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EphelDuath
Guest
What was Pope Pius XII’s reaction to it?
Yes, but we killed millions of innocent civilians – not soldiers – in doing so. The Church teaches that evil cannot be done in order to accomplish good.i dont know his reaction, but i think it was justified. 2 attacks several hundred thousand dead(granted mostly civillian), however that probably saved millions of lives on both sides. and as we were defending against an agressor(they did start the war) more force is justified.
they wouldnt have done so. they didnt give up after the first bomb, i doubt a bomb threat would persuade them.Yes, but we killed millions of innocent civilians – not soldiers – in doing so. The Church teaches that evil cannot be done in order to accomplish good.
Even if Hiroshima was justified, what is the justification for Nagasaki? We barely gave any time at all for Japan to surrender.
They didn’t give up because we only gave them three days to deliberate. Why wouldn’t they have given up?they wouldnt have done so. they didnt give up after the first bomb, i doubt a bomb threat would persuade them.
we didnt kill millions with those 2 bombs, even if you add up the decades of radation victims it was still less than 1 million. and just like in this country every civilian was involved directly in the war effort in some way. in a way there were no true civillians.Yes, but we killed millions of innocent civilians – not soldiers – in doing so. The Church teaches that evil cannot be done in order to accomplish good.
Even if Hiroshima was justified, what is the justification for Nagasaki? We barely gave any time at all for Japan to surrender.
I know, I have heard and do believe that this was a necessary action.I was just thinking what could have been better. Hey, I am a Vietnam Vet. I know everything you could ever imagine about being badmouthed for your best efforts. Been there and done that.the problem with droping them in an uninhabitated place is you lose effect. these bombs were like noting else ever seen. the whole point was the bluff that we had tons of these things as opposed to two. we didnt have spares immeditealy on hand.
and most estimates indicate that in the island to island fighting it would take to invade and defeat japan in a traditional way, more lives would have been lost than had been lost in the entire pacific theater up to that point. i dont think we were obliged to knowingly take a course of war that would not ensure sucess and would have cost more lives in the long run.
True, and the only way you can have a reasonable round of MMQ is to look at the situation given the information that was available at the time, not what we know now.This is a really hard question. On one hand we were attacked without provocation. We did have an obligation to defend our country and I have no problem with that. I guess I would have been more in favor of us letting rip a couple of BIG BOYS in uninhabited areas as a warning , if there was no response I would have aimed at more Military targets rather than civilian inhabited areas.
Regardless, It’s Monday morning quarterbacking.
Dad was on an attack transport and would have been there too.A very large percentage of my generation would not have been born if those bombs had not been dropped. Daddy was being mustered out of Europe after VE day and was headed for an attack on the Japanese Mainland, as were the fathers-to-be of many others I know, and all indications are that most of them would have been killed in the effort.
Yes, they were justified. War is Hell.
because your kind of hell where a total war by dictators was met and ended by the total war response of western democraices would be preferable to the hell of a nazi death camp? or the human-subject experimentation lab the Japanese ran in Manchuria? or the Warsaw ghetto? or a kempeitai or gestapo or SS interrogation cell?The ends justifies the means? Consequentialist ethics? Warning, warning, Will Robinson - that way lies hell.
Let’s try a return to virtue ethics as the Church would have us do. Before we ask the question, “What am I to do?” ask, “What kind of person ought I be and what kind of person will I be after I make this moral decision?”
The men who developed the bomb almost universally recoiled in horror. Perhaps, their vision exceeded that of the politicians, whose only interest is the next election.
Total war and unconditional surrender may not be concepts in harmony with church teaching.
edit: Actually You were trying to defend consequentialist ethics total war and unconditional surrender, but get the point I’m sure.because your kind of hell where a total war by dictators was met and ended by the total war response of western democraices would be preferable to the hell of a nazi death camp? or the human-subject experimentation lab the Japanese ran in Manchuria? or the Warsaw ghetto? or a kempeitai or gestapo or SS interrogation cell?
Where do you get this? I never said the war was not justified. Take two deep cleansing breaths and calm down.
and your moral advice to the Chinese in Manchuria, the Filipinos, Jews everywhere, the Brits, Canadians, South Africans, Belgians, Finns, Dutch, Poles, Czechs, Russians, French, Norwegians, Danes, Australians, New Zealanders, et al. circa 1940 would be – it is moral to submit to slaughter, don’t take up arms, God will prevail??? you’d be a better person starving to death in a labor camp, next stop the ovens?
Once again, try to avoid hysteria. I never said the war was not justified.
pacificists and totalitarian all ditctators agree: submission is Korrect!
Two more cleansing breaths for you… much better
see, I can plan the Platitude Game much better than you.
except you have to set up a straw man to to do it . No cheating now!
I’m going to hazard a guess that you don’t even understand the concept of unconditional surrender in 1945.
I’m going to hazard a guess that you read what you wanted to read and not what I wrote. If you would like to try again in a civil tone and engage what I actually wrote, I’ll be here for a little while. Try to rationally defend consequentialist ethics, total war, and unconditional surrender. Those are the points you are attempting to disagree with.
strawmen noted. evasions noted. want to try again? what would your advice be to people caught up in a total war by brutal dictatorships bent on complete domination and murder of your fellow citizens? that’s a fairly direct question.edit: Actually You were trying to defend consequentialist ethics total war and unconditional surrender, but get the point I’m sure.
The thread is about the use of the Atomic bomb, not Just War Doctrine. Certainly the war was just. And yet the ends do not justify the means.strawmen noted. evasions noted. want to try again? what would your advice be to people caught up in a total war by brutal dictatorships bent on complete domination and murder of your fellow citizens? that’s a fairly direct question.
submission? a hand wave argument? have you thought any of this through yet?
the atomic bombs and the air war were fully justified.The thread is about the use of the Atomic bomb, not Just War Doctrine. Certainly the war was just. And yet the ends do not justify the means.
I find the “every civilian was involved in the war effort and therefore a legitimate target” argument specious and self serving.
The allies said they would not bomb the rail lines used to transport Jews to concentration camps because it would divert resources away from military targets from and the real task of winning the war. They also intentionally dropped tons of munitions and two atomic bombs on essentially civilian populations but did not seem to notice they were not military targets. That’s total war for ya.
How to win the war without the bombs? Can’t help you there, but that does not mean that the ends justify the means.