And when I talk about alternatives (on which I have written at length), I am not necessarily saying any one of them would have lead to a better world. My goal, again, is to emphasize that there were more than two options (bomb vs. invade) on the table.http://blog.nuclearsecrecy.com/2015/08/03/were-there-alternatives-to-the-atomic-bombings/ …
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I make them because the "wrong, overly simple" version of this history (in this case, the "orthodox" version, but I frequently poke holes in the "revisionist" simplicity as well) causes Americans to understand this whole thing very poorly.
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And given that the atomic bombings are one of the foundational ways in which Americans think through questions of actions taken during war, I think it's important that people see that they are actually a pretty tricky issue, if you take them seriously.
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The fact that most Americans don't even know the basic timeline, and frame the issues entirely ahistorically, is more than a pet peeve to me — it's a real, basic civics issue. Anyway — thanks for listening and replying. FIN.
End of conversation
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