Gamblerjoe said:
at another point, i was talking about the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs with a member of my family who served in the navy most of their life. i said that i thought it was wrong that so many innocent civilians had to die, and their response was "would you rather that a bunch of military personnel like me died in stead?" I really didnt know how to respond to that. i mean seriously? do most members of the military believe that civilians deserve to die and that the people actually doing the fighting deserve to live?
Personally, I would have countered with facts. ~Recently released documentation pertaining to American spies in the Japanese government during that time revealed that the Japanese were strongly considering surrender at that point. They had been negotiating terms so that the royal family could still hold a position, even if it was just as a figurehead. The bombs were dropped because the US got tired of waiting for a consensus to be reached because with the western front won, they feared that the Russians would turn their attention to Japan, and we simply could not let communists use Japan as a base of operations.
In short, we killed a bunch of Japanese civilians because we hated Russia.
Wish that the History channel would go back to covering WWII and stuff, I got this info from PBS. With all the documentation that is being declassified about that period of time, they could really get people to think about our society. Of course, that's why it'll never happen. God forbid someone questions about what was supposedly the most righteous thing our military has ever done.
On topic, ersatz authority figures make me laugh. Congradulations, you served (emphasis on the past tense) in the military. Unless you're currently an active officer, I could care shit less about what you tell me to do. Heck, even then, unless it pertains to a crisis situation, I'm likely to ignore you regardless. Your mastery of the ability to point the shooty end of a gun at something does not make you the authority on animal husbandry. (A skill for which I am told there a limitless uses)