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Hiroshima Day

I had mixed feelings about receiving this in my Inbox yesterday:

"I never really understood the craziness until I saw this video"

In honor of the victims of Hiroshima, send this E-card to your friends

Dear Andrew,

Sunday is Hiroshima Day, the 61st anniversary of the first atomic bomb attack in history.

We've come up with a 90-second video that shows the truth in a simple way you'll never forget.(click below to watch it).
http://www.truemajorityaction.org/postcard

Hiroshima Day is a time to remember the dead, but let's also work toward a saner, safer future. Please send the E-card to asmany people as you can. You will be commemorating the day at the same time you spread the crucial information needed stop the craziness.

No more Hiroshimas,

Matt Holland
TrueMajority Online Director

As TrueMajority videos go, this one isn't so bad, but what's with the crass reference to Hiroshima?

First, "No More Hiroshimas" suggests that there was an inadequate moral rationale for having dropped Little Boy on it. There is an important historical debate with valid points on both sides as to whether Japan would have surrendered without the two atomic bombs. The firebombings of Tokyo and other cities (over 100,000 civilians killed) in the winter and spring of 1945 didn't do it. The brutal battle for Okinawa (an estimated 150,000 civilians killed) in May and June of 1945 didn't do it. So what was going to do it in the absence of the atomic bombs? More firebombings? A naval blockade leading to widespread starvation? A full American invasion of Kyushu and beyond? It's hard to imagine we would have killed fewer than 200,000 Japanese with any of those options.

Second, we are told that "Hiroshima Day is a time to remember the dead." I'd like to suggest that if one were to observe Hiroshima Day, it should be a time to remember the living as well. In many communities across the country, there are men in their eighties, veterans of World War II, who would have perished in an invasion and occupation of Japan that might otherwise have been necessary to end the war. Commemorate Hiroshima Day by telling them how glad you are that they got to live for another six decades, to be fathers, grandfathers, and great-grandfathers, rather than paying the ultimate price.

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