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#11
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![]() Both Eisenhower and MacArthur thought otherwise, but what do they know? Hell, they were just the generals running the war and commanding the troops who fought it. Probably a couple of bleeding-heart, pinko, commie, rat-******* liberals anyway. I'm sure YOU know FAR more about it than they ever did.... "Japan was already defeated and that dropping the bomb was completely unnecessary" Dwight Eisenhower, "Mandate for Change", pg 380 "the Japanese were ready to surrender and it wasn't necessary to hit them with that awful thing." Dwight Eisenhower, Newsweek, 11/11/63 "No military justification for the dropping of the bomb". Douglas MacArthur Norman Cousins, The Pathology of Power, pg. 65 On Thu, 18 Dec 2003 12:41:58 +0900, Ernest Schaal wrote: I agree that there should have been more information in the exhibit. Besides mentioning the thousands who died because of the bombs, there should have been mention of the greater number of Japanese lives that were spared from their inhumane government, who had wanted all Japanese to die rather than admit that their leaders lost the war, a war they never could have won. in article , KenG at wrote on 12/18/03 10:22 AM: And Hunderds of thousands did not die..... KenG Gunnar wrote: Why not simply include the wanted information in the exhibit ? It seams like a small request to me. It is after all true that 100+ thousand humans died because of this plane/bomb. Is history now politically uncorrect in the US ? ? G __________________________________________________ _____________________________ Posted Via Uncensored-News.Com - Accounts Starting At $6.95 - http://www.uncensored-news.com The Worlds Uncensored News Source |
#12
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Dear Mr. NoSpam,
If you had been keeping up with the news (specifically the Japanese newspapers), you would have known that even after the Nagasaki bomb was dropped, the military wanted to continue the struggle to the death of the last Japanese, rather than admit defeat. There were a few stories to that effect in the Japan Times within the past year or so. Those stories might still be accessible somewhere. Needless to say, both Eisenhower and MacArthur had been dead before those revelations had been made, although I remember reading about the role of the emperor in finally admitting the defeat as early as the 1970s. It is true that many in Japan were ready to surrender, but that didn't really matter, since the Japan of that time was under the tight control of a government run by the military. While there were civilians in the government, the cabinet could be brought down (and often did) at any time by the Army or Navy quitting from the cabinet. Throughout that period, thought police persecuted anyone who dared voice a dissenting opinion. The net result of all this is that Japan has become very pacifist since the war, and there is major political turmoil with even the sending of noncombatants to Iraq, or anywhere for that matter. On television, the Japanese military of the period are often the heavies, far more than the American military. Do you ever bother to study Japanese history or Japanese society? Have you ever visited here or lived here? in article , at wrote on 12/18/03 1:03 PM: Both Eisenhower and MacArthur thought otherwise, but what do they know? Hell, they were just the generals running the war and commanding the troops who fought it. Probably a couple of bleeding-heart, pinko, commie, rat-******* liberals anyway. I'm sure YOU know FAR more about it than they ever did.... "Japan was already defeated and that dropping the bomb was completely unnecessary" Dwight Eisenhower, "Mandate for Change", pg 380 "the Japanese were ready to surrender and it wasn't necessary to hit them with that awful thing." Dwight Eisenhower, Newsweek, 11/11/63 "No military justification for the dropping of the bomb". Douglas MacArthur Norman Cousins, The Pathology of Power, pg. 65 I |
#13
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The Japanese military infrastructure and capacity to wage effective war may
have already been destroyed, and sensible people would have quit under those circumstances, but according to at least one Japan Times story the military was quite willing to sacrifice the lives of all Japanese civilians rather than stand the shame of living with those civilians after losing the war. Most sources I know of talk about the resistance of the military to surrender, and the uncommon action of the Emperor of resisting the military on this matter. in article , jake at wrote on 12/18/03 1:34 PM: On Thu, 18 Dec 2003 13:19:23 +0900, Ernest Schaal wrote: It is true that many in Japan were ready to surrender, but that didn't really matter, Very true ... what mattered was that Toyko and the Japanese military infrastructure and capacity to wage war had been already destroyed. |
#15
