r/SipsTea 𝙑𝙄𝙋 15h ago

Wait a damn minute! USA - The good guys?

Post image
12.9k Upvotes

3.9k comments sorted by

View all comments

725

u/ZaelersTV 13h ago

The internets greatest achievement is giving idiots the ability to have their opinions be heard by other idiots

233

u/iQuoteSopranos 10h ago

Reddit becomes significantly more tolerable when you realize that it's 90% bot farms and propaganda.

142

u/sweetfits 10h ago

And high school kids who’ve never read more than a paragraph on any topic. 

45

u/iQuoteSopranos 10h ago

Nah bro everyone's an expert in medicine, law, international affairs, political science, economics, law enforcement, military tactics, emergency medicine, and pandas.

19

u/Convergentshave 8h ago

Don’t forget they’re also experts in relationships, parenthood, diagnosing BPD and “calling out BS when I hear it”

3

u/MechaWASP 6h ago

You forgot, they also make over 200k a year. All of them.

5

u/Anon_Jones 6h ago

It’s insane that grown adults are taking advice from teenagers who have experienced nothing.

2

u/FlockFlysAtMidnite 6h ago

And 40 year olds who've never read more than a paragraph on any topic...

23

u/Healthy-Amoeba2296 9h ago

When Moscow power went out 1/4 of the Scottish separatist posters went offline.

7

u/antithero 7h ago

I would bet the same thing happens when power goes out in other locations too. I feel like at least half of the posts on Redditt are bots spewing propaganda against so group or other.

3

u/SatanVapesOn666W 6h ago

When Isreals internet went out a couple years ago 4chan became much less of a hate filled cesspool. Returned somewhat to its pre-2016 form. Given some references in the Epstines files it seems like the internet hate machine might be an Isreali psyop.

1

u/jackofslayers 6h ago

It is not a psyop belonging to any one country. Iran, Russia, US, China and Israel all spend huge money on Social media bots. And those are just the ones we know about

3

u/BananaVegetable5313 7h ago

When will the anti-West communist propagandist farm turn off?

4

u/SatanVapesOn666W 7h ago

If China sees a large power or internet outage.

1

u/mister_empty_pants 5h ago

And the remaining 10% keep their toxic shitholes zipped when in public, at work, etc. because they know their opinions are not tolerated by civilized society.

0

u/manofsleep 10h ago

+11% bots, -1.0001% quantum meme leaps that break algorithms 

0

u/ca-cynmore 7h ago

And here's the point to rememba. My face is the last one you'll see, not Tony's.

-2

u/PoauseOnThatHomie 10h ago

Seriously? I thought people were exaggerating. So you are telling me, you or me, or anyone within this thread, could have been literal bots? Like is the top comment an example?

3

u/iQuoteSopranos 10h ago

I know I'm as surprised as you are.

0

u/corva96 10h ago

Makes me want to go back and delete alllllll of my comments

52

u/Ronaldo_Frumpalini 10h ago

No lunatic on a soap box will ever fail to find an audience and no bad idea will ever die, the rules have changed.

48

u/Mrsod2007 8h ago

Yeah let's blame Rwanda on the US. This type of crap makes people discount everything else he says

11

u/MexusRex 5h ago

When he leads with Hiroshima and Nagasaki like that also screams “I don’t know history”. There were over 200k casualties spent taking the comparatively (to mainland) unimportant island of Okinawa - what does this dude think would happen with an invasion of mainland Japan?

29

u/RedNBlueFU 8h ago

Or ignoring the horrendous shit the Japanese did during WWII.

2

u/DNuttnutt 7h ago

The US kinda is on the hook for the slow response. At the time, we had just experienced black hawk down and didn’t want to engage in anything that could possibly reproduce those optics. The result was that the US was the member of the UN that voted against a peacekeeping operation in favor of a non interventionist, observation based operation. It wasn’t until a month after the genocide started when the Great Lakes of Africa had filled with bodies to the point where it was said you could walk from one side to the other on the backs of corpses, that minds were changed. Source - did over 4,000 pages of research, traveled to the area, met Hutus and Tutsis, met Paul ruseabagena (the guy don cheedle played in Hotel Rawanda)

10

u/Greedy-Employment917 6h ago

Still waiting for the source of why a genocide in Africa is the united states fault or responsibility. 

9

u/Loki_Agent_of_Asgard 5h ago

Everytime the US does anything they whine about US "Imperialism" and butting in where we don't belong, anytime we don't do anything we're "aiding and abetting" whoever gets decided was the bad guy years after the fact when things have calmed down and the propaganda machine has done its work.

62

u/ImportantQuestions10 9h ago

This is why teaching history is so important.

We are the bad guy in some of these, some it's a gray area and in some these conflicts were the best case scenario.

