1. Why did some world leaders and
theologians feel that flying would be the end of mankind?Some world leaders and theologians felt that flying would be the end of
mankind because they believed the bombings would wipe out civilization. Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin pointed out on
November 10, 1932 that “…it is well for the man on the street to realize there
is power on earth that can prevent him from being bombed.” He continued to say that the only defense was
offense, “which means you have to kill more women and children than the enemy
if you wish to save yourselves.” (356)
Baldwin was in agreement of many theologians, who though that God did
not give man wings for a purpose. The
Spanish theologian Juan Caramuel y Lobkowitz explained that “God denied men the
faculty of flight so that they might lead a quiet and tranquil life.” (356) In
other words, man causes too much mischief and damage to be responsible for a
gift such as the ability of flight. Nearly
three centuries before the Wright Brothers solved the problem of flight another
theologian, German experimenter Johann Daniel Major, believed that flight would
make “the world seem a thousandfold more hateful and more ruinous” (357) than
the discovery of gunpowder. He believed planes
would be more dangerous than guns!
7. What is meant by the phrase
“abandonment of all restraint” as it relates to WWII and the military
tactics used by both sides?
The phrase “abandonment of all restraint” refers to the disregard for civilian
life, and that of the enemy’s, in order to achieve victory during WWII. More specifically the strategic bombing and
the atomic bomb. The author states that “The
destruction wrought by the strategic air campaigns was to some degree
intentional. The desire to punish the
enemy, to bring him to his knees, was very real.” He further explains that the technology of
the day was unable to produce the degree of bombing accuracy sought by the air
planners before the war. They were
therefore unable to destroy the industrial heart of the enemy with exact
precision, so the “temptation to bludgeon him to death proved simply
irresistible.” (426) This bombing war ultimately
resulted in the deaths millions of people; civilians including women and
children, as well as the young airmen who brought the firepower. The atomic bomb brought with it total war, “with
no mercy, no quarter, and no limit to the capacity for destruction.” (425) Was victory worth the amount of life
lost? Was the “abandonment of all
restraint” the correct answer to winning the war? This topic continues to this day to be an
object of debate.
8. How did WWII transform the prewar
United States aviation industry into the huge aerospace and defense
industrial complex it is today?
World War II
transformed the prewar United States aviation industry into the huge aerospace
and defense industrial complex it is today because of one word: necessity. With war looming in the future it was
necessary for the United States to invest in an air force. In turn, it was necessary for the aviation
industry to expand in order to meet the production quantity that was requested
by the government. This resulted in the
creation of a National Defense Commission and the Defense Plant Corporation “which
acquired land and built factories that were then leased to manufacturers”
(433). The result of this was that the
federal government funded over ninety percent of the plant expansion of the aircraft
industry during wartime. In order to
train and move forward with aviation places like McCook Field were necessary,
which housed U.S. aeronautical research facilities. The author says that “Even during an era when
American commercial airplanes dominated the world’s airlines, military sales paid
the bills” (440), talking about before WWII broke out. In other words, the military played a huge
role in the production of the United States aviation industry. Because of this, it developed into the huge aerospace
and defense industrial complex it is today because that was what was necessary
for the United States to procure an air force and continue to have and further
that air force today.
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