We Had to Do It
(Surviving a War Against Savages)
by
Mike (in Tokyo) Rogers
by Mike (in Tokyo) Rogers
DIGG THIS
Vice President
Dick Cheney gets off the hook for ordering war crimes? Since America
cheers and the mass media agrees, then US President George W. Bush
needs to pardon many more people for war crimes before leaving office.
Yes, Mr. Bush, let this be a plea for you to forgive these war crimes
committed by those who, with good hearts, and good intentions, tortured
fellow human beings, not by choice mind you, but because we were
dealing with a savage and inhumane enemy that the record shows were
bloodthirsty murderous savages. Our boys committed those war crimes
because it was the only way they could try to protect those poor,
innocent, women and children at home from the terrorists. If you
hear my plea, Mr. Bush, please pardon them.
Yes, it was
wrong. We shouldn't have tortured. But when our leaders did it,
they had good reasons for doing it. Our leaders ordered war crimes
committed for all the right reasons. Therefore; they should be pardoned
for the war crimes they committed.
History will
show that breaking of International Law and the committing of the
war crime of torture was not only unfortunately necessary, it didn't
actually prevent the terrorist killing of thousands of our innocent
men, women, and children. But, who knows? Perhaps it did prevent
the killing of many more? It's easy to have 20/20 vision with hindsight.
But we didn't have that luxury back then.
No. If I am
to understand US Vice President Dick Cheney's logic – as well as
the logic of the mass media, of which I am a proud member – then
what we did could not have been helped; in fact, if you were us
you would have done the same thing; you would have done anything,
even torture, to protect your citizens. History proves that I am
100% correct on this point and not to be argued with.
We were in
a war for survival; a Clash of Civilizations; we tortured because
we had to. We didn't mean to be bad guys, we were merely trying
to obtain the necessary information we needed to prevent a calamity.
Too bad, we failed. The world was different then and it's hard to
remember, with mere hindsight, what the people felt at that time.
We did what we had to protect our people and our homeland. In fact,
I agree with Cheney and think it's too bad that we didn't torture
more to catch the main people who were running the show for the
enemy and prevent the disaster that occurred.
Yes,
..".sure, some of this might have been excessive and arguably wrong,
but it was all done for the right reasons, by people who are good
at heart." I absolutely agree; especially about the part of
the "people who are good at heart." I seriously doubt if you could
ever find a mother of any of these patriots we're talking about
who wouldn't insist that their son wasn't pure at heart and absolutely
dedicated to the freedom of the homeland.
Yes. Fair is
fair. What's good for the goose is good for the gander, no?
So besides
pardoning the people for crimes committed, there are seven more
people you need to pardon, Mr. Bush.
Let me give
you a rough background about the people that I demand that the US
president pardon.
We were in
a war with a savage enemy. This enemy had just committed the "worst
human holocaust the world had ever witnessed, roaring across two
continents non-stop for four centuries and consuming the lives of
countless tens of millions of people" in the last 400 years.
In fact, these savages wiped
out at least 300 men, women and children – nearly 75% of a native
population – in a single day! – during their imperialist
expansionism.
This genocide
played heavy on our hearts and our minds. We knew we were dealing
with the devil himself. We had no choice but to do anything to win
the war; that included, unfortunately, torture.
Finally, Mr.
Bush, I ask for a pardon, by using the one piece of evidence that
I promised to show you. This is the piece of evidence that history
shows as undeniable proof that we were dealing with the criminally
insane or, at best, savage barbarians who would rape our women and
brutally murder our children at any chance they could get. In fact,
they did, and as I say, history proves me right: In August of 1945,
these animals dropped two atomic bombs on our cities and incinerated
nearly a quarter-million old men, women, and children. Children!
Small six-month old babies and 2-year-old girls and boys, all incinerated
in an instant like a tissue into a bonfire.
This is also
an admission of guilt that torture actually didn't help us to prevent
the enemy from committing the war crime of genocide against our
people.
As it turns
out, and I'm sure you'll agree that my logic is as impeccable as
Mr. Cheney's, as well as the complicit American mass media, we should
have tortured and killed many more American POWs. Perhaps, by committing
atrocities against them we could have prevented them from committing
genocide against us. Perhaps we could have stopped the American
terrorists if we had only had the will-power.
I demand that
the US president, as well as American society as a whole, pardon
the people in the following list. To not do so would be completely
hypocritical if I am to believe that war crimes and crimes against
humanity committed by the Bush Administration should not be punished.
The
list of seven to be pardoned is:
- General
Kenji Doihara, spy (later Air Force commander)
- Baron Kouki
Hirota, foreign minister
- General
Seishirou Itagaki, war minister
- General
Heitarou Kimura, commander, Burma Expeditionary Force
- General
Iwane Matsui, commander, Shanghai Expeditionary Force and Central
China Area Army
- General
Akira Muto, commander, Philippines Expeditionary Force
- General
Hideki Tojo, commander, Kwantung Army (later prime minister)
These patriots
were sentenced to death by hanging at the Tokyo
War Crimes Tribunal after the end of World War Two. Their crimes
included torturing Allied prisoners of war. But, as I quite skillfully
pointed out, the circumstances of their crimes were special and,
therefore, it is not useful to consider their actions crimes because,
well, ask their mothers; these boys were all good at heart and they
only meant to protect their country from murderous terrorist imperialists.
So let American
exceptionalism stand. Let us all bask in the glory of the new reality.
~ Edited
by Robert
Klassen
December
29, 2008
Mike
(in Tokyo) Rogers [send
him mail] was born and raised in the USA and moved to
Japan in 1984. He is the president of a mass-media production company
and also runs a talent agency in Japan. He is now the Producer/Director/Co-host
of Good Morning Garage, the most popular FM radio morning show in
Tokyo. His book, Schizophrenic
in Japan, went on sale in 2005.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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(in Tokyo) Rogers Archives
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