “resistance.”



October 7 Was Israel’s Pearl Harbor
Some say October 7, 2023, was Israel’s 9/11. But it was its Pearl Harbor—a day of barbarism that shocked the nation to its core. Since then, Israel has fought on nearly a dozen fronts: Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon, Houthis in Yemen, Shiite militias in Syria and Iraq, and terror cells in Judea and Samaria—alongside an international assault by UN agencies, NGOs and media disinformation.
This isn’t about land. It’s not about statehood. It’s about genocide. The same goal as the Nazis. The same tactics as Imperial Japan.
Iran’s proxies doesn’t just kill civilians—they hide behind them. They straps bombs to children. They glorify death as divine victory. They fight not for an emperor, but a Supreme Leader— the ghost of Nasrallah, Soleimani or Ahmed Yassin. Their god is not Hirohito, but a twisted invocation of Allah, where genocide is sanctified.
But just as Imperial Japan lost control of its oil fields and bases in 1945, Hamas, Hezbollah, the IRGC have lost their lifelines. Hamas no longer controls aid, its tunnel networks are exposed, arsenals destroyed. Hamas, Hezbollah and IRGC leaders mostly dead and those remaining hunted.
And now, Iran’s nuclear program gone. Its myth of resistance is now a carcass. As Iran itself begins to crumble, Hamas will finally fall. Its sugar daddy is nearly gone. And soon, the remaining 50 hostages will come home. Because when the regime that fuels terror falls, the terror ends with it.
One Island at a Time
Israel has gone “island by island”—from Gaza City to Rafah, from Hezbollah’s strongholds in Lebanon, to Syria’s Assad—dismantling Iran’s terror empire. Every cleared tunnel is another Tarawa. Every nuclear and missile site another Midway. Every IRGC base destroyed is one step closer to the head of Tehran.
And now—the final blow has begun.
In the early hours of June 22, 2025, the United States entered the fight. In one coordinated strike, Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan—Iran’s nuclear crown jewels—were obliterated. The infrastructure for apocalypse? Gone in minutes. Years of diplomatic games and billions of dollars vaporized in a single night.
This isn’t just a war. It’s the end of a global terror empire—one that began in 1979 and has brought blood to everything it could touch. While the media is busy writing about the Supreme Leader, whitewashing the Regime’s crimes and its love for gardening, the Iranian people see a light to end decades of torture, death and oppression in Iran. Tens of thousands of dead Iranian people. Thousands more around the world through terrorism. All that, now on the brink of collapse.
And now, Israel and America are cracking its spine. Just as Britain stood alone in 1940, Israel stood alone until now. Because it remembers. It remembers what the world ignored in the 1930s and ‘40s. That genocidal threats are not metaphors—they’re blueprints.
The World Should Say “Thank You”
Iran wasn’t looking for peace. It was building a bomb to flip the table and annihilate everyone sitting at it. And finally, someone stopped them.
The world should be saying thank you to America.
Thank you, Donald Trump. For doing what no one else would—acting before it was too late.
Instead, we hear condemnations. The UN screams about “escalation.” Some even call it a “war crime.” Pundits shriek that this is “World War III.” And in Washington, many lawmakers cry “unconstitutional!” Let’s be clear: World War II was the last time Congress formally declared war. Every U.S. conflict since—Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Syria—began without one. Under the Constitution and War Powers Resolution, the President can order strikes without Congress unless deploying troops long-term.
Trump didn’t start a war. He prevented one. He stopped the world’s top terror sponsor from getting the world’s most dangerous weapon. That’s not unconstitutional, illegal or an “escalation.” That’s leading the free world. The United States remembered what is the meaning of deterrence.
What Ends a Death Cult?
And yet, even now, the regime stands. Just like Japan in 1945, Iran won’t surrender because of logic. Its ideology is built not on strategy, but martyrdom. On pride. On divine fantasy.
June 22, 2025—when America struck Iran’s nuclear sites—was our modern Tarakan. But remember: it still took 71 days and two atomic bombs for Hirohito to surrender.
The final “bomb” Iran needs won’t fall from the sky. It will rise from the streets of Tehran. It will be the people themselves—fed up, fearless, and free—who bring the regime down.
Only then will the war truly end.
Only then will Khamenei fall.
Only then will peace begin.
Never forget—the only way to achieve peace is through strength.
Remember that when the Battle of Westerplatte started on 1st September 1939 Poland stood alone. The British troops should have been there within a day to support as promised. Hitler would have lost. Today people may not remember the death cult in Japan and this article is needed. Japan is underpopulated today because of mass murder of Japanese Christians over 300 years and it's youth finished off in WWII.
Excellent work as usual!