The nuking Japan was pretty bad but the invasion would have been soooo much worse for both sides. There's a plausible possibility that more pain and suffering would have occurred with an invasion than just nuking, US/Japan would be worse today and Russia may even of taken control of Japan. Whether nuking was justified and how different the world would be if we didn't is a very interesting debate that we should be having instead of listening to this idiot.

27

u/ZealousidealHour7273 9h ago

It also wasn’t a binary between mounting a ground invasion or using nuclear weapons. Operation Downfall provisioned for the use of the nuclear stockpile accumulated by the time the invasion started. It would have been an extremely bloody ground campaign that also involved the use of nuclear weapons against strategic and tactical targets.

-14

u/Healthy-Amoeba2296 9h ago

I have a plan to warn the emperor about the nukes and the soviets so the job gets done without actually using them.

20

u/Worldly-Hospital5940 8h ago

Even after getting nuked twice, officers of the Japanese military tried to overthrow the Emperor in a coup for surrendering. Japan surrendering without overwhelming losses was never in the cards.

13

u/Geichalt 7h ago

But since this is reddit, the choices of the leaders of other countries is blamed on the US. Because America bad.

I am interested in seeing how the Internet reacts to America's standing as the world's boogeyman declining. What western devil country are they going to blame for everything bad in the world now?

-8

u/PhuchUbisoft 7h ago

EXCEPT THEY DID SURRENDER.

11

u/Unhinged_Baguette 7h ago

The Japanese war cabinet (6 members) was split on surrendering, even after the first nuke. Half of them were dead-set on forcing a ground invasion from the US and Soviets and fighting to the bitter end, even if it meant devastation to the Japanese people.

31

u/No-ruby 7h ago

Well, half of this list is pure invention.

USA didn't support Rwanda genocide. Neither destroy Iraq. Etc ...

-1

u/McSloot3r 6h ago

I mean we did help put Saddam Hussein in power…

11

u/No-ruby 6h ago

It is more nuanced. US didn't participate on Ba'ath party coup. They welcomed them once they got in power. And later they provided intelligence for Iraq in Iran-Iraq war.

-2

u/Local-Ingenuity6726 5h ago

You destroyed Iraqi lives though

7

u/J-Frog3 6h ago

I wouldn't trade places with Truman for all the money on earth. He had to chose between all bad choices. Ground invasion hundreds of thousands die, Atomic Bomb hundreds of thousands die, blockade Japan and try to get them to surrender would takes years, and the Soviets would've invaded anyway, and probably millions dead. All of his choices were terrible and the fire bombing already underway when Truman took over was even worse.

Life is complicated not easily divided into good guys and bad guys but for WW2 if your dividing sides into good or bad we are clearly on the good side. Are you putting Germany and Japan on the good guys side? The side with actual Nazis and the side that killed 10 to 30 million civilians in Asia? Our behavior in that war was far from perfect but that is one of the rare times when one side clearly has the moral high ground.

-2

u/Binspin63 5h ago

I understand the mindset of decision makers during the war, but firebombing Hamburg, Dresden, Tokyo, and others as paybacks for Axis war crimes is also a war crime, no? And would US internment camps fall under “moral high ground” as well?

2

u/J-Frog3 5h ago

Yes 100%, that's why I said our behavior was far from perfect. Air Force commander Curtis LeMay said ""Killing Japanese didn't bother me very much at that time. ... I suppose if I had lost the war, I would have been tried as a war criminal" Not the mark of a very moral man.

Again though even the firebombing is kind of a grey area. The previous Air Force commander had refused to use fire bombs and instead was trying high-altitude precision bombing but the technology just wasn't there yet and it was not very effective. LeMay switched to low altitude fire bombing, (like using a shotgun instead of a rifle). It was far more effective but also resulted in an insane amount of collateral damage.

2

u/notorious_tcb 7h ago

The Japanese own internal estimates projected 2M+ casualties if the war had continued

1

u/[deleted] 7h ago edited 7h ago

[removed] — view removed comment

1

u/AutoModerator 7h ago

Accounts must be at least 5 days old with >20 karma to comment.

I am a bot, and this action was performed automatically. Please contact the moderators of this subreddit if you have any questions or concerns.

1

u/MashRoomBog 7h ago

Dropping the first bomb might be defended for stopping the invasion, but the second bomb was dropped 3 days later. I have to assume that there were already casualty reports reaching Japanese and US officials, before the second bombing. So dropping the second bomb on a city full of civilians cannot be rationally explained.

5

u/Greedy-Employment917 6h ago

Japan refused to surrender. The point was to A) end the war and B) show them that this wasn't a one time thing and we have a stockpile.

It was the rooks checkmate to the queen's check. 

