Chapter 1183 The Real Reason
She thought of it so quickly...That was as expected. As far as Huo Shaoheng was concerned, she really was the best lawyer.
Huo Shaoheng tilted his chin slightly, the unconcealed admiration and praise reflecting in his eyes.
He nodded and spoke in an even tone as he said, “...Go ahead.”
Gu Nianzhi began by organizing the thoughts in her head.
She looked at Reinitz and said, “Reinitz, you said that the Japanese clearly wrote in their experintal data that their Operation Borrowed Seed, or their race optimization eugenics experint, actually succeeded?”
Reinitz carefully recalled the moirs written by his predecessors in the bureau and said, “That should be right, but they also wrote in the records that the Japanese used countless Huaxia people to conduct experints. However, they only succeeded one ti.”
The corners of Gu Nianzhi’s eyes twitched.
They used countless Huaxia people to conduct experints...
That ant that countless Huaxia people were forced to mate like livestock, just to produce one offspring to the Japanese’s satisfaction?
They had really worked so hard.
Before Gu Nianzhi realized it, a subtle sneer gradually appeared on her face. “Haha, these Japanese people really exerted all their efforts just for the sake of optimizing our Huaxia race.”
Reinitz, “...”
He Zhichu also snickered before shaking his head.
Huo Shaoheng remained composed and said, “...Keep talking.”
Gu Nianzhi walked behind Huo Shaoheng’s desk to look at the informational video playing on the screen of his super-thin, lightweight laptop.
The information that was displayed indicated that the Japanese set up concentration camps in the Northeastern region of the Huaxia Empire to conduct such secret experints even before World War I erupted.
There was a hundred-year period between World War I and World War II, which implicated the birth and growth of at least two or three generations.
Gu Nianzhi was very regretful and heartbroken as she continued to say, “This was such a huge concentration camp that was operated for a very long ti. So many Huaxia citizens were captured and subjected to all sorts of inhumane torture and experints.
“The Japanese actually dread of creating a superman in this kind of hell on Earth?! Haha, they really daydread too much and believed they were strong, and that others must be weak. Does that an it was survival of the fittest? Did they even stop to look at the tis the Huaxia people truly succumbed over the thousands of years?”
Gu Nianzhi shrugged and said, “I am not trying to insult them, but I have always thought that there were deep-rooted paranoia and morbid genes embedded within the Japanese race itself. Is this kind of morbidity inherent in nature, or developed after birth? I will leave it to our scientists to continue researching the answer to this question.”
“You an to say that this entire race is ntally ill?” Reinitz pursed his lips. “Soone has made this statent before,” he said.
The cris committed by the Japanese people during World War II were unacceptable, even to the Nazis, who were burdened with countless war cris themselves.
But the Japanese were obviously even more cruel, evil, and unforgivable than the Nazis.
Huo Shaoheng imdiately dismissed his question, saying, “No, they were not ntally ill. Please don’t use ntal illness as an excuse for their cruelty.”
Gu Nianzhi nodded in agreent with Huo Shaoheng’s explanation and added, “ntally ill people cannot control their own behaviors, so they can escape legal punishnt no matter what cris they commit.
“So, my view is the sa as Huo Shao’s in that I absolutely object this kind of statent. They obviously committed these war cris in an organized, conscious, and systematic manner. The international court has already tried the relevant criminals, and, although there were many people who escaped punishnt, I still believe that justice will ultimately prevail one day. They will certainly pay the rightful price for their war cris and cris committed against humanity.
“However, this problem has nothing to do with my conclusion at all.” Gu Nianzhi discreetly changed the topic, saying, “My perspective is very clear. The Japanese have never succeeded with Operation Borrowed Seed despite continuing it for over a hundred or even a thousand years.”
“But how do you explain Gu Haoze’s existence then? How do you explain his son, Gu Xiangwen? And also, yourself, Gu Nianzhi? Are you all errors that slipped through when God created humans? Of course, I will definitely believe you even if you said you are a living cheat code,” Reinitz said with a smile.