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![]() "jake" wrote in message ... On Thu, 18 Dec 2003 14:10:41 +0900, Ernest Schaal wrote: Jake, I don't think you don't understand anything about Japanese culture, especially that of the dark years when the military influence became more and more dominant. Whether or not the "Japanese military had already been defeated" doesn't change the fact that the Japanese deaths would have been much greater if both bombs had not been dropped. this is not a "fact " but your assertion.. An assertion based in facts. The Japanese civilians were already starting to starve (by the end of July, the average Japanese was subsisting on some 1680 calories per day, and the call had gone out to harvest a couple of million bushels of acorns to try and stem the tide of starvation)--prolonging the war would undoubtedly have resulted in a lot of civilian deaths due to starvation. Add in the deaths that would have resulted from the continuing, and increasing, conventional aerial bombardment (the B-29 force was still growing, and after Okinawa fell the potential of aircraft like the B-24 to be added to the assaulting force was nearing fruition), recalling that more prople died in Tokyo and its environs due to the earlier incendiary attacks than died at Hiroshima. Those bypassed Japanese forces in the south and western Pacific that were already suffering deaths due to starvation would have lost that many more of their garrisons. Finally, toss in the deaths that the Japanese alone (disregarding the heavy casulaties that would undoubtedly have been borne by the Olympic/Coronet assault forces) would have suffered during an invasion. Add them up and any realistic observer is going to conclude that they would undoubtedly have exceeded the sum total of both atomic bomb attacks. The civilians were being trained to use bamboo spears to attack any allied troops who landed in Japan. civilians with bamboo spears would not have been much of a contest for the most powerful and technologically superior military machine ever assembled in the history of the world..now would it? Which is why they would have died in dizzying numbers, albeit while taking some number of US troops with them. You speak of "the ravings of defeated meglomaniacs who had LOST their power." Unfortunately, those "defeated meglomaniacs" had not lost their political power in Japan. they lost it the instant the army was defeated.. The Army remained undefeated until the Emperor finally pulled the plug, and even then there was a hardcore element that tried a last minute coup to prevent the surrender. To quote one of your neighbours.. "political power grows out of the barrel of a gun" The form of government in Japan was not a democracy or even a republic, instead it was a continuation of a centuries old tradition of using the emperor as a figurehead to govern. And once defeated the form of government became a matter for the victors.. Who left a legacy of true democracy; what a shame, huh? snip further mindless drivel Brooks |
#16
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in article , jake at
wrote on 12/18/03 2:48 PM: On Thu, 18 Dec 2003 14:10:41 +0900, Ernest Schaal wrote: Jake, I don't think you don't understand anything about Japanese culture, especially that of the dark years when the military influence became more and more dominant. Whether or not the "Japanese military had already been defeated" doesn't change the fact that the Japanese deaths would have been much greater if both bombs had not been dropped. this is not a "fact " but your assertion.. It not merely my assertion, but that of others as well. The civilians were being trained to use bamboo spears to attack any allied troops who landed in Japan. civilians with bamboo spears would not have been much of a contest for the most powerful and technologically superior military machine ever assembled in the history of the world..now would it? True, they probably would not be effective against our forces, but a poorly armed force that can't (not permitted to) surrender usually has high causalities. You speak of "the ravings of defeated meglomaniacs who had LOST their power." Unfortunately, those "defeated meglomaniacs" had not lost their political power in Japan. they lost it the instant the army was defeated.. To quote one of your neighbours.. "political power grows out of the barrel of a gun" The above statement shows that you know absolutely nothing about Japanese history or Japanese culture. Although there had been peasant revolts for over a thousand years, those revolts were always unsuccessful and ended poorly for those who revolted. Considering that history, a successful revolt against the military-controlled government simply was not an option. The form of government in Japan was not a democracy or even a republic, instead it was a continuation of a centuries old tradition of using the emperor as a figurehead to govern. And once defeated the form