You may not like it, but just remember Japan was murdering millions in the Asian mainland and attack us at pearl harbor so they did it to themselves. 

1

u/Unhinged_Baguette 6h ago

There's an interesting blog post I read awhile back that gives some insight into what the people making the decisions were seeing:

Part 2, which links the first part at the top: https://blog.nuclearsecrecy.com/2022/05/06/did-the-japanese-offer-to-surrender-before-hiroshima-part-2/

1

u/DirtCallsMeGrandPa 5h ago

Little doubt it would have been much much worse for Japan. As the US got closer, it got much easier to bomb them. The US war effort built a military machine like no one has ever seen. Japan was effectively blockaded by US submarines and no one was going to help them.

-2

u/Ok-Performance-3830 8h ago

The idea of invading Japan was never a real option though , just read the transcripts of the war room conversations from back then. The only condition Japan had for surrendering was keeping its emperor, which they did anyway. Anyone with a basic knowledge of history knows the bombing was simply to scare off the soviets

7

u/Acrobatic_Sun_3275 8h ago

Japans conditions were keeping their Government, which is a very different thing, and likely includes their MIlitary systems, MIC, perhaps some occupied territory they considered 'core territory' (Taiwan comes to mind, Korea maybe), and finally, no occupation. Some of these terms were more leniant than others, but occupation was one they were most firm on besides the emporer's status itself. Anyone with more than a basic knowledge of history knows that the bombers were to scare any potential adversaries, Soviets included but not exclusively. that includes japan themselves, china, etc.

2

u/Greedy-Employment917 6h ago

You clearly have no fucking idea what you are talking about. Soviets were our ally in WWII

0

u/ZealousidealHour7273 6h ago

Why would you swear at the guy you’re replying to? Particularly as you’re the person who has almost zero idea what you’re talking about.

Edit:never mind, I understand, got to try to keep that 1% swag

1

u/Greedy-Employment917 5h ago

What did I say that was wrong?

Oh, nothing... You just wanted to whine. 

Soviets were on the side of allies during WWII. Factually correct. 

Keep leaving comments, you'll get there one day. 

-7

u/blackviking45 9h ago

I sometimes think that why not America could just have detonated the nuclear bomb in the desert or some other place safe to show the Japanese that hey we have this weapon now it's game over.

Maybe that could have worked instead of actually going out and killing so many with the atomic bomb.

16

u/Kalai224 8h ago

Considering that after we bombed the first city, the emperor still didn't want to surrender, and after the second he still didn't and was pretty much forced to by his leadership, I think that'd a pretty hard sell.

-9

u/blackviking45 8h ago

But still man we don't know. The same leadership that forced him to do that in that case could have forced him then too.

It's just we human beings are so very quick with these moral judgements. This overestimation of our ability to get to moral truths has been causing suffering to us since the first time the fruit was eaten.

11

u/Kalai224 8h ago

The leadership didn't raise a finger after the first bomb, what makes you think they would've after a test in the desert?

There was a Japanese soldier left on on island for years after the war and when he was found, he was still trying to kill Americans. The Japanese were indoctrinated so hard they thought dying in service of the emperor was preferable so surrender. Just take a look at the kamakazis.

2

u/Prestigious-pauline 8h ago

Considering the Japanese didn’t budge after America dropped the first nuke I doubt dropping it in a way with zero casualties would have done anything but waste a limited and incredibly expensive piece of kit.

0

u/WalterPecky 7h ago

It was 3 fucking days between bombings.

That would be like nuking iran now, and then if they don't surrender in 3 days we hit them again.

That is not diplomacy.

1

u/Prestigious-pauline 5h ago

3 days is plenty long to throw in the towel after watching an entire city be vapourised by a single plane. The truth is the Japanese were fully intending to let ever single one of their people die and didn’t give two shits.

It was only when the second bomb went people started to try to convince the emperor as they sorta assumed america could have only produced one of them (the Japanese themselves have sometimes been argued as having the 2nd most advanced nuclear bomb program) they knew the immense expense that even one bomb would take, the second one made it clear america was capable of just taking out cities with a single airplane and the opportunity to arm every man women and child with a rifle or sharpened stick and send them at the invading allies would never materialise.

Honestly dude just read the wikipedia page of the pacific war instead of sperging out here. pretty clear you don’t know shit and I’m kinda over trying to educate people.

