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Ayn Rand did not "glorify" the atomic bomb. She feared it as a threat to "wipe out mankind" in the hands of statists. She took it very seriously and explained at great length in a letter to the producer what she thought would be necessary in a film about the development and use of the first atomic bomb. You can read first hand her letter and notes on her script in David Harriman's Journals of Ayn Rand, Chapter 9 pp 311-344, which the currently active article in The Nation omitted.
She wrote only about a third of the script for the movie, called Top Secret, before the project was sold to MGM, which had already been working on its own movie version. Ayn Rand's partial script is not in the book and I have never seen it. MGM apparently continued the project with its own competing script but the movie was never released.
The conventional fire bombing, including Tokyo, did more damage continued right up to the end than even the two nuclear bombs, but at the expense of much greater American losses. Were it not for the bombing, especially the nuclear explosions at the end, that forced the surrender an enormous amphibious assault would have been required and was planned against the island, which would have entailed massive American losses. The Soviets did none of this.
A good history of the air war against Japan is Kenneth Werrell's Blankets of Fire: U.S. Bombers over Japan during World War II.
Hitler aside, Heisenberg was desperately trying to get an in-place nuclear reaction going even as the Allies were swarming over the landscape towards him. At the last minute he abandoned the failed project and bicycled a large distance to his summer home where he waited on the front porch arrogantly expecting to be treated as a prestigious scientist aloof from German war when officers arrived.
There are many books about Heisenberg's role, some trying to make a case for Heisenberg either sabotaging the bomb effort or the opposite of leading its development for the war, but a very good and straightforward personal and scientific biography is Cassidy's Uncertainty: The Life and Science of Werner Heisenberg.
Cassidy covers Heisenberg's entire life and career, not just the atomic bomb controversy. One interesting parts describes how he bungled the original formulation of the uncertainty inequality while arguing from an optics "thought experiment" analogy with microscopes, which Bohr had to correct because of Heisenberg's inadequate background in basic physics -- especially the optics of the resolving power of microscopes despite his intelligence.
And it describes how Heisenberg's tenacity successfully developed the matrix formulation of quantum mechanics, as a generalization of the discrete spectrum of the over-simplified "Bohr atom", with tedious algebraic calculations that Born and Jordan converted into the proper general matrix form -- Heisenberg hadn't known about matrix algebra either. It was later shown to be equivalent to Schodinger's continuum formulation.
has a chapter(seven - 'Gifts From Heaven': The American Victory over Japan, AD 1945 p.237) that changed my perspective on the propaganda that declared the use of the two nuclear bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki immoral,etc.
The argument that those two bombs were supremely MORAL because they broke the will of the Japanese to continue supporting their leadership's war efforts, and in the process saved countless American and Japanese lives.
So at best it was facing up to reality which also included no natural resources and no war industry left along with the knowledge it only took one explosion to cancel out anything else.
I doubt the word atomic entered into it until later. Horror maybe. the Russians would have spent some time consolidating their regained and newly gained land area along I'm sure with the usual purges.
Then too they were at the end of a very long supply route a single railway line. thus no immediate threat to the Japanese Islands as compared to the look up in the sky threat of the US Forces. At best the Russian declaration was an extra dollop of frosting and perhaps a candle on a cake already baked, served and eaten.
Given time. The water route from Sakhalin to south was feasible in the warmer months.
The US was already in Japans southern most Island of Okinawa with a massive fleet of naval and air resources.
And bombs big enough to wipe out whole cities.
As in most things it's a combination of events and reality, Either way and without the knowledge of what this sort of weapon, even if it could be delivered, it kept a lot of American troops alive. From a soldiers point of view which is far different than 5,000 miles of distance and 70 years of hindsight later it was a good thing.
I believe in killing in self-defense and as a LAST RESORT.
When threatened by psychotic islumic clowns that START WITH KILLING others because they will not blindly follow a madman's delusions, I say "sew their miserable corpses into pigskin shrouds and drop them onto mecca during the hajj as a warning regarding their fate if they want to cause trouble."
I don't think it'll be government driven as much as commercial. Someone like Musk or Space X, may well drive it.
p.s. my browser window is always full-screen,
because I want to f o c u s on you.
.
I wish the mods would change the posting software so it removes the line breaks.
I would much rather see money-making activity in space, and except for solar power satellites that will probably need to involve travel to the outer solar system. Factories could be put in Earth orbit and probably will be, but once cheap transport is in place it will make more sense to get their raw materials from the asteroid belt than any large planet or moon surface (and the moon doesn't seem to have much except sand, anyway).
width of a newspaper column, to make it easier on the
eyes and so that you don't wag your head "no" when
reading. . I'm using a homebrew pc with windows 7
running (truth be told) firefox. -- j
.
But there are other countries where dumbing down is not a priority, and competition is intense, and they could very well be the leaders.
.
was because of the unique history there. . they were
built in 43, five years before I was born.
"Dutch" Van Kirk, the Enola Gay navigator visited
us at y12 in about 03 or 04, and I asked him about
the supply line of atomic bombs behind the first two.
from what I had read, there was a significant gap
before more would be ready, and he confirmed
that -- weeks. . Little Boy had used up so much
235 that it would be awhile before that much would
be ready again, and Fat Man was supplied with Pu
from Hanford, Washington, where the reactors
were working at maximum -- but could beat the
production of 235 to the punch, if required. . it
sounded like the strategic bet was that two would
do the job. . it was fortunate that they did. -- j
.
I am constantly amazed when someone presents more of Rand's thoughts and always find her thoughts incredibly accurate.
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