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Were Hiroshima and Nagasaki Racist Acts?
International Business Times ^
| August 5, 2011
| Palash Ghosh
Posted on 08/09/2014 1:11:12 AM PDT by right-wing agnostic
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The author regurgitates the ahistorical bull $hit pushed by the late Howard Zinn and like-minded historians that the United States only dropped the atomic bombs on Japan because they were predominately a white (read: racist) culture in 1945. The author does note, seemingly dismissively, that Germany had surrendered before we tested the first atomic bomb at the Alamogordo Bombing and Gunnery Range in New Mexico on July 16, 1945. My pet peeve, other than the United States being considered a racist country for using the atomic bombs on Japan, is that they are often referred to as "nuclear" bombs. But we did not test our first thermonuclear bomb until November 1, 1952 when President Harry Truman ordered the hydrogen bomb, "Ivy Mike", to be tested on Enewetak Atoll in the Pacific./rwa
To: right-wing agnostic
The fact stood right out that we didn’t have a nuke to drop on Berlin. If we did, we would have used it. We did a terrific amount of damage on German targets much worse than the two nukes we dropped on Japan. Dresden comes to mind. Along with the red army invasion of Berlin.
And this isiot author makes no mention of Japanese belief in their superior race. Chinese weren’t even thought of as human beings when the imperial army marched through Shanghai and Nanking.
To: right-wing agnostic
there have been a lot of arguments made about this. My feeling is that it was absolutely necessary to end the war decisively and on America's terms. In the absence of such a decisive American victory, the war would have continued and the resulting reality would almost certainly have been less favorable for America. So, I don't think it was racist at all, it was a final chess move designed to place America squarely and undeniably at the top of the global food chain. And here we are. still.
3
posted on
08/09/2014 1:37:46 AM PDT
by
RC one
(Militarized law enforcement is just a nice way of saying martial law enforcement.)
To: right-wing agnostic
To: PastorBooks
I always thought it was a shame that the Gadget wasn’t ready in time for the European Theater.
5
posted on
08/09/2014 1:44:35 AM PDT
by
cynwoody
To: right-wing agnostic
Incidentally, my grandfather was stationed on Guam in the Army Air Corps. His job was to load bombs onto trucks and ships. He always claimed that he was twice tasked with driving a truck loaded with the A-Bombs down a long pier to waiting ships. He claimed he had no idea what the first one was other than "the biggest GD bomb I had ever seen" but he knew what was in the back of his truck the second time. Apparently a major storm was throwing waves over the pier the second time as he drove down it with a giant atomic bomb in the back of his truck.
That was his story anyways.
Grandma, bless her heart, was a nurse stationed at Pearl Harbor and then later at Saipan. She had some good stories too.
A toast to all WW2 vets. America's finest generation.
6
posted on
08/09/2014 1:46:20 AM PDT
by
RC one
(Militarized law enforcement is just a nice way of saying martial law enforcement.)
To: right-wing agnostic
No but they were effective
7
posted on
08/09/2014 1:48:36 AM PDT
by
wardaddy
(we will not take back our way of life through peaceful means.....i have 5 kids....i fear for them)
To: right-wing agnostic
Nuclear = “A-Bomb” and Thermonuclear = “H-Bomb” IIRC. BTW, I believe the “trigger” on an “H-Bomb” that gets the ball rolling is a built-in “A-Bomb” inside. Any physicists here can confirm that or correct me.
8
posted on
08/09/2014 1:54:40 AM PDT
by
2ndDivisionVet
(The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out for himself.)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
BTW, I believe the trigger on an H-Bomb that gets the ball rolling is a built-in A-Bomb inside. Yep.
The X-ray and gamma ray pulse from the primary compresses the secondary, initiating a fusion reaction, which amplifies the yield considerably.
9
posted on
08/09/2014 2:08:17 AM PDT
by
cynwoody
To: right-wing agnostic
Racist?
Which side was yellow?
10
posted on
08/09/2014 2:09:48 AM PDT
by
Vendome
(Don't take life so seriously-you won't live through it anyway-Enjoy Yourself ala Louis Prima)
To: right-wing agnostic
i have an uncle---who is still alive---who said that he was in a ship in the waters near Japan and getting ready to be among the first troops to invade Japan when the bombs fell. He may have died a very young man if the bombs were not dropped and he had to fight his way into Japan. The bombs may have saved his life.
So I agree completely with the decision to drop the two bombs.
He spent a few quiet months in Japan soon after the surrender.
To: right-wing agnostic
Did anyone point out that Germany is not an island? Germany was being invaded on two fronts, and there was no way Germany could have held out, like Japan possibly could have.
To: right-wing agnostic
Did anyone point out that Germany is not an island? Germany was being invaded on two fronts, and there was no way Germany could have held out, like Japan possibly could have.
To: cynwoody
And each single ICBM or SLBM holds about eight of those in a MIRV configuration, meaning eight separate targets (bases, ports, cities, industrial complexes or what have you) can be targeted and utterly destroyed, IIRC.
14
posted on
08/09/2014 2:43:37 AM PDT
by
2ndDivisionVet
(The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out for himself.)
To: right-wing agnostic
Was the sneak attack on Pearl Harbor racist? Was the war in the Pacific racist?
15
posted on
08/09/2014 2:47:11 AM PDT
by
monocle
To: RC one
No, we are not on top anymore. Came and went. We have allowed political correctness to trump all else: survival, jobs, safety, economy, and our very existence. All the 70s hippies and celebrities cost us dearly, like ripples through a pond we have all allowed a small majority to dictate what is right and wrong. We could have won Vietnam decisively, the Gulf War, and now Iraq and Afghanistan. Vietnam we should have burnt those jungles to the ground and scoured every last vestige of NLF out and beaten them so badly into submission that they would not threaten anyone for a thousand years. The Gulf was fine, but the second time around we should have given the Kurds authority and let them rule. In Afghanistan we should have reduced those mountains to rubble and trapped all the cockroaches inside, burnt the poppy fields and scoured the earth so that none could ever grow there again. We should have let Israel go into Gaza and utterly obliterated anyone even thinking of taking up arms against the Jewish people.
But nope, a few celebrities and political figures changed the way one generation thought and now they are all grown up.
To: john mirse
My late father was sitting on Okinawa with a few other guys preparing to invade. He was sent to Tsingtao, China to pacify the place instead.
17
posted on
08/09/2014 2:51:19 AM PDT
by
2ndDivisionVet
(The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out for himself.)
To: right-wing agnostic
So what if they were? What is wrong with protecting one’s extended family?
18
posted on
08/09/2014 2:58:36 AM PDT
by
IChing
To: right-wing agnostic
I believe nuclear is a fair term for an atomic, or fission, bomb.
To: right-wing agnostic
20
posted on
08/09/2014 2:59:46 AM PDT
by
RWB Patriot
("My ability is a value that must be earned and I don't recognize anyone's need as a claim on me.")
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