Paulo, it is good to debate, I too enjoy a good discussion. It’s too bad this forum limits us as we engage in discussions (not face-to-face, etc.), but getting a point across in a limited amount of words is a challenge I welcome. And, I want everyone to know its friendly for my part and I take everyone else as being friendly as well. Discourse is the only way to understand each other and the tolerance of the opinions of others is vital in an open society.
First, I believe that the responsibility for a society’ government and its actions and the consequences of those actions rest with the citizens of that society, regardless if the government is totalitarian or not. If the citizens of any particular society do not, then who does? The Japanese did have innocents among them. So what. They allowed the culture to exist as it was. The Russian people also bear responsibility for Stalin. The German people bear the responsibility for Hitler. We Americans bear the responsibility for our actions as well. We held people as slaves for several hundred years. We used means of mass extermination to rid ourselves of the Indian nations and take their land for our own. We Americans have a great deal of responsibility for our actions also. One way of doing that is to be honest with others and ourselves without rewriting history to fit some acceptable model.
During the course of war, it’s not who is right or who is wrong. It’s who get there the fastest with the mostest. We got there with the mostest firstest. Might does not make right, but it wins wars. War is about winning and not being annihilated by the enemy. The Japanese would have killed millions of Americans if they had won. They would have done it without fear of consequences or their conscience. My evidence, Shanghi, Nanking, and many, many other places. I for one am not sorry we did it. It ended that horrible war and I believe saved lives. It also showed the world, we would protect our society at all cost. We won our continued existence.
Michael