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You have gone through the same brainwash. Did you vote for the PAP?
No , I did not . Did you ?
You have gone through the same brainwash. Did you vote for the PAP?
Also, do not underestimate the "blood" ties of the Anglo-Saxon world, i.e. English speaking countries, UK, USA, Australia, NZ and Canada. They may see each other as one of themselves in a world conflict. It may well be a Clash of the Civilizations as per Samuel Huntington. So there will be blocs - and the most likely leader of the western world will still be the USA. Possible that it could be Germany but unlikely because of its past. Whatever it is, it won't be a China-dominated unipolar world - China also does not harbor such ambition.
I do believe that the USA economic strength will pick up soon,,if their Gahmen can get things in control,,without all these Congress vs Senate and all the bullshit,,,USA has a huge private sector whereas Singapore has a huge Gahmen sector,,,
its the gahmen and taxes that need to be revamp in the USA for it to grow again,,,but with a paralysed Government, the rent seeking behaviour of the jews and so on,,,the USA is finding it hard to reform and move on,,
No , I did not . Did you ?
No. So why did you not vote for the PAP?
that is why the us need to fight wars continually so that they can jump and bounce up from the downturns....if it manages to stir up a war n the korean peninsula, it would be a dream come true...
No. So why did you not vote for the PAP?
Obviously , you should know the reason . Whatever needed to explain already been said in other thread . Don't have to repeat so many times .
I don't think the South Korean want to start a war. Why would they with their economic ascension? The North Korean are only posturing.
They have almost succeeded in killing off Chavez and what is the prized venezuelan oil stocks might soon end up in the hands via all their espionage and corruption again. India is inconsequential actually. It does not have the resource that america wants to control the world nor does it pose sufficiently as a threat to american interests especially since the americans can always rely on the Pakis to check. In my own deliberation, i think that the Pakis are more intimately enmeshed with the americans but I could be wrong, america is like making its 2 mistresses in pakistan and India face each other off in their competition for its love.....As for Brazil, we will see. America will bare its teeth as soon as it refuses to cede sovereignty over its oils fields to american/allies companies....
If only the world opens its eyes to the true evil of america and resisting it. however, america have 2 potent weapons in their arsenal, human fear and greed. Their manipulation of these 2 human failings will ensure their longevity. i hope the new leadership in China recognises this. The institutional corruption and their failure to check the gangrenous rot might lead to its ultimate crippling. If China wants to be strong, it must bite that bullet and start to clean its house as thoroughly as possible. otherwise, the greedy and corrupted amongst its ranks will lead to its unravelling if should decide to fight that war with america. Mao strangely managed to do that, he instituted so much fear via the cultural revolution that it galvanised the chinese people into one dedicated fighting machine which was put to the test in the korean war. Mao in his own way needed a war (and a victory) to whitewash all the deaths caused by his bad planning.
Was it necessary to drop the atom bomb on Japan?
After more then Sixty years later, many scholars still argue about the decision to use atom bombs against Hiroshima and Nagasaki as a way to hasten the end of World War II . So don't draw your own conclusion . Just use it as a reference .
YES :
The atomic bomb was necessary to end the war with Japan at the earliest possible moment. By the early summer of 1945, Japanese leaders knew they could not win. But they fought on in hopes of securing better surrender terms.
President Harry S. Truman considered several ways to convince Japan to quit the war: 1) intensifying the already heavy bombing of Japanese cities; 2) waiting for the Soviet Union, an ally in defeating Germany, to join the war against Japan; 3) allowing Japan's emperor, Hirohito, to remain on his throne; and 4) invading Japan.
The first three options were far from certain to compel a Japanese surrender quickly, however, and each posed serious military, political, and diplomatic risks. More than 55,000 Americans had already died fighting the Japanese in the Pacific. An invasion was certain to be very costly in American lives.
When the atomic bomb became available in July 1945, it appeared to be the most promising way to end the war as soon as possible and without the drawbacks of the alternatives.
The atomic bombing of Hiroshima and then Nagasaki persuaded Emperor Hirohito, who had wavered for weeks, that the war must end immediately. Combined with the Soviet entry into the conflict, the atom bombs brought about Japan's surrender within a few days.
The bomb was necessary to accomplish Truman's primary objectives of forcing a prompt Japanese surrender and saving American lives, perhaps thousands of them.
No :
When General Dwight D. Eisenhower, then the Supreme Allied Commander, was informed by the Secretary of War that the atomic bomb was going to be used, he later recalled saying it was unnecessary because Japan was already largely defeated. Eisenhower said the bomb was "no longer mandatory as a measure to save American lives." At one point after the war he said bluntly, "It wasn't necessary to hit them with that awful thing."
Before the bomb was used, U.S. intelligence officials believed the war would likely end when two things happened: When the U.S. let Japan know their Emperor could stay on as a figurehead, and when the Soviet army attacked. The U.S. did tell Japan the Emperor could remain, and the Soviets declared war, as agreed, on August 8.
But U.S. officials chose not to test whether this intelligence was correct. Instead, Hiroshima was bombed on August 6, and Nagasaki on August 9. Because of logistics, an invasion of Japan could not begin for another three months, so the U.S. could have waited to see if Japan would surrender before dropping the atomic bombs.
Most top World War II military leaders are all on record agreeing with Eisenhower. Admiral William Leahy, President Truman's Chief of Staff, later called the bomb a "barbarous weapon" that was unnecessary. Leahy wrote, "The Japanese were already defeated and ready to surrender. . . . In being the first to use it, we . . . adopted an ethical standard common to the barbarians of the Dark Ages.
Yes that means it was necessary to drop the bombs on Japan as it was to end the war,,,
Actually the generals was pro dropping the bomb,,when Macarthur planned the invasion,,,he wanted to drop the bombs on japanese positions before the troops went in..thank goodness this did not happen as the US troops would have been exposed to the radiation too,,,
and the Japanese military wanted to fight on,,,,so the bombs had to be dropped
Thanks for the read , very interesting . where can I find more information on that ? Thanks in advance .
Different ppl have different view on that . I just show you how ppl debate on that , both groups have their own good reason .
And the coming President Xi Jinping's daughter is doing her Bachelors' in Harvard. Now, this is like sending a princess to your enemy country to study high school. I hope Xi is not doing this because he lacks confidence in China's own educational system - but because he wants his daughter to better understand the enemy. Bachelor's education nowadays is like high school eduction. If you send your princess to study Masters or PHD in some technology field in the USA (your no. 1 enemy country), that's still okay because US is still much more advanced in technology. But to do Bachelor's in USA is another thing. If the top government officials are all corrupt, the generals may not be better off.
Corruption aside, where your son's or daughter's education could be funded by a foreign investor, I see nothing wrong your children overseas for study. Today's China still suffers from deficiencies in their institutions. The legal system is still rather primitive and lacks the comprehensiveness of the British or the US system. Their skill in international marketing still need to be horned, although I am already quite impressed by what they are already able to do at home. The need to learn the international way is something they need to do fast in order to rise up as a more credible global player. All these, the British and America universities can deliver in spades. Although the Chinese universities are quite good at the first degree level but they still lack the broad base discipline that the US universities provide or the comprehensiveness of the British education. And most of all the exposure that these overseas stays provide will be first hand exp
Corruption aside, where your son's or daughter's education could be funded by a foreign investor, I see nothing wrong with sending your children overseas to study. Today's China still suffers from deficiencies in their key institutions.
The legal system is still rather primitive and lacks the comprehensiveness of the British or the US systems. Their skill in international marketing still need to be horned, although I am already quite impressed by what they are able to do at home. The need to learn the international way is something they need to do fast in order to rise up as a more credible global player. All these, the British and America universities can deliver in spades.
Although the Chinese universities are quite good at the first degree level, they still lack the broad base discipline that the US universities provide or the comprehensiveness of the British education. And most of all the exposure that these overseas stays provide will be first hand experience for them to emulate when they return home. We often complain of PRCs' disgusting manners as tourists in foreign lands. This, too, needs to be
learnt from more frequent travelling to foreign lands and attending international meetings.
In the past two centuries, from the world's dominant economic and military power to one where even a little Japan had the right to throw its weight around was directly a result of the refusal to take in outside influence and to learn from external newfound knowledge. This is slowly being changed.