of government became a matter for the victors.. That didn't happen until after the surrender. I recommend that you read the Meiji Constitution of 1889, which governed the war years. after the Tokyo raids it stopped at article one.. http://history.hanover.edu/texts/1889con.html Article 1. The Empire of Japan shall be reigned over and governed by a line of Emperors unbroken for ages eternal. Article 2. The Imperial Throne shall be succeeded to by Imperial male descendants, according to the provisions of the Imperial House Law. Article 3. The Emperor is sacred and inviolable. While the Emperor was "sacred and inviolable," that Emperor was usually controlled by his cabinet. Even the Meiji emperor really didn't have the power that the constitution said he had. If you knew anything about Japanese history, which you clearly don't, you would have realized that even prior to the Tokugawa shogunate, and even prior to the other shogunates, the real power did not rest in the Emperor. During the Heian period ("Tale of Genji"), the emperor's advisers or ex-emperors controlled the figurehead emperor. Occasionally an emperor would endeavor to win back real power, but any success was fleeting. The Tokyo raids did as much damage as the atomic bombs, but those raids did not effectively reduce the political power of military nor did they change the nature of that government, except to make it more determined. Even the two atomic bombs were almost not enough. Do you know anything about Japanese history? only where it intersects with European history.. That explains a lot about your misconceptions on this matter. |
#17
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#18
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Kevin Brooks wrote:
The Army remained undefeated until the Emperor finally pulled the plug, and even then there was a hardcore element that tried a last minute coup to prevent the surrender. Wait, wait. There was something more to that. When the cabinet members voted for the acceptance of the Postdam Declaration or not, the numbers tied. Therefore, the final decision was made by the emperor. At the time, the Japanese populace were under abnormal pressure. They were brainwashed that defeat means death. Therefore, after the surrender, a large number of both soldiers and civilians killed themselves. In the street or anywhere, someone pulled the pin of the hand grenade and shouted, "Ten'nou heika banzai!", a group of passers-bys jumped on to it to be blown up together. A pair of school girls pulled their knives and stabbed each other. If one didn't have any means to kill oneself, one begged the closest military person to shoot oneself. I just can't believe how crazy human can get. Who left a legacy of true democracy; what a shame, huh? Sex industry was indeed a big hit. |
#19
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![]() "Cindy" wrote in message news:lulEb.144653$_M.714783@attbi_s54... Kevin Brooks wrote: The Army remained undefeated until the Emperor finally pulled the plug, and even then there was a hardcore element that tried a last minute coup to prevent the surrender. Wait, wait. There was something more to that. When the cabinet members voted for the acceptance of the Postdam Declaration or not, the numbers tied. Therefore, the final decision was made by the emperor. At the time, the Japanese populace were under abnormal pressure. They were brainwashed that defeat means death. Therefore, after the surrender, a large number of both soldiers and civilians killed themselves. In the street or anywhere, someone pulled the pin of the hand grenade and shouted, "Ten'nou heika banzai!", a group of passers-bys jumped on to it to be blown up together. A pair of school girls pulled their knives and stabbed each other. If one didn't have any means to kill oneself, one begged the closest military person to shoot oneself. I just can't believe how crazy human can get. Who left a legacy of true democracy; what a shame, huh? Sex industry was indeed a big hit. If you think the US was responsible for introducing an enlightened attitude towards sex to the Japanese, you are sadly mistaken and need to review your Japanese social history. Brooks |
#20
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Kevin Brooks wrote:
If you think the US was responsible for introducing an enlightened attitude towards sex to the Japanese, you are sadly mistaken and need to review your Japanese social history. I read John Dower's "Embracing Defeat". Hey, you got to be proud of your country for this service. Sex gave the Japanese fantasy, daydreaming, and probably a lot of babies after the defeat. Pan pan girls were able to make money off the American GIs. Strip shows were first introduced in Asakusa and were the major success. Western women were considered to be a sex symbol. Sex was far better than committing suicide, after all. You didn't know that, did you? |
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