August
6 is the sixty-ninth anniversary of the first dropping of an atomic bombs on
the Japanese city of Hiroshima. Almost every moral authority in the world
has concluded it was a hideous immoral act. Many Americans apologize and
point out the Sunday sneak attack and well-known brutality of the wartime
Japanese “made us do it.” Those who do argue the moral acceptability of
using the nuclear weapon against Japan usually cite the number of lives –
American and Japanese military and civilian – spared by the “quick
knock-out” of Japan from the war they started. Barry once interviewed
South African author Laurence van der Post who spent the war in a Japanese
concentration camp in Java. Barry was totally captured by his reasoning and
makes the case that using the nuclear bombs was not only morally acceptable,
but morally necessary. And that van der Post argument doesn’t invoke the
life of one single American or Japanese soldier or one single Japanese civilian
who would have been lost invading the Japanese homeland. Barry presents the van
der Post argument this evening.
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