George Rebane
In 1945 Hiroshima was devastated by the first atom bomb used in anger. The bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki saved a net of at least two million lives and untold millions of casualties, plus a Japan devastated more horribly than it already was in August 1945 when the bombs were dropped. The outcry from the know-nothings was that the bombs would leave a radiation ruin that would last into the thousands of years. Instead, 66 years later we have the thriving metropolis of Hiroshima that is a showcase to the world. Why?
In the United States we started with a thriving metropolis and world class industrial center that could be matched nowhere on this Earth. It annually produced millions of the finest motor vehicles, and supported a war effort by making thousands of B-24s in the largest facility on the planet. The city was located on the nexus of land and water transportation conduits and close to all of its major markets. It was the gateway to a better life for untold thousands of poor blacks seeking a new life and relief from a Jim Crow south. Then Detroit was struck by the cancer of collectivism – labor laws, welfare, …. . As a result, it lost it all.
What has made the difference in these two cities – collectivism and/or culture? (H/T to a correspondent for the photos)




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