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I'm proud to be a resident of Oak Ridge - and despise those that will be here next month to protest the weapons plants, and the men and women who work there. We joke about glowing in the dark, and live with news stories about radioactive frogs - but this small town helped to end the war. God bless the men and women of the Manhattan Project.
1 posted on 07/15/2005 9:49:00 PM PDT by Tennessee_Bob
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To: Tennessee_Bob

amen! And God Bless men like Dr Teller who worked on it!


2 posted on 07/15/2005 9:52:45 PM PDT by Perdogg
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To: Tennessee_Bob

T+60 years bump...


3 posted on 07/15/2005 9:54:03 PM PDT by RichInOC (ALAMOGORDO: WHAT HAPPEN?)
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To: Tennessee_Bob
Hey, TB, did you ever run a geiger counter through your house, sort of a Silkwood kind of check?
4 posted on 07/15/2005 9:55:19 PM PDT by NonValueAdded ("Iraq is the bug light for terrorists" (Mike McConnell 7/2/05))
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To: Tennessee_Bob

I have a unique take on this.

Within 15 years of the bombings, Japanese American relationships were amazingly good.

Do you think that if you'd told surviving Sailors from the Pearl Harbor attacks that they would have Children born in Japan and perhaps they would retire there? Would they have believed it?

I'm not saying it takes Nuclear war to bring about change, but I think that REAL change can happen in relatively short periods of time, and that is my hope for the current situation in the mid east.

Good show. I'm watching too.

This is good to brush up on, with China Saber rattling and whatnot.


6 posted on 07/15/2005 10:05:06 PM PDT by Capn TrVth
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To: Tennessee_Bob

Bump.
I am up too late, watching the History Channel right now. Earlier they had a brief program on the Trinity test.

Thanks for the thread. I have long found the story of the Manhattan Project fascinating.


8 posted on 07/15/2005 10:07:15 PM PDT by Constitution Day (I am the Sultan of Oom-Papa-Mow-Mow.)
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To: Tennessee_Bob

And if I understand right, the next two bombs were used in japan and we were out of bombs for quite some time after that.

It took both bombs and another B-29 conventional bombing run (inadvertantly disrupted a coup to overthrow the emperor and keep fighting) to bring about the Japanese surrender.


9 posted on 07/15/2005 10:10:49 PM PDT by Names Ash Housewares
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To: Tennessee_Bob

BTTT


10 posted on 07/15/2005 10:13:52 PM PDT by Fiddlstix (This Tagline for sale. (Presented by TagLines R US))
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To: Tennessee_Bob

With this quote from the Bagavad-Gita, Oppenheimer summoned in the nuclear age at 5:30 in the morning at the Trinity Site in New Mexico.


The yield of code name Gadget was estimated to be equivalent to 20,000 tons of TNT - 2,000 B-29s worth of explosives.


A quote from Brigadier General T.F. Farrell regarding the blast - "The effects could well be called unprecedented, magnificent, beautiful, stupendous, and terrifying. No man-made phenomenon of such tremendous power had ever occurred before. The lighting effects beggared description. The whole country was lighted by a searing light with the intensity many times that of the midday sun. It was golden, purple, violet, gray, and blue. It lighted every peak, crevasse and ridge of the nearby mountain range with a clarity and beauty that cannot be described but must be seen to be imagined..."


The light from the blast was seen all over New Mexico, and in parts of Arizona, Texas, and Mexico. Windows shattered 120 miles away in Silver City, New Mexico, and the shock wave was felt in Los Alamos, 230 miles away.


Why this post? I live in Oak Ridge, Tennessee - part of the Manhattan Project. I own a home built in 1944, for the workers at the Y-12, K-25, and X-10 facilities. I go to church with folks that as young men and women, came to this City Behind the Fence, to do their jobs - without an understanding as to what the end result would be - just the knowledge that it was part of the war effort. I make a point of thanking them for what they did - because even though they didn't carry weapons, or face the enemy - they helped to end the war.


It appears that the dirty work was done in NM, explosions, why do we care about Tenn.?


11 posted on 07/15/2005 10:14:23 PM PDT by Ethyl
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To: Tennessee_Bob

I visited Trinity site a few years ago. A desolate patch of weeds beneath the Sierra Oscura range. A slightly depressed circular area a few hundred feet in diameter surrounded with cyclone fence accessible by an equally unremarkable military access road on the White Sands test range. Very little betrays the history there. All that remains are reinforcing steