Thursday, March 12, 2020
War Without Mercy essays
War Without Mercy essays    Race played a dominant role in World War II for a variety of reasons.      Historically, power relationships emerge between the dominant and the     domineered.  This has occurred throughout history, from slavery in Roman     times to slavery in our own South.  It seems there is always a victor and a     vanquished, and those weaker must bow to those stronger who dominate them.     In World War II, and added tension was added, and author Dower calls this     "race hate."  We were not just fighting the Japanese, we were fighting the     "Japs," the "Yellow Bastards" who attacked Pearl Harbor and killed so many     of our fighting men in a single morning.  They were not only the enemy,     they were despicable because of their color and their race, and we hated           In Europe, we were fighting the Nazis, the "Krauts," who murdered     millions of Jews and sought to take over all of Europe.  In both cases, the     threats were quite real, and it is understood why we were fighting a war,     but it became more than a war, and turned into a racial war because we     hated and feared the things these foreigners had done, and this is common     when we fear the vanquisher, and hope not to become the vanquished.           On the home front, race hate reared its own ugly head in the way we     treated our own black soldiers, who were not allowed to do many of the jobs     that whites were allowed to do.  We formed all black regiments, and all     black fighter squadrons, but never mingled the two, thus underlining it was     not just the enemy we were afraid of, it was anyone with a different color     skin.  Race played a dominant role in World War II because of fear, and     because of ignorance, but that is not to say it could not happen again.     Race hate will always be an issue when two dominant nations face off     against each other; it seems to be human nature.    ...     
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