First, to say this – I'm not bitching about the racism itself, but I noticed something odd about how we look back at stuff.
So recently, I've fallen in love with the following cartoon, The Ducktators:
It's absolutely fucking hilarious but some people might find the depiction of the Japanese as racist.
Anyways, we're going to talk about that actually.
One of the things I love about this cartoon is that, if we take away the context of the stereotypes themselves, we're left with these three ducks going around and being absolute dicks to everyone, until the dove of peace is sick of their shit and kicks their ass. And adding the political commentary on top makes it even funnier, and it's basically saying that the military/leadership of Germany, Italy and Japan were just being dicks and they were idiots, and that we had to balls up and kick their ass into line. (Not saying that the US is known for peace, but "peace doves" were a term for people who didn't want to get involved in wars directly like WWI, as opposed to "war hawks"). Anyways, the only duck that is mainly based on the actual person themselves is Hitler Duck – the other two are blatant stereotypes.
But to be honest, I think a lot of this commentary is lost because people are so turned off by the Japanese caricature.
The thing is, I'm not saying it's not racist – it's totally overtly racist. But… isn't Mussolini's depiction just as fucking racist? Mussolini is basically depicted as a complete idiot who is just following in the footsteps of Hitler and has absolutely nobody supporting him willingly. The Italian stereotypes are played up, especially with his accent (just as much as the Japanese duck really) as well as the cultural references. And to be brutally honest, the Imperial Japanese army, which is what the duck represents, totally deserved it.
But we all know this by now, we're smart kids here. My question is this:
Why are we so much more offended by the Japanese stereotype than the Italian one?
It's no secret that at the time of WWII, the Japanese were viewed less favorably than the Italians and Germans. Japanese Americans were treated as literal spies and rounded up to detention camps. That's fucked up. And yes, we did drop two nukes on them. But the problem is, it's no longer 1944, it's 2016, and we still seem to hold ourselves to a standard as if we're still saying "yeah that was totally okay".
There are people out there who still act like Germany has a little Nazi blood running through them, 70 years after, despite almost ludicrous attempts to prove the contrary again and again in apology for the atrocities committed. Meanwhile, Japan has more victimization in WWII because of the Japanese detention and the use of nukes against them, despite committing extreme war crimes themselves and essentially a total cultural attitude towards world domination. The problem with this whole thing was that Japanese detention of Japanese-Americans didn't really affect Imperial Japan as much as it affected American citizens, and it was racism against our own people, not the country Japan. And the nukes are an controversial issue I won't get into here. But I don't think the use of nuclear weapons justifies this whole racism spiel.
Is it some projection of our culture wanting to change or erase the past or something?
Have we really gotten any better with actually fixing the problem of racism by instilling a gut reaction to stereotypes of what we consider "other peoples"? Or has overemphasis on this issue in our culture caused us to lose the ability to view work objectively? And have we really done much to accomplish anything if we can't even distinguish between Japanese Americans and Imperialist Japan as a culture?