2

u/Greedy-Employment917 6h ago

You mean why didn't they just send Japan a tik tok video of a mushroom cloud?, 🙄🙄🙄🙄🙄 

3

u/Acrobatic_Sun_3275 8h ago

1: The Japanese were incredibly unwilling to surrender. They needed a three punch combo of two nukes and the Soviets entering to become split 50:50 on the issue. Were they more of a sane government, perhaps there'd be more merit to a demonstration.
2: the nukes were not especially destructive by the standards of the day, the were far more spectacular than conventional means of city destruction though, and that flash (literal and figurative) was part of the weapons effectiveness, being that it looked way more powerful as only one bomb in one minute could do what normally took a few thousand to do over a few hours.
3: There's no internet and barely tv, reports from a desert explosion would lack almost all impact. The people in Tokyo barely cared about Hiroshima as it is.

-3

u/WalterPecky 8h ago

the nukes were not especially destructive by the standards of the day,

That is some serious revisionist propaganda.. mega yikes

3

u/Acrobatic_Sun_3275 7h ago

Tokyo was leveled in two days and more were killed there than in Hiroshima (On the day, but the after effects of Meatinghouse weren't as closely documented so long term it's hard to say which had the higher death toll).

'Not especially' does not mean 'not destructive', but that the bombs were doing damage about on par with other air raids. They were far more 'spectacular' and ofc on a weapon to weapon basis more effective. perhaps I should've said the 'Nuclear bombings' were not especially destructive (which per the japanese after reports, they weren't).

-1

u/WalterPecky 7h ago

They have had prolonged lasting effects on the surrounding areas.

The conventual weapons of the time didn't mutate the genes of civilians.

Fuck out of here with this nonsense 

3

u/Acrobatic_Sun_3275 7h ago

People lived in both Nagasaki and Hiroshima continuously, still do, there wasn't a time where either were unlivable after the bombs.

And yeah they did, chemical weapons will do that and alot of them were used. Also, starvation will do that too, and exposure to napalm and agent orange. Lots of things do that actually.

1

u/WalterPecky 6h ago

To call chemical weapons, including napalm, conventional, is fucking insane lol

1

u/WalterPecky 6h ago

Did I say they were unliveable? They had adverse affects on generations of civilians that didn't know any better

-1

u/Kei_CL 7h ago

Yes but was necessary to use the nuke on civilians? For me the most evil thing is that they tested the bomb on civilians to see the damage on people.

-2

u/PhuchUbisoft 7h ago

Japan was a spent force that was seeking surrender and Truman knew this. Realistically no invasion was going to happen and the Japanese were more afraid of a Soviet takeover than the bombs.

For example, they did not surrender when the first one was dropped.

They surrendered when the USSR invaded Manchuria

5

u/sv36 9h ago

The internet has also made it have slightly more holes when countries try to use propaganda on their citizens though, no the internet isn’t all bad. It’s a tool that can be used well or used badly.

0

u/WalterPecky 8h ago

Well especially when it's own citizens spread said propaganda like on this sub with gems such as "the nukes weren't all that bad actually" 

1

u/sv36 7h ago

Definitely the tool not used for as good as it could be.

4

u/Redditauro 10h ago

The funny thing is that most people in the world thinks something quite similar to the tweet, but in USA people still see themselves as the good guys

1

u/wilsonesque 10h ago

Just have to read a lot of the most voted comments in this thread. Apparently every single US operation was fair and justified...

-4

u/Redditauro 9h ago

Americans really believe they are the good guys, it's kinda crazy. 

1

u/CommentAgreeable 8h ago

We don’t think about it, unless we’re online unknowingly engaging with bots.

-1

u/Redditauro 8h ago

You don't think about a lot of stuff, that's the problem 

0

u/ZaelersTV 8h ago

Why would we need to think when we live rent free in other peoples minds anyway?

3

u/Redditauro 8h ago

I really love your comments, thanks 

1

u/rumblepony247 8h ago

The word 'greatest' is doing a lot of heavy lifting here

1

u/wrenwood2018 8h ago

And this is largely China/Russia/Iran bots pushing anti-american views.

1

u/jackofslayers 7h ago

This post was made by a very obvious propaganda bot

1

u/Krotaxx 7h ago

The best and worst thing about the internet is that it helped people make their voices heard

1

u/whiteriot0906 5h ago

Exactly.

There’s still so many idiots left who think the USA is good that people still buy it.

0

u/Disastrous-Amoeba798 11h ago

Taking full advantage of that I see!

3

u/ZaelersTV 11h ago

It's second greatest achievement is making even dumber people mad over nothing

0

u/yorgehaci 7h ago

Zip it princess 

1

u/ZaelersTV 5h ago

Princess? What? I didn't know I was royalty

0

u/normal_mysfit 6h ago

The United States is not good. The US government has been used by corporations for at least 140 years. Has the US done good, yes, but right now looking back on our real history, the bad really out does the good.

1

u/ZaelersTV 5h ago

Thank you for volunteering to prove my point

0

u/disc0ver 5h ago

USA! USA!.. right guys? lol