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I went through that anguish at one time in my life.
But finally realized that; In a war you do everything you can to win. ( do or die ! ) Every nation would trade ten enemy lives for "one of their own" We bombed their cities, because we had the capability. They would have bombed ( our cities ) if they had the capability. It's not just "how you conduct the war" it's how you behave after the enemy's been vanquished. In that respect, the Japanese army ( especially in China ) showed themselves to be poor winners. We didn't start the conflict, yet I still feel a pang of discomfort when I see pictures of the bombed-out cities... Tokyo, Cologne, Hamburg, Dresden...... I'm also surprised that out of the thousands of bomber crewmen, not one said "This is immoral... I'm not gonna do this" There were a lot of civilians in those cities, and, as John Wayne used to say; "Murikans don't make war on civilians" War is hell ! On Mon, 13 Oct 2003 19:41:50 GMT, Stu Gotz wrote: On 12 Oct 2003 21:11:28 -0700, (Keke Goldfeller) wrote: Met an elderly Japanese gentleman while having brunch today. Long story short, his family was a victim of the American war crimes, specifically the dropping an atomic bomb on Hiroshima. I've never felt so ashamed to be an American. I couldn't bow low enough in apology for this nation. Keke Goldfeller PLONK!!!!!!! rj |
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