The words spoken by Teiresias in Antigone, if adhered to during World War II, could have saved several thousand lives. Like Creon, many leaders have failed to listen to the warnings of impending danger and continued on their destructive paths.
In Japan, Emperor Hirohito serves as a perfect example. Once in power, Hirohito augmented Japan's military in spite of warnings from the United States. He then invaded China and Manchuria, against the wishes of both the U.S. and the Soviet Union. The Emperor continued to ignore foreign threats, including an embargo on the oil that drove Japan's war machine, and invaded Indochina. He gave up any hope of turning back when he ordered the attack on the U.S. Emperor Hirohito's refusal to end Japanese expansion brought America into World War II, preparing the way for two atomic bombs to be dropped on Japan. The casualties from these bombs, over 100,000 total, could have been prevented if the Emperor had only "yielded when he knows his course wrong, and repaired the evil". .
Similar to Emperor Hirohito, Creon, the king of Thebes in Antigone, also disregarded the warnings of imminent catastrophe. He was told by many, including his own son and Teiresias the prophet, that refusing burial to Polyneices body was against the law of the gods and the will of the citizens of Thebes. Antigone was sentenced to death, and the suicides of Haemon, Creon's son, and Eurydice, Creon's wife, soon followed. Had Creon spared Antigone when he knew his course wrong, tragedy could have been avoided. .