dropping the bomb on japan? yes or no?

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NuclearPenguin

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Bruin said:
Hosker said:
I don't believe the killing of innocent people is ever justifiable.
Tell that to a bunch of generals.

Or the Romans.

Or the Brits.

Or any country that's survived to the modern day.

They'll just laugh in your face.
Faulty logic is faulty.
 

CitySquirrel

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RicoADF said:
They didn't surrender when it was dropped on Hiroshima, so a small isolated island wouldn't have worked. Plus they ONLY had 2 bombs, they'd have been screwed if they did that and the surrender didn't come about as it'd have taken time to make more.
Also, like it or not, its war and people die. I recall reading that more died in the fire bombings by B-29's then the 2 nukes, so in the grand scheme of things it was the lesser of 2 evils.
As someone else cleverly pointed out, they did not have youtube at the time. Someone comes and says to you "Sir,Hiroshima is gone" and you look at them like they are nuts. Even assuming all your arguments are true, there would have been no harm in waiting a week before the next bomb. Or sending a message to go see what was left of Hiroshima, and take a few days to think on that.

But what do I know?

Mimsofthedawg said:
You are just... you should be smacked. Your logic and philosophy is wrong on almost every level. the three days between Hiroshiman and Nagasaki were MORE THAN enough for hte japan to know what hit them. the Japanese emperor wanted to surrender after the first bomb, but the despotism that controlled the government refused. He had to go behind their backs with a radio broad cast to create popular opinion (the peasants considered him a god, so obviously they'd follow his choice over a bunch of no name generals).
It occurred to me that you basically just argued that it was the will of the emperor, who cleverly avoided the desires of his commanders, that stopped the war. Thus, according to your explanation of things, it was about the emperor and the will of the peasants. So all you needed to convince the one man who, you state as fact, managed to end the war single-handedly anyway. Therefore, it may still have been possible to do this without killing 66,000 civilians (the lowest estimate, made by the people who dropped the bomb). So, my idea of blowing up a small island (and despite what Vetterthorir783 thinks, there are many small islands in volcanic regions) still might have worked. I don't know for sure, and neither do you.

Mimsofthedawg said:
Lastly, your attempt to be "neutral" and point out the futility of such a discussion is inherently narrowminded. For example, it is proven that humans, due to their dualistic nature, HARDLY EVER admit their views were wrong, but upon reflexion, many people have their views refined. Therefore, petty discussions such as this can INCREASE intellect and logic, rather than prove to be a trivial waste of time. Under your philosophy, nothing is accomplished. People are left in their ignorance or they never even knew a problem existed. Neither of which breeds a society that is self-aware, liberal, and just. It is the inherent gift of man to establish forums for discussion on any topic for the greater enlightenment of society.
I never attempted to be neutral. If I didn't make it clear (and I think I did make it clear, because you threatened me with violence for my belief) I think that dropping the bombs was a horrible thing. I think that there are other things that should have been tried first. I think that dropping atomic weapons is one of the worst things you can do to a people and that they should have been a last resort. And, frankly, I think that people desperately need to feel that it was justified because the alternative is horrific.

I did not say I was neutral, what I said was that this discussion is useless. And you know what? When you saw that I wrote something you disagreed with, you first response was not "reflexion" but the sentiment that I was so wrong that I needed to be hit. I think, therefore, that my supposition was shown to be correct. You talk about this like it is a platonic dialog, but there is no logic here because we are making statements about the unknowable (i.e. what would have happened).

If you REALLY wanted to get into a meaningful dialog about this, we should drop the whole real world example and start from the ground up trying to determine the worth of a human life, how much responsibility a civilian carries for the actions of his or her leaders, whether civilian targets are ever justifiable in warfare, and several other topics that can be used as a baseline to understand the situation. That isn't what we have here. What we have here is a group of people arguing about unknowable variables to rationally back up their previously held emotional reactions. And, yes, I include myself here: all my arguments hinge on the belief that killing that many civilians is unjustifiable, something that I admittedly have not done the philosophical legwork to determine for sure. If you wish to do that, I would gladly start that discussion with you (in another thread) so long as some ground rules are in place. Specifically, there can be no real dialog when the chief means of argument are name calling and ridicule, as is so prominently displayed in this thread.
 

farmerboy219

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Another of these. To add to the continuing quoting of quoting, here is what I've said previously on the subject:

paulgruberman said:
My post in the earlier thread on this subject contains a link to the intelligence intercept summaries with information that shaped the decisions made by the people on the spot and not privy to decades of additional information, nor time for careful sifting of the mountain of information available for alternate interpretations, that all of us armchair presidents can enjoy while passing judgement on them.

