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Anttech said:Well, judging by what happened after ww2 it would have to seem that America didnt come to save our asses, but rather to ecconomically bog down and take everything it could, which it did. Most of your ecconomy was built on the back of WW2, so I would stop the we saved your asses rubbish, we saved yours just as much. (snip)
Yup --- didn't leave anything but that filthy Marshall Plan money, assorted base payrolls, civilian employment --- that sort of thing.
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Kurdt said:Bystander said:The thread is about mass murder, the second amendment, and gun control. If Europeans prefer institutionalized mass murder as the cost of security against occasional, individual, small scale mass murders, and Americans prefer small-scale, freelance mass murders as the cost of security against institutionalized mass murder, that's the way things are. You think you got a good deal, and we think we got a good deal. You stay out of our faces about it, and we won't rub your noses in your messes.
WWI? Nothing. WW II? Laconia, Pacific submarine campaign, hearsay about a Patton order regarding prisoners on Sicily, post-war kangaroo courts in concert with our allies. Iraq and Afghanistan? We're chasing the mass murderers.
Few dozen a decade.
(snip)What about the bombing of Japan? You are designing your definition of mass murder to be beneficial to yourself.
Nerp --- mass murder is the gratuitous slaughter of people who are no threat to the murderer: Soviet murder of Polish PoWs in the Katyn; loading Poles, Slavs, Jews, gypsies, and who all else into boxcars and shipping them to gas chambers; shipwreck survivors such as from the Laconia, assorted sinkings by submarines of merchant shipping in both Atlantic and Pacific theatres; engineered famine (peacetime) in the Ukraine; executions of PoWs by Allied forces in all theatres (some of which probably fall into the same gray class as Malmedy --- they surrendered, you don't have the manpower resources to guard and control them, and there's a war still on in the other direction --- ugly situation); Lidice (again, reprisals were jus in bellum at the time, but that was a bit over the top); Dresden, Guernica, Coventry were all deliberate attacks on civilians, the cities themselves having no strategic or tactical value, and known to have no value as targets at the time.
"Japan?" You do understand that there was a war on at the time? You also understand that there were very few precision munitions available to the USAAF for bombardment purposes? And, that the USAAF was charged with destroying war industries and military targets? And that war industries and military targets tended to be co-located with urban centers? The efficacy of the strategic bombing campaign in WW II is still the subject of debate, but it's more along the lines of "picking a single class of key target (oil, ball bearings, transportation, aircraft, munitions), and concentrating solely on that target until something collapses" vs. "trying to hit everything a little bit and hoping one target is more fragile than another," or, the "daylight precision raid" vs. "nighttime area raid," rather than the "collateral damage" and "civilian morale" question.
I'll say again, the thread was not started to debate indiscriminate mass murder, it was started to see if changing the 2nd amendment could prevent events like virginia tech. Read the first post.
A 23 year old S. Korean senior English major committed indiscriminate mass murder on the campus of Virginia Tech --- the thread IS discussing indiscriminate mass murder --- the only question remaining is whether the U.S. should adopt the European preference for mega-scale mass murders through revision of the second amendment, or continue facing micro-scale events.