People without the Black Death fled the countryside just as the Japanese who were not hit by the bomb disadvantaged the survivors of Hiroshima. These people have never received help from their country and from those who caused all this to them. The United States is praised for the so-called “victory,” but does not show the long-term effects experienced by these people. Years later, people don't know the challenges Hiroshima faced. Takashi explains: “those who survived must continue to talk about our experiences.” The violence experienced by Takashi and many others needs to be told by everyone. The difficulties that the city of Hiroshima faced should never be forgotten. The pain experienced by the country has never been exposed to the public. No one knows what the survivors had to recover from because it is hidden from the public. Berger's article explains that the bombing of Hiroshima was a terrorist act. He thinks terrorists are murderers of human beings saying, “the calculations were terrorist, the indiscriminate was terrorist” (240). Berger uses the victims' stories to capture the horror and pity they went through while allowing the reader to observe. Berger's article demonstrates terrorism as a political decision to kill a group of civilians. Takashi states that “the United States has broken international law and all principles of humanity by using nuclear power
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