Wolseley
Beaucoup-Diên-Cai-Dāu
- Feb 5, 2002
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And most of them were either combatants or potential combatants. As I stated before, the Japanese 2nd Army was vaporized at Hiroshima, which would have been a force we would have had to confront if we had invaded Japan---a force committed to killing American troops. Likewise, the entire Japanese citizenry was being prepared for resistance to US forces, meaning more people committed to killing American troops.iggy said:Please, people, do not forget that over 700,000 innocent people were killed in both Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
This was a state of all-out war, no quarter asked or given on either side, and all of this revisionist nonsense about the Japanese being the innnocent victims of the oppressive militaristic Americans is a load of balderdash.
So you're suggesting that our course in World War II should have been to tell the Japanese, "It's okay if you bomb us and kill thousands of our people, we won't do anything. If you invade us, abolish our government, take our teenage girls to serve your army as military prostitutes, kill our young men or turn them into slaves for forced labor, and slice the heads off old women who fail to bow to your soldiers on the streets----that's fine with us. We wouldn't do anything to hurt you"???I'm inclined to believe that there are always other options, maybe it was hard to find... but it was there. There was a way. Ghandi brought down the British impire in India with non-violent resistance. Why is it that we are so pro-war all the time... it's our society, and it's very sad.
I am profoundly grateful that Americans of 60 years ago did not have similar sentiments.
See above.I can't help but tear up when I saw human beings trying to rationaly 'favoring' killing so many innocent people.
Considering that we prevented three extremely nasty totalitarian regimes from taking over the planet, being Nazi Germany, Imperial Japan, and Soviet Russia, I'd say we didn't do too bad.Why must the US be a military Super-Power? Why not, instead, be a Humanitarian Super-Power? We have the resources, we could rid starvation in the world ourselves with all the food we have here. But we don't... it's not good for business. And neither was any less violent way of handling Japan... the Atomic Bomb was less costly, in the long run.
-IGGY
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