• @Telodzrum
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    -121 month ago

    Yeah, the bombs’ effects were horrific. It’s absolutely amazing that even that level of devastation was able, in the balance, to save lives.

      • @Taniwha420
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        181 month ago

        The prevailing sentiment was that the Japanese would not surrender until their home islands were totally conquered. Their government was in the process of preparing the civilian population to fight to the death. (Research the invasion of Okinawa if you want to know what a US invasion of the main island would have been like.) In a version of the trolley dilemma, the American rational was that the loss of life in two horrific attacks that would shock the Japanese into surrender was less evil than the alternative of invading their home islands.

        I’m not making that argument, or saying there were no alternatives, just that the Americans were weighing the loss of life (including civilians) involved in a nuclear bombing against the loss of life (including civilians) in invading the islands.

        Notwithstanding other unthought of solutions, the strategy worked, and the apparent alternative would have been brutal.

        • @[email protected]
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          181 month ago

          The belief that the nukes accelerated Japanese surrender is 100% cope made up by people to avoid feeling guilty for the weapons’ deployment. The Japanese were already in the process of reaching out to surrender before the bombs were dropped, and it isn’t clear that the military administration was even fully aware that the nuclear bombings were different from the many hundreds of other bombings that had already occurred in the months previous due to Japan completely losing control over the sea and sky around its home islands.

            • @[email protected]
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              31 month ago

              Their only term was that they get to keep the Emperor, which they were allowed to do anyway.

                • @[email protected]
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                  31 month ago

                  I mean no they weren’t, but when they set terms that they were going to get anyways… is it really setting terms?

                  • @[email protected]
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                    11 month ago

                    Allieds had decided together and told the Japanese that they’d accept nothing but unconditional surrender. At that point asking for anything would be an attempt to set terms.

        • @freddydunningkruger
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          -61 month ago

          lol, the prevailing sentiment according to Taniwha420, the human pretzel, so called for the shocking degrees they bend facts to fit their narrative. puff puff? I think I’ll pass.

          There’s just as many voices, and evidence, that the Japanese were looking for a way out of the war. There were other “non-brutal” options you ignore, pretending they didn’t exist. It would be one thing if you presented both sides honestly, but clearly you’re just AFP, another fucking propagandist.

    • @[email protected]
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      41 month ago

      They did not save any lives, that is a completely made up invention. In fact Imperial Japan cared little about the atomic bomb, and even if a land invasion had become necessary, the USA had made a deal with the USSR to invade on land.

      This was the real reason for the bombings, not to beat Japan into submission, which Roosevelt’s deal with the USSR for a land invasion ensured, but to show the USSR the destructive power the US held. Truman was a staunch anticommunist, and refused to let the USSR play the part Roosevelt negociated in a land invasion.

      It was a war crime with no benefits at all except to show off to the USSR, who would develop nukes themselves 4 years later anyway. An absolute tragedy which proved to be entirely useless.

      • @Telodzrum
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        41 month ago

        Your understanding of the historical record is not only fatally incomplete; it’s also riddled with inaccuracies and purposefully promulgated falsehoods. Get less history from pop sources and ideologically steered texts.