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| Those who cheer on evil share in the bad karma. |
This was during World War II (after the U.S. used the anticipated attack of Pearl Harbor as its pretext for entering the war, moving major assets out to sea ahead of time to protect them, leaving behind old equipment and sitting ducks, U.S. GIs, to be sacrificed for propaganda purposes).
America's aerial bombings murdered between 150,000 and 246,000 helpless civilians, most of them not involved in the conflict. This remains the only use of nuclear weapons on humans in an armed conflict.
Japan announced its forced surrender to the Allies on August 15th, six days after the war crime bombing of Nagasaki and the Soviet Union's declaration of war against crippled Japan and invasion of Manchuria.
The Japanese government was forced in humiliation to sign an instrument of surrender on September 2, 1945, bringing about the end of overt war and ushering in decades of cold war hostilities that continue in varying forms up to the present. More
Hiroshima: The Day the Sky Fell | multilingual documentary
WAR CRIME: A secret weapon—"Little Boy," the first atomic bomb—is loaded aboard a plane dubbed the Enola Gay. Its target: Hiroshima.
At 8:15 am, the city vanishes in nuclear fire. Photographer Yoshito Matsushige captures haunting images on the Miyuki Bridge, where survivors struggle in silence and agony.
Through personal testimonies and rediscovered photos, this video uncovers the American slaughter of innocent noncombatant civilians, the human cost of atomic warfare.
This is the untold story of survival, loss, and memory beneath America's mushroom cloud that reshaped the world forever.
Directed by Bertrand Collard.
- Hashem Al-Ghaili, "Hiroshima-Short Film"; Bertrand Collard, Best Documentary, Aug. 5, 2025; Pfc. Sandoval, CC Liu, Ashley Wells (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly


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