B
BibleReader
Guest
The problem is that the entire Japanese nation was geared to waging war.One of the most painful changes for me was to finally agree that the use of the Atomic bombs was not moral. Just war theory does not allow the deliberate targeting of civilians … even in total war. One may not use immoral means … deliberate targeting of civilians … that good may come of it. Double effect does not apply here because civilians were targeted deliberately as a means to demoralize the population.
(Fire bombing Dresden was immoral because it, too, targeted civilians …largely undefended civilians, by the way. It was purely an act of revenge. There was no strategic or tactical value to bombing Dresden. )
Yes, using the A-bombs saved far more lives than they took … at least by an order of magnitude. Yes, more lives were taken in ordinary bombing raids than by the a-bombs. The problem is that Catholic just war theory does not allow civilians to be targeted: any deliberate targeting of civilians is immoral … whether atomic, firebomb, conventional or otherwise.
Cities were targeted in WWII because there was a theory that the people would be demoralized and press their government to sue for peace. This theory has been thoroughly discredited by the experience of the English, the Germans and the Japanese.
I believe we can thanks Churchill for implementing civilian bombing. He realized England was in deep trouble because the Germans were very successfully bombing his airfields. The RAF could not get planes off the ground to stop them. England was slowly loosing the ability to defend itself. Our friend, Mr. Churchill, bombed German civilians to demoralize the German population AND to try to get Hitler to take his eye off the English airfields. It worked. Hitler was enraged and immediately began bombing population centers, not military targets. The pressure was off the English airfields and the RAF was safe(er). They had time to regroup; time to get the USA to help out a little. Their civilians were being killed nightly but, heck, they had a few to spare, right?
The demoralization of the civilian population tactic never works but the military tactic Churchill employed did work. It was immoral, never the less. We may not use immoral means to acheive a greater good. Period. Because the means are in and of themselves immoral, double effect is irrelevant.
Today, an enemy may rely upon the Main Steam Media to demoralize the population .
As I said up above, most of the women in Nagasaki work in the shipyards building war ships. Those ships blew people up, and transported troops who simply murdered women and children.
And that’s no exaggeration.
Is that “civilians”?
So, if we may not use immoral means to achieve a moral end, then the Pope’s prayers before the Battle of Lepanto were profoundly demonic?
Sorry. Nagasaki was sad, but understandable.
Ladies in Nagasaki building troop barges enabled Japanese men wearing helmets to laugh as they hammered chopsticks into the ears of little girls in Nagasaki.
It’s not so simple as moral absolutes.
The moral absolutes I see here in this thread kill children.