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Home Front: Politix
Pelosi Visits Hiroshima A-Bomb Memorial
2008-09-03
Duplicate. Please check in the future. Leaving this up because of the comments. Again, always check for duplicates!
Kumbaya
HIROSHIMA, Japan -- U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Tuesday became the highest-ranking serving American official to pay respects at the memorial site of the world's first atomic bomb attack. Democrat Pelosi is in Japan for a two-day gathering of top legislators from the Group of Eight industrialized countries.

On Tuesday morning, she and the other G-8 representatives visited Hiroshima's Peace Memorial Park before heading into an all-day meeting.
I wonder if they will fly to Korea to console some surviving "comfort women."

No sitting U.S. president or vice president has ever visited Hiroshima. As speaker of the House of Representatives, Pelosi is second in line to the presidency after U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney.
I visited the memorial in 1980 and was outraged at the demonizing, one-sided presentation. I wrote "Remember Bataan and Singapore" in the guestbook.
Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter stopped by the memorial in 1984, after his presidency, but he did not visit in any official capacity.
Consistent of him anyway.
Genyu Izawa, a Buddhist priest, stood by as each of the G-8 officials laid flowers at the arch-shaped monument inside of which a stone chest holds the names of bomb victims.
Is there a chest somewhere that holds the names of the 300,000+ victims of the Rape of Kanking?
"As a Japanese, I am grateful that they are thinking about this and have all gathered here, the site of the atomic bombing," said Izawa, who traveled from Tokyo to show his support to Pelosi for her longtime commitment to Tibet issues.
They should fly together to the Phillipines. The Filipino government has helpfully built a stone memorial at every kilometer of the 140 kilometer route of the Bataan Death March if they want to walk it themselves.
An estimated 140,000 people were killed instantly or died within a few months after an American B-29 bomber dropped its lethal payload on Aug. 6, 1945. Three days later on Aug. 9, 1945, the U.S. dropped a nuclear bomb on the city of Nagasaki, killing about 80,000 people.
Subsequently millions died in the allied invasion. Oh, wait a minute:
Japan surrendered on Aug. 15, ending World War II. Japan, which adopted a pacifist constitution after the war, has since become one of the staunchest opponents of nuclear proliferation.
Er, not everybody in Japan is so happy with this dogma.
At a ceremony last month marking the 63rd anniversary of the bombing, Hiroshima Mayor Tadatoshi Akiba urged the next U.S. president to support a proposed ban on nuclear weapons. And Japan submitted a resolution in the United Nations last year calling for the abolition of nuclear weapons. Akiba said 170 nations supported it, with the U.S. one of only three countries opposed.
What dictator would dare to oppose the thundering moral authority of such an edict?
The gathering of G-8 officials in Hiroshima will focus on peace and disarmament, but is not expected to result in any major agreements or statements.

Sadami Naganishi, 73, of Hiroshima said she hopes their visit to the city is a step forward in ridding the world of nuclear weapons. "I hope they see what happened here, and take that back to their countries," said Naganishi, whose father died of a bomb-related illness several years after the war
Tojo also died as a result of the atomic bombings, when he was hanged as a war criminal.
Posted by:Atomic Conspiracy

#13  Read Downfall, by Richard Frank for a thorough discussion of the last days of the war. He covers the firebombing of Tokyo and other cities, the preparations by the Allies and the Japanese for the invasion, and what could have happened if we had continued bombing and then invaded.
Bottom line: there would have been millions of casualties, both military and civilian. Thousands or millions more would have starved to death. Next on our list of bombing targets was the railways that moved the food from the farms to the people. The Japanese should thank us that we ended the war the way we did. The nuclear weapons gave them an excuse to surrender, even though the end was inevitable. The only difference would have been the number of people who died.
Even after Nagasaki, there were die hard Japanese officers who tried to prevent the Emperor's recording of surrender from being broadcast. Think how many more people would have died if the Japanese military had continued to fight on. Without the Emperor telling them to lay down their arms, they would have continued to fight and kill, possibly for years.
Posted by: Rambler in California   2008-09-03 18:49  

#12  Pelosi and the rest of the world should be thanking their lucky stars that we got the bomb before Germany or Japan--they would have used it on us which brings us to Iran...
Posted by: JohnQC   2008-09-03 17:28  

#11  Gen. LeMay began nightly incendiary bomb raids on Japan's largest cities. One on the suburbs of Tokyo killed over 100,000 and totally destroyed 10 square miles of the city and its suburbs. Tokyo was neither the first or the last. Of course, nobody bitches about those, because they weren't "the first ever". As Harry Truman said, "it's just a bigger artillery shell". Get over it.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2008-09-03 15:35  

#10  I partly agree.  But it also gives O a forum to upstage McC
Posted by: lotp   2008-09-03 14:38  

#9  lotp, what does that tell us about O'Reilly? I think it depends upon what O'Reilly asks. If he throws softballs or not.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2008-09-03 14:18  

#8  I think Nancy should've gotten down on her hands and knees and let everyone in Japan line up and boot her in the ass.
Would've assuaged that liberal guilt. Tough on the ass though...
Posted by: tu3031   2008-09-03 11:43  

#7  An estiameted 74 million Japanese were saved
by teh bomb. Compound it with 300,000 thousand Chinese a month along with a similar number of people in the rest of occupied Asia. Or has someone forgotten what the Japanese did in China, Filipines, Indonesia or Malasia?
Posted by: JFM   2008-09-03 11:35  

#6  I welcome Ms. Pelosi's reminder to the world that we've done it before and we can do it again if we have to.
Posted by: Darrell   2008-09-03 10:59  

#5   Akiba said 170 nations supported it, with the U.S. one of only three countries opposed.

Those 170 nations of course included Iran, North Korea, Syria, Egypt, The People's Republic of China, Venezuela, Bolivia, Russia... Forgive me if I'm not as impressed as I ought to be.
Posted by: trailing wife    2008-09-03 10:53  

#4  
He did NOT go to Switzerland.  He will be on Bill O'Reilly's show just before McCain's speech Thursday.  Which, by the way, tells you a lot about O'Reilly.
Posted by: lotp   2008-09-03 10:45  

#3  Pelosi goes to Japan. The Obamessiah goes to Switzerland. Evidently they cannot stand to be on the same continent during the Republican convention.
Posted by: Besoeker   2008-09-03 10:09  

#2  An estimated 140,000 people were killed instantly or died within a few months after an American B-29 bomber dropped its lethal payload on Aug. 6, 1945.

Bogus, long continuing numbers game. Let's use the left's own standard for accrediting cause of death to the citizens of New York for 9/11. We should be able to get that number up to a half a million by the 20th anniversary.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2008-09-03 08:40  

#1  Pelosi Visits Hiroshima A-Bomb Memorial

Drat, 63 years late. Perhaps we could encourage her to take an extended tour of Iranian nuclear facilities.
Posted by: AzCat   2008-09-03 03:10  

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