(since your "shattered jewels" bit is a total canard, and an utter failure of an excuse for the dropping of the "two mushroom clouds of justice" as you so eloquently stated)
From Embracing Defeat
The germans were told essentially the same thing. We would be too under similar circumstances; of that I have little doubt.
And let us also remember, that (as the book cited notes) the citizens of Japan were not "citizens," but rather "subjects" of the emperor.
Also, "shattered jewels" was not a fighting technique, nor a tactic of war. It was an artistic/literary ideal that the emperor tried to capitalize on in a last desperate effort to have his subjects save his ass (which they didn't).
You are way off, share a common ignorance of history and are an asshole (troll) to boot! Congratulations.
Good day hairball, you've been coughed up.
You know you have gotten someone's goat when they start(or finish) with the petty insults.
If you had honestly searched for the concept, you also would have found what American planners had figured into the unavoidable invasion of the Japanese home islands.
The leaders were taking a willing populace towards a road of final extermination. Unlike the Germans, which started pitching arms and surrendering, the Japanese soldiers, and a lot of civilians on Okinawa died rather than face defeat.
You talk of individual citizens, Constituent, but as I pointed out, the Japanese nelieved their Emperor was divine and above question in his rule. If the Emperor had decided, along with the generals, to fight till every Japanese person was dead, the people would have gone for it.
I understand it is foreign to you, the thoughts and ratioanle of other people, but that was the harsh reality. The two bombs brought home the futility of fighting, because the Japanese people would not get a chance to fight to extinction, they would only be vaporized. A different mindset, and you do have a hadr time delineating differences in behavior.
We were left with little choice, and yes, the bombs, both and more if needed were completely and fully justified. I am content knowing Col. Tibbets felt no guilt over a mission well done.
Constituent, you are earnest and zealous, but you make the same mistake Rush Limbaugh makes. You get your facts in line and will follow the wrong conclusion. Perhaps, you should emulate el Rushbo quite so much, it leaves you blinded from reason.