W
Wirraway
Guest
I’m pointing out that your opinion is unsupported by any critical analysis. why are you taking it personally?Why are you so belligerent? I have a right to my opinion even if you don’t share it
I’m pointing out that your opinion is unsupported by any critical analysis. why are you taking it personally?Why are you so belligerent? I have a right to my opinion even if you don’t share it
I am taking it just the way you posted it angry and demanding. I am no military tactician but I know something that can kill 250,000 people in 2 bombs is way more force than the enemy hadI’m pointing out that your opinion is unsupported by any critical analysis. why are you taking it personally?
I’m glad the war ended by the means it did before another million or more people were killed. your mileage may vary.I am taking it just the way you posted it angry and demanding. I am no military tactician but I know something that can kill 250,000 people in 2 bombs is way more force than the enemy had
I don’t believe in nuclear war , even as a defensive measure, and it is not just…nor do I beleive my country right or wrong
I’m not bitter at the japanese. I own japanese trucks. I’m bitter at the blame-america crowd that gloms onto events in August '45 without the least understanding of the bigger picture. did you know that on this forum there’s a citation to an purported anti-nuke proclamation by the Pope which was clearly a forgery?Your personal stake is no bigger than mine, all my family served…its a long time to hang on to such bitterness
I still do not believe that when a country wages a just war, that any act is justified.
But you may never choose an inherently evil act - even if it is the lesser of two evils. Our acts become our character. If we choose inherently evil acts, we ourselves become evil.I am opposed to war. Nuclear weapons are terrible. But when faced with two evils we should always choose the lesser, and I firmly believe that ending the war via nuclear weapons was the lesser of letting the war drag on for years in which evermore deaths would have occured and families devestated.
I have offered no alternatives or facts? So what? I am not a military man. It is not my job to offer facts or alternatives. But that does not make me incapable of examining a situation as presented by history and evaluating the choice actually made in order to have a better choice the next time.except you have no viable alternative solutions, no facts, only bare statements devoid of **any **analysis and which are nothing more than mere conclusions. you’ve already admitted elsewhere that you have no idea how the war could have ended otherwise. , it happens that the allies chose, as confirmed by the Japanese authorities, the method that did end the war with the least human cost – the air campaign, as brutal as it was.
without the bombing of Japanese cities and in particular the atomic bombings, the total toll of Japanse and American losses soars into the millions if the DOWNFALL invasions went forward. this sounds like prosecuting a just war to me.
before you drone on and on about proportionality, come up with a viable alternative available to war planners in the summer of '45.
you also might want to acknowledge who was at fault here. hint: they had a god-emperor.
Sorry, but I find that argument silly. Why should we have been required to give Japan warning when they didn’t warn us about their attack on Pearl Harbor? War shouldn’t require enemies to give their enemies advance notice of attacks. That’s counter productive to winning a war.The bombs were not justified and evil. Japan was already in peace negotiations with the U.S. Also we gave no warning to Japan that we had such bombs. We just did it to show we could.
Yes, because attacks on civilians are always wrong. The circumstances do not matter. The provocation does not matter. The consequences do not matter. Attacking civilians is murder, and murder is intrinsically evil. End of discussion.most of the criticism of the bombings is done by merely citing a rule like the Just War Theory without applying it to the historical facts
I wonder how many people who post on this very site would never have been born because there fathers , grand fathers or great grand fathers, would have never made it home because of a forced entry.Yes, because attacks on civilians are always wrong. The circumstances do not matter. The provocation does not matter. The consequences do not matter. Attacking civilians is murder, and murder is intrinsically evil. End of discussion.
we’ll see if the discussion is over. let’s look at some facts.Yes, because attacks on civilians are always wrong. The circumstances do not matter. The provocation does not matter. The consequences do not matter. Attacking civilians is murder, and murder is intrinsically evil. End of discussion. …
There would have been no invasion. Japan was seeking peace at this point. The US refused b/c we wanted no conditions but then bombed them and then accepted a treaty with conditions. It made no sense.I wonder how many people who post on this very site would never have been born because there fathers , grand fathers or great grand fathers, would have never made it home because of a forced entry.
“If the invasion had gone through, the death toll would have been in the Millions, for both American and Japanese. The US military anticipated so many causalities, the company that produces the “Purple Heart” medal, awarded for wounded or killed in action produced over a million medals. There was such an overstock of the medal that they were still being awarded up to the first Gulf War”
How could the President and the Generals prosecuting the war have explained to at least a half million more gold star families that; Oh, well, sure we had the bomb, but we didn’t use it because we have an argument concerning the morals of ending the war by using all the weapons in the arsenal. “Sorry about that, but we just felt that our obligation to the enemy and there families was more important than your son, your husband, your brother, but take comfort that you loved one died to save the enemy. You can be proud!”
To do nothing to spare the majority of lives is the greater evil in this situationBut you may never choose an inherently evil act - even if it is the lesser of two evils. Our acts become our character. If we choose inherently evil acts, we ourselves become evil.
that’s completely wrong. this has been discussed at length in another thread in this forum. the army was in firm control of the government to the extent that there was even coup attempt at the eleventh hour.There would have been no invasion. Japan was seeking peace at this point. The US refused b/c we wanted no conditions but then bombed them and then accepted a treaty with conditions. It made no sense…