He was already able to speak calmly to Gu Nianzhi at this point. Perhaps it was because he believed that she was the sa kind of person as him, so he was able to let go of his contradictory and hostile ntality.
Reinitz had already given up on analyzing his feelings for her.
Gu Nianzhi curled her lips into a smile, her eyes quickly scanning over Reinitz’s face.
Reinitz was a bit uncomfortably since he also noticed a trace of contempt and disdain in Gu Nianzhi’s eyes. He instantly felt very ill.
Gu Nianzhi completely cald down and said evenly, “We are not errors, nor are we results of the Japanese’s Operation Borrowed Seed.
“Before I can tell you why the appearance of my grandfather Gu Haoze was not an experintal result of the Japanese Operation Borrowed Seed, I need to first clarify a conceptual issue.”
Gu Nianzhi’s slender fingers quickly danced over Huo Shaoheng’s laptop keyboard as she brought up the standards for successful scientific experints.
“Look for yourselves. There are fixed standards that determine if a scientific experint has succeeded. It’s not like you can prove you predicted the pattern of humans becoming ill, just because the weather cooled down and a person sneezed once.
“The most basic standards proving the success of a scientific experint is to obtain results that do not exceed the experintal margin of error under the sa experintal conditions by following the sa standards.
“The experintal thod must be replicable, and not only replicable in one’s own laboratory but replicable for others.
“Finally, the results cannot exceed a certain margin of error. Only then can the experint be considered successful.
“Think about all the articles in international scientific journals that have been exposed as being fabricated in recent years. These experints were concluded as such because other laboratories repeated the experints under the sa conditions, but were unable to achieve the results claid by the journals.
“We do not have the experintal data from the Japanese Operation Borrowed Seed right now, but we have their thods of experintation. This is what Reinitz ntioned about the moirs written by the directors of his bureau who had actually seen experintal data.
“Perhaps it would be very difficult to rember exact data, but the experintal procedure was actually very simple. They didn’t have any more advanced techniques in that era. Isn’t’ that right?”
Gu Nianzhi paused after she said this, her luminous and huge eyes looking at Reinitz. “Reinitz, can you recall the experintal thods ntioned by your predecessors?” she asked.
Reinitz was a bit embarrassed.
Basically, race optimization experints in that era were conducted by mating real humans.
In that concentration camp, people lost their basic human dignity. Like lab rats, they were used for various comparison studies under different situations until the won were impregnated.
However, the n would be forced to impregnate even more won, so the growth and developnt of their offspring could be observed.
After Reinitz said this, the room plunged into dead silence.
Gu Nianzhi was a woman, but she could sympathize as well.
The three n could feel a faint pain in their groins...
This was the literal aning of the concept.
...
Gu Nianzhi was the first person to compose herself, and she continued calmly, saying, “This was about the sa as I postulated. This was their experint, but using this thod and all those people. Yet they were only able to produce Gu Haoze as their sole successful sample, yet it could be considered a successful experint?
“If a scientific experint cannot be repeated or verified, then it cannot be proven to be successful.”
Gu Nianzhi ca to her first conclusion. “The production of a genius requires a large number of random factors.
“Even without Operation Borrowed Seed, geniuses of the world would have continued to be born.
“So as to Gu Haoze’s appearance, I believe that he was a genius born in a normal way. Perhaps he was just coincidentally born at that concentration camp. This had nothing to do with Operation Borrowed Seed.
“You must understand that even more geniuses would have been born amongst these Huaxia people if the Japanese had not captured all these excellent Huaxia n and Huaxia won to be studied like livestock.
“From this perspective, Operation Borrowed Seed actually destroyed countless possibilities of the birth of Huaxia geniuses. As for Gu Haoze, he was only an uncontrollable accident occurring within the experint.”
Gu Nianzhi was very solemn as she ca to her second conclusion.
“So that’s why I believe that the final phase of the Japanese Operation Borrowed Seed had already achieved its first goal – to research how to optimize the Japanese race. They had already transitioned to the second goal, studying how to exterminate the Huaxia Empire. This was the true reason why they changed experintal subjects.”
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