I shall include the pertinant lines again, so perhaps it is more likely you'll try to open the link to those intelligence intercepts, and realize it was one day's worth and a summary, at that:
We should, however, give a fair hearing to the argument that "if the enemy actually carries out a landing, we will concentrate all our strength on a counter-attack and will thus bring about his disillusionment." I understand from your July 17 message ... that the Government and the Military are convinced that we will still be able to give the enemy considerable shock with our war strength.
This was July 22, 1945. Japanese leadership still felt it could fight on just two weeks before the first bomb was dropped.
And a link, so you don't have to follow the string of quotes to get to the intelligence intercepts mentioned: "MAGIC" - Diplomatic Summary 1214
 

Legendary Alucard

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maddawg IAJI said:
The Japanese weren't gonna stop. We gave them a warning, they refused, we dropped the bomb. We let them look at what just happened, we asked them again and they did not listen. So we dropped another one.

You can't say we didn't give the Japanese ample warning to surrender and while I don't condone mass killings like in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, I can see how it saved countless lives on both sides of the fighting.
So Becaus a Goverment doesnt listen.. You Kill ppl that had nothing to do with the war.. Yea it makes Sense.. Real American Tactic.. I think Pearl Harbor was a Good move.. Atleast Those soldiers died for there country.. and they Choose to be there.. But Bombing a Town full of Woman and Children is just Playing wrong :s
 

Hosker

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DazBurger said:
Hosker said:
DazBurger said:
Hosker said:
thatcanadianguy said:
Hosker said:
I don't believe the killing of innocent people is ever justifiable.
you ask if japanese civilans deserved to be bombed as they were. did the dockside workers at pearl deserve to be bombed? did the unsuspecting crews of those battle ships deserve to be bombed, burned or drowned, in an unprovoked attack? think bout who started the war with america first.
The Japanese were attacking soldiers, not civilians.
Thats one think I never really understood.

Why does soldiers have less right to live then civilians?

As you probably already have an answer to that then lemmie ask: What about a conscripted soldier?
It is better than killing women and children.

Why exactly? Why are killing women any worse than men? Sounds like sexism...
War has always been fought by the men and I don't see why WW2 should have be any different
 

Plurralbles

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I think the bombings were needed as a political tool for the US to have power in japan instead of the Soviets who would have steamrolled in. Which I think we should have let them. A million casualties on their side but power over the japanese island would have changed the politics of the next half century.
 

Evil mr dave

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CitySquirrel said:
You sound like you have already made up your mind. However, I will suggest a hypothetical: iimagine a scenario where we contacted the Japanese government and told them "please observe this small uninhabited island over here." Then, BOOM. "Now, you have 24 hours to surrender or that will happen to several undisclosed locations within your country."
That was one of the options put forward by the US government as a way to demostrate the power of the bomb (although I beleive they wanted to perform a demostartion over Tokyo bay) but they had spent billions of dollars (in there money) on develpoing the bomb's and they were going to use them on real targets.
 
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I think overall as many people have already said although devastating with the effects still felt today I think it overall resulted in the immediate lowering of the death toll. Also it sent a good message to the world that nuclear warfare is dangerous and should never ever be implemented again.
 

JeanLuc761

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paulgruberman said:
Another of these. To add to the continuing quoting of quoting, here is what I've said previously on the subject:

paulgruberman said:
My post in the earlier thread on this subject contains a link to the intelligence intercept summaries with information that shaped the decisions made by the people on the spot and not privy to decades of additional information, nor time for careful sifting of the mountain of information available for alternate interpretations, that all of us armchair presidents can enjoy while passing judgement on them.

I shall include the pertinant lines again, so perhaps it is more likely you'll try to open the link to those intelligence intercepts, and realize it was one day's worth and a summary, at that:
We should, however, give a fair hearing to the argument that "if the enemy actually carries out a landing, we will concentrate all our strength on a counter-attack and will thus bring about his disillusionment." I understand from your July 17 message ... that the Government and the Military are convinced that we will still be able to give the enemy considerable shock with our war strength.
This was July 22, 1945. Japanese leadership still felt it could fight on just two weeks before the first bomb was dropped.
And a link, so you don't have to follow the string of quotes to get to the intelligence intercepts mentioned: "MAGIC" - Diplomatic Summary 1214
This is a beautiful post and I applaud you for it.

I'm still of the conviction that dropping the bombs was the right thing to do, and nothing anyone has said over the last 13 pages has convinced me otherwise. We can sit back and judge the American government, condemning them, acting like Americans are a bunch of brutal animals for what they did, but you have to look at things relatively, and with the information available at the time.

Japan was going to continue to fight to the death, come hell or high water. If they weren't stopped, immediately, the death toll would have been unimaginable

Do people REALLY think we just dropped the bomb on them for giggles?
 

Cazza

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It wasn't right. It worked though and thats all that matters now. Anyone who said it "save more lifes" is just wrong. There are more ways to end a war then invade or bomb. It's called talking.
 

Hosker

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Evil mr dave said:
CitySquirrel said:
You sound like you have already made up your mind. However, I will suggest a hypothetical: iimagine a scenario where we contacted the Japanese government and told them "please observe this small uninhabited island over here." Then, BOOM. "Now, you have 24 hours to surrender or that will happen to several undisclosed locations within your country."
That was one of the options put forward by the US government as a way to demostrate the power of the bomb (although I beleive they wanted to perform a demostartion over Tokyo bay) but they had spent billions of dollars (in there money) on develpoing the bomb's and they were going to use them on real targets.
On wikipedia it says they had plans to make more if they didn't surrender after the second. I'm not sure how true this information is however
"The U.S. expected to have another atomic bomb ready for use in the third week of August, with three more in September and a further three in October"
 

JeanLuc761

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Cazza said:
It wasn't right. It worked though and thats all that matters now. Anyone who said it "save more lifes" is just wrong. There are more ways to end a war then invade or bomb. It's called talking.
And this, folks, is what's known as extreme naivete. You simply can't resolve every dispute by just talking. That's not how the world works.
 

harv3034

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In a way, the desision to drop the bombs may have saved Japan.

With the end of the war in Europe, the soviet union was starting to turn it's attention towards the Far East. Being that Russia is pretty close to Japanese ocupied China and Japan itslef, they were likely considering an invasion of their oun. It is likely that such an invasion would have coincided with the American invasion and would probably resulted in a similar post-war situation as was experienced in Germany.

Yes, dropping the bombs killed thousands of people. Yes, two major cities were destroyed in the process. And Yes people are still suffering the effects of radiation. But when you consider the potential loss of life that would have resulted from an invasion (most likely on two fronts), and the suffering that would have resulted form a country divided (like what happened to Berlin, and all of Germany), one can maybe see that the dropping of the bombs was the lesser of two evils.
 

Cazza

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JeanLuc761 said:
Cazza said:
It wasn't right. It worked though and thats all that matters now. Anyone who said it "save more lifes" is just wrong. There are more ways to end a war then invade or bomb. It's called talking.
And this, folks, is what's known as extreme naivete. You simply can't resolve every dispute by just talking. That's not how the world works.
Well live in your depressing "knowledgeable" world. Must suck for you. I believe that everything can come to an understanding. It's just some people don't go to the lenght to make sure the shit doesn't hit the fan.
 

direkiller

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Dec 4, 2008
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JeanLuc761 said:
paulgruberman said:
Another of these. To add to the continuing quoting of quoting, here is what I've said previously on the subject:

paulgruberman said:
My post in the earlier thread on this subject contains a link to the intelligence intercept summaries with information that shaped the decisions made by the people on the spot and not privy to decades of additional information, nor time for careful sifting of the mountain of information available for alternate interpretations, that all of us armchair presidents can enjoy while passing judgement on them.

I shall include the pertinant lines again, so perhaps it is more likely you'll try to open the link to those intelligence intercepts, and realize it was one day's worth and a summary, at that:
We should, however, give a fair hearing to the argument that "if the enemy actually carries out a landing, we will concentrate all our strength on a counter-attack and will thus bring about his disillusionment." I understand from your July 17 message ... that the Government and the Military are convinced that we will still be able to give the enemy considerable shock with our war strength.
This was July 22, 1945. Japanese leadership still felt it could fight on just two weeks before the first bomb was dropped.
And a link, so you don't have to follow the string of quotes to get to the intelligence intercepts mentioned: "MAGIC" - Diplomatic Summary 1214
This is a beautiful post and I applaud you for it.

I'm still of the conviction that dropping the bombs was the right thing to do, and nothing anyone has said over the last 13 pages has convinced me otherwise. We can sit back and judge the American government, condemning them, acting like Americans are a bunch of brutal animals for what they did, but you have to look at things relatively, and with the information available at the time.

Japan was going to continue to fight to the death, come hell or high water. If they weren't stopped, immediately, the death toll would have been unimaginable

Do people REALLY think we just dropped the bomb on them for giggles?
To be fair we judge outer contrary on there historical decisions(England,France treaty of Versailles). Turnabout is only fair play.
 

Knusper

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heavymedicombo said:
cfieldplatt said:
Obviously, nearly all the casualties from the 2 bombs were civilians. If the Yanks invaded instead, most of the deaths would be military. No civilian asked to be in the war or fight for it.

Yeah... so basically, I would have rather it never happened.
no, civilians would be hurt. as in raped and killed angrily.
I'm fairly sure that no matter how angry the Yanks were by the end of the war, they wouldn't kill and maim as many civilians as the two nukes, and then make their suffering be passed down through generations if they had invaded.
 

run_forrest_run

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I guess it was necessary. The Japanese were possibly the best soldiers in the world. The only reason they didn't stop is because their emperor, who was essentially a god to them, admitted defeat. Probably a good thing the Americans didn't invade the main land. The losses would have been insane, especially for the americans.