In such high numbers, humans are a statistic. If you think otherwise you're a blatant moralfag.
More like 'fucking moron' than moral fag. It's horrible either way morally, but exchanging 2 cities for a horrifically high body count (and one that would have been payed really only by Americans because the brits were being little bitches about the pacific theater) is a far far more stomachable thing than Rider slaughtering an entire town for a single person.
Yes, it is (although I think the US deliberately avoided pushing too hard for a surrender so it could scare the Soviets), but that is a matter of scale rather than fundamental principle.
Yes, killing an entire city to save one person is something I would consider to be wrong, whereas the converse is less obviously so, but doing so does
not make you a psychopath. It just means you value the lives of those you care for more highly than others. Which everyone does to some extent, Rider just takes it to an extreme.
EDIT: I'm not strictly utalitarian, but in the case of the atomic bombs, it was justified. No question about it. And why it was done was because the Japanese WOULDN'T have surrendered. I don't think you get this Mike. Even after both bombs were dropped, the military still didn't want to give up, and actually tried to coup the Emperor who wanted to throw in the towel.
I've read plenty of things that strongly imply otherwise. The Japanese were negotiating a surrender some time before the bombs were dropped, and the biggest sticking point was the US insistence on unconditional surrender without any guarantees about the Emperor, which ended up not happening
anyway.
The first atomic bomb can be argued, perhaps, but the second really was not needed. Further, the US could easily have used a demonstration (or even a smaller city) rather than seeking out a large city to bomb. They clearly intended to maximise the damage.
And, sure, some of the military didn't want to give up even after the atomic bombs, but they were evidentially not that strong, since they failed.