The Pros And Cons Of Bombing

725 Words3 Pages

War can be a devastating event for many people. The bombs dropped on Hiroshima are an example of destruction, chaos and death all around the world. Many people were lost, others dead and some with injuries that were impossible to heal from. Moreover, those sad events affected the area of were the bombs were dropped so much that, up to today’s date, people are born with genetic disorder do to their ancestors’ exposure to radiation. The genetic disfiguration escalated from generation to generation. The author John Berger (b. 1926) reinserted those events of August 6, 1945 back into living consciousness. His comments of nature of evil, horror and hell brought back most memories of the catastrophe, which made a dent in history forever. There are many reasons the bombing will never be forgotten, and the biases of people that approved or denied the occurrence made it harder for the government to decide whether to do it or not. First, all humans are the same, and we do not have the rights to take a life that was not given to us. Higher authority, which is God, is the only one that can decide the fate of a person’s life, by allowing …show more content…

Complete disorder and confusion abounded the streets of Hiroshima meanwhile the war was ending. Japan had announced their surrendering to the United States, that lead to the effective finale of the World War II. Until todays date, more people are being born defected, due to the aggressiveness of the waves in radiation that infiltrated the genes of the population during the bombing. It has transcended generation by generation in the blood stream of all Hiroshima society. Research showed that the effect of radiation in the genetic scale can last up to half a century, within the generation of ancestors. The innumerable consequences brought to light by the nuclear weapon used on Hiroshima lead to the birth of children with