What Has Your Country Ever Done For Us?!

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Kinguendo

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Apr 10, 2009
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Arnoxthe1 said:
What has the USA given the world? A taste of true freedom.
Ah freedom, free to... not make a decision on your national debt that will cause you to default and become the financial equivalent of a drug addict. No America, we will not give you another fix. You hurt Chinas feelings and vomited on Europes shoes!

Quite frankly, we find your right-wing rhetoric to be distasteful and we can all plainly see that its the reason you are going down the tubes... enjoy your "freedom" which you claimed to have the entire time it was being taken away from you, "god" forbid you stop saying "USA #1" long enough to realise you are being brainwashed into thinking what you have is the best and you couldnt possibly be better or that the rest of the civilized world passed you by years ago.
 

dogenzakaminion

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Jun 15, 2010
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We gave the world the areosol spraycan, so without us, you would all be completely stinky. We also gave to world the paperclip. So yeah, suck on it staples!
 

specialk730

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Jul 26, 2011
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The Brezel, the Haber Process, the first artifically made rubber, various high quality guns, basically most of the saturn rocket, nihilism, and really organised genocide.

the other country i am from gave us the idea of vinegar on chips, and most awesomely the theory of gravity and calculus(though a guy from the other country claimed to have odne it too). and the dividing line between hemispheres

you can probably guess the countries?
 

TheEvilCheese

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Dec 16, 2008
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The worlds first Programming language and TV broadcast.

You're welcome.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_inventions
 

Bassik

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Jun 15, 2011
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Us Dutchmen gave the world many black friends!

Okay, that was actually horrible.
 

commodore96

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Aug 31, 2010
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UberNoodle said:
There was nothing humane about those bombs. Rationalising it as 'the only way to end the war', as many historians do, is as offensive and dehumanising as rationalising 9/11 as America reaping what America had sowed. If you ever make it to Hiroshima, go to the bomb museum and you will see. Japan's total war effort had already broken the country. It's leadership was fragmented and on the verge of major change. Other avenues were being investigated to end the war. Those bombs was the only way to end the war with the outcome America wanted.

The concept that Japan was a culture in which revolt was impossible is almost mythical. Less than 90 years earlier, Japan had successfully revolted against iron fisted Shoganate rule and its rigid and regimented feudal caste system. Within a few decades, the nation had accomplished perhaps the most unprecedented cultural and social revolutions this world has yet seen. It's entirely possible that many more Japanese would have suffered if their war effort had gone on much longer, but they were already greatly suffering. A ship like the Yamato was sent out without enough fuel to return. The war would have ended. The bombs ended it sooner, but no amount of rationalisation can make them in any way 'humane', or not a war-crime.

But yeah, as for nuclear weapons, the USA can take that claim to fame, if it wants. It has the most of them anyway.
Yeah because we all know that a joint USSR and USA invasion of Japan would have saved so many lives of the Japanese. If you want to use number of Japanese lives than nuclear bombs were the way to go. If you want humane deaths of the Japanese people again nuclear bombs were the way to go.
 

TheEvilCheese

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Dec 16, 2008
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aei_haruko said:
America:

invented pennacillin
I assume you mean penicillin? and it is commonly attributed to Alexander Fleming (Scottish) and the first published reference of it was by John Tyndall (Irish) over 40 years prior. So how was it an American invention?
 

UberNoodle

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Apr 6, 2010
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commodore96 said:
UberNoodle said:
There was nothing humane about those bombs. Rationalising it as 'the only way to end the war', as many historians do, is as offensive and dehumanising as rationalising 9/11 as America reaping what America had sowed. If you ever make it to Hiroshima, go to the bomb museum and you will see. Japan's total war effort had already broken the country. It's leadership was fragmented and on the verge of major change. Other avenues were being investigated to end the war. Those bombs was the only way to end the war with the outcome America wanted.

The concept that Japan was a culture in which revolt was impossible is almost mythical. Less than 90 years earlier, Japan had successfully revolted against iron fisted Shoganate rule and its rigid and regimented feudal caste system. Within a few decades, the nation had accomplished perhaps the most unprecedented cultural and social revolutions this world has yet seen. It's entirely possible that many more Japanese would have suffered if their war effort had gone on much longer, but they were already greatly suffering. A ship like the Yamato was sent out without enough fuel to return. The war would have ended. The bombs ended it sooner, but no amount of rationalisation can make them in any way 'humane', or not a war-crime.

But yeah, as for nuclear weapons, the USA can take that claim to fame, if it wants. It has the most of them anyway.
Yeah because we all know that a joint USSR and USA invasion of Japan would have saved so many lives of the Japanese. If you want to use number of Japanese lives than nuclear bombs were the way to go. If you want humane deaths of the Japanese people again nuclear bombs were the way to go.
I wonder how you would respond were it your own nation and people.

Well, we don't 'all know' but we can 'presume'. Anyway, your response is flawed for equating a manned invasion with two atomic weapons and their indiscriminate devastation, immediate and for generations afterward. Then again, perhaps if the USA had shown the bombs' power to Japan, the Japanese could have surrendered. At least give the nation time to assimilate the situation after the first bomb before dropping the second!

But we don't know. However, I find the attitude that the bombs were dropped to 'save the Japanese' laughable. If the shoe was on the other foot, say, LA and San Francisco, the treatment in history might be a lot different. I understand that war is war, but there's no way one can paint those bombs in a positive light, especially with the 'humane' brush.

Anyway, just a quick Google found this (http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0805-24.htm). I thought it was interesting, but it's not where I have gotten my information. But it does cover American misconceptions and inaccuracies about the bombs and why that could be so.

My views on all this are largely based on primary experiences here in Japan. But I think that a spade should be called a spade. Atrocity in war are not just for the losers to accept. Japan has much to answer for itself in terms of that too. Anyway, don't think I am out to demonise any nation or culture here.
 

aei_haruko

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Jun 12, 2011
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TheEvilCheese said:
The worlds first Programming language and TV broadcast.

You're welcome.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_inventions
whoops, thought it was mass produced in america during word war 2, thatd be my bad
 

stef1987

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Jan 11, 2011
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waffles,
good chocolates,
good beer,
french fries (they're not actually french),
the saxophone (I think),
molesters,
...

woops, let's forget that last one
 

aei_haruko

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Jun 12, 2011
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commodore96 said:
UberNoodle said:
There was nothing humane about those bombs. Rationalising it as 'the only way to end the war', as many historians do, is as offensive and dehumanising as rationalising 9/11 as America reaping what America had sowed. If you ever make it to Hiroshima, go to the bomb museum and you will see. Japan's total war effort had already broken the country. It's leadership was fragmented and on the verge of major change. Other avenues were being investigated to end the war. Those bombs was the only way to end the war with the outcome America wanted.

The concept that Japan was a culture in which revolt was impossible is almost mythical. Less than 90 years earlier, Japan had successfully revolted against iron fisted Shoganate rule and its rigid and regimented feudal caste system. Within a few decades, the nation had accomplished perhaps the most unprecedented cultural and social revolutions this world has yet seen. It's entirely possible that many more Japanese would have suffered if their war effort had gone on much longer, but they were already greatly suffering. A ship like the Yamato was sent out without enough fuel to return. The war would have ended. The bombs ended it sooner, but no amount of rationalisation can make them in any way 'humane', or not a war-crime.

But yeah, as for nuclear weapons, the USA can take that claim to fame, if it wants. It has the most of them anyway.
Yeah because we all know that a joint USSR and USA invasion of Japan would have saved so many lives of the Japanese. If you want to use number of Japanese lives than nuclear bombs were the way to go. If you want humane deaths of the Japanese people again nuclear bombs were the way to go.
Iwo jima:
little over 8 miles overall, give or take a few
21,000 japanese casualties
26,000 american
dug in fighting. lasted a bit over a month.
X-day, proposed invasion of mainland Japan.
Allied leaders proposed that if the main assult would last 90 days, there would be 456,000 casualties, if another 90 days were needed, then there would be upwards of a million casualties
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Downfall
The japanese were already using suicide soldiers, and the fighting in the pacific
The battle of okinawa 62,000 casualties not including 12,000 killed or missing, 82 days.
If the war would've gone on longer, ore and more people would be killed, the japanese almost never surrendered in the pacific campaign. It was considered a disgrace to the emporer, and to do so would be unthinkable.
now tell me, how is that humane to either side?
 

UberNoodle

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Apr 6, 2010
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aei_haruko said:
commodore96 said:
UberNoodle said:
There was nothing humane about those bombs. Rationalising it as 'the only way to end the war', as many historians do, is as offensive and dehumanising as rationalising 9/11 as America reaping what America had sowed. If you ever make it to Hiroshima, go to the bomb museum and you will see. Japan's total war effort had already broken the country. It's leadership was fragmented and on the verge of major change. Other avenues were being investigated to end the war. Those bombs was the only way to end the war with the outcome America wanted.

The concept that Japan was a culture in which revolt was impossible is almost mythical. Less than 90 years earlier, Japan had successfully revolted against iron fisted Shoganate rule and its rigid and regimented feudal caste system. Within a few decades, the nation had accomplished perhaps the most unprecedented cultural and social revolutions this world has yet seen. It's entirely possible that many more Japanese would have suffered if their war effort had gone on much longer, but they were already greatly suffering. A ship like the Yamato was sent out without enough fuel to return. The war would have ended. The bombs ended it sooner, but no amount of rationalisation can make them in any way 'humane', or not a war-crime.

But yeah, as for nuclear weapons, the USA can take that claim to fame, if it wants. It has the most of them anyway.
Yeah because we all know that a joint USSR and USA invasion of Japan would have saved so many lives of the Japanese. If you want to use number of Japanese lives than nuclear bombs were the way to go. If you want humane deaths of the Japanese people again nuclear bombs were the way to go.
Iwo jima:
little over 8 miles overall, give or take a few
21,000 japanese casualties
26,000 american
dug in fighting. lasted a bit over a month.
X-day, proposed invasion of mainland Japan.
Allied leaders proposed that if the main assult would last 90 days, there would be 456,000 casualties, if another 90 days were needed, then there would be upwards of a million casualties
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Downfall
The japanese were already using suicide soldiers, and the fighting in the pacific
The battle of okinawa 62,000 casualties not including 12,000 killed or missing, 82 days.
If the war would've gone on longer, ore and more people would be killed, the japanese almost never surrendered in the pacific campaign. It was considered a disgrace to the emporer, and to do so would be unthinkable.
now tell me, how is that humane to either side?
However it is presumptuous to assume that this wasn't all about to end regardless. Japan was broken, economically and spiritually. As I said above, the citizens were in suffering, so many cities were already devastated by conventional bombing, the fighting forces were demoralised and without resources (Yamato was sent out without enough fuel to return), and the leadership was already splintering. And with Russia entering the Pacific, apparently it had those splinters in a panic.

Japan did make attempts to broker peace but ultimately they were rejected. However, it can be argued that the USA was not going to tolerate any peace not on their own terms, especially via Russia. They also saw the tactical advantage of overcoming Japan on American terms. They had long lusted over the nation historically and were instrumental in prompting it to revolt against feudal caste oppression by the Shogonate, ironically in favour of the Emperor - and we know how that turned out.

In regard to the bombs, there are many well documented quotes and comments from the US and allies which clash rather strongly with the accepted version of events from the USA, such as the 'humane motivations' and 'need' for the bombs, and also the factually challenged assertion that the allies air dropped warnings before dropping the bombs and not after. And this view also hinges on the idea that the Japanese were all unyielding, unreasonable fanatics, incapable of revolt. In the 80 years that had passed from the nation's 'opening to the West' (through bloody revolution no less), it underwent perhaps the most daring and incredible technological, cultural and societal revolutions ever witnessed.

This begs the question -

If your government had just unleashed the two most powerful weapons ever created, thereby literally flattening two major cities and bringing upon the the survivors severe pain, death, cancers and then generations of congenital affect, wouldn't you try as hard as you could to paint yourself in as positive a light as possible? I think so. History is written by the victors, after all.
 

Leonartheinsane

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Jun 20, 2011
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Shirokurou said:
Russia saved Europe from the Tatar invasion (by taking one for the team for a few hundred years)
Russia saved Europe in 1812 (except you France)
Saved again in 1945 (Don't pretend the US did it, Berlin was taken by the USSR.
Didn't save us with the mongolian one though did you! And they were riding ponies...
 

Shirokurou

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Mar 8, 2010
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Leonartheinsane said:
Shirokurou said:
Russia saved Europe from the Tatar invasion (by taking one for the team for a few hundred years)
Russia saved Europe in 1812 (except you France)
Saved again in 1945 (Don't pretend the US did it, Berlin was taken by the USSR.
Didn't save us with the mongolian one though did you! And they were riding ponies...
Check your info.
Tatars and Mongols...
And ponies are delicious...
 

Coffinshaker

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Feb 16, 2011
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Chaos Marine said:
Coffinshaker said:
hmm... invented personal computers and the interwebs? and iphones.... so yeah, we're responsible for the downfall of civilization.
The computer was invented by an Italian man called Babage. It was more a cogitator engine though which was a crank powered computer for math.

[Edit] Also, Ireland invented the surname.
right... that's why I used the term "personal computer", as in, the kind of widely distributed computer for the general public.