I thank you for your service, but I fail to see why this would be offensive. I don’t think this discussion detracts from honoring the sacrifice of our fallen soldiers. We are not criticising or disparaging our soldiers. We are just discussing the morality of similar wartime actions.
I’m not looking for kudos. The timing of this thread is disgusting. You could have easily waited. Yes, you are disparaging the military.
If you were given the order to drop an atom bomb on Hiroshima, would you do it?
Since you like posing questions, I’ll pose a couple for you.
A 5 year old boy comes running at you with explosives wrapped around him, you know someone in the crowd behind him has the detonator. You have 30 men behind you whose lives are in your hands. What do you do?
A 15 year old boy does the same thing. What do you do?
A 20 year old man does the same thing. What do you do?
You have about 3 seconds in each scenario to shoot or not. You have no way of anticipating what is coming next. You’ve never heard of a Church teaching on the subject. You’re 19 years old. Welcome to combat. These are the scenarios that our soldiers face every day. They don’t sit at home typing in a computer, googling references to morality that a bunch of people can’t agree on for several days. And they have seconds to decide.
So don’t get all sanctimonious on me about decisions that have to be made in a short amount of time, under pressure that you have to experience to believe, and with far less information then they would like to have. They do the best they can with what they have available to them. And it is my belief that the vast majority of them have NOTHING to apologize for when they stand in front of God on judgement day.
Fair enough. As I said earlier, looking at it from a detached perspective I think the mass bombing of cities was wrong. It was the use of a new weapon simply because it could be used. But I think the most truthful thing either of us could say about such a question is that we cannot possibly know, here and now, how we would view the war and the acts of war back then.
Did the Church declare authoritatively during the war that such bombing was a grave sin? If she did, and if I had that information, then I would have refused to take part.
Even if the Church did, how many people would have known about it in 1945? Very few. No internet, poor communications. But I agree with you, with the knowledge comes responsibility.