is google frontpage actually saying this?
May. 8th, 2015 10:53 amIs this just some sort of weirdness on my browser, or is Google actually saying this?

Excuse You
Because I’m pretty sure everyone with a Pacific Ocean coast might have something to say about that. Particularly but by no means exclusively China, Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand, Singapore, and Viet Nam.
Front of Battle, 1 August 1945, Pacific Theatre
Also Hiroshima.

And Nagasaki.

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no subject
Date: 2015-05-08 06:19 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-05-08 06:32 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-05-08 06:36 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-05-09 04:23 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-05-09 04:28 pm (UTC)Hell, the final disposition treaty wasn't signed until 1990, if you want to get all technical about it.
Dear Google...
Date: 2015-05-10 12:22 am (UTC)Seventy years ago, "The end of World War II". That would be May 8, 1945.
Funny about that. As I remember— from history, not in my own lifetime but not long before—
• World War II was a **WORLD** war, not just a European war.
• The US dropped the first atomic bomb used in war on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945, and the second one on Nagasaki three days later, August 9.
• Quoting from Wikipedia:
Victory over Japan Day (also known as Victory in the Pacific Day, V-J Day, or V-P Day) is a name chosen for the day on which Japan surrendered, in effect ending World War II, and subsequent anniversaries of that event. The term has been applied to both of the days on which the initial announcement of Japan's surrender was made – to the afternoon of August 15, 1945, in Japan, and, because of time zone differences, to August 14, 1945 (when it was announced in the United States and the rest of the Americas and Eastern Pacific Islands) – as well as to September 2, 1945, when the signing of the surrender document occurred, officially ending World War II.