InkL0sed wrote:Committed genocide on Reconstruction bills with his veto?
Well for the record, Jackson's action (the Trail of Tears---and including defying the Supreme Court decision) was based on his view that State's Right's superceded Federal ones. Georgia's Supreme Court Ruled against the Natives, and threw out their treaties. Jackson told the Natives that they had 2 choices. Respect Georgia's authority or GTFO. The indians would not recognize Geogian authority, so they were thrown out.
However yeah, he clearly had no respect for the natives lives. He had no problem letting them die.
Shivas wrote:I'm willing to wager that most, if not all responses from individuals directly fighting in the war (WWII) would have considered it a treasonous act if Truman did not use every resource available to end the war as quickly and with as few of American casualties as possible.
Juan_Bottom wrote:There are those in Japan that felt no resentment towards the United States for their usage of the atomic bomb on Japan. A fighting man's view of the atomic bomb came from Captain Mitsuo Fuchida, who had led the air attack on Pearl Harbor and who had been one of those investigating Hiroshima the day after the disaster. In his opinion, once a nation embarked upon war, it was obligated to go all out. To possess a weapon that could ensure victory and not use it would be to break faith with a nation's people as well as to disgrace the memory of lost comrades and make their sacrifices meaningless. What must be remembered is that during the Second World War, both Nazi Germany and expansionist Japan tried to perfect the atomic weapon, it would be absolutely ludicrous to suggest that Japan and Germany wouldn't have used it if they got it first. Americans were still dying, a solution arose that would end the loss of all American lives and end the war quickly. They seized it. Captain Fuchida also added that given the culture of his nation, Japan would inevitably have used the atomic bomb over the United States if it meant their assured surrender.
Though again, the bombs were not dropped to achieve victory. They were dropped to get Japan to stop fighting.