C
Contarini
Guest
But that’s one of my problems with your line of argument. This is not a realistic situation. I am not arguing (nor, as far as I can tell, is anyone else) that the atomic bombs were the only thing that was morally problematic about the conduct of WWII. Anyone with the power to influence the dropping of the atomic bombs would also have been in a position to influence a host of other decisions.You choose to stop the use of the bombs. And that’s the only change to the real world you can make. You cannot make the American people other that what they were, or make them to have experienced other than what they experienced.
The deeper issue, of course, is whether there is a natural law, and if so whether dropping weapons of mass destruction on a place where civilians (including children) live is according to natural law. I hold that there is a natural law, and that such attacks are always contrary to it.
If those two things are true, then everything else becomes irrelevant. If committing murder were necessary to preserve the entire universe from destruction, then the universe would have to be destroyed.
Whenever I enter an argument in which you are on the other side, I feel rather as King Arthur’s knights did when they realized Sir Lancelot was jousting against them. (I don’t mean that I feel betrayed–I mean that I feel terrified!
I remain, of course, always your admirer:thumbsup:
In Christ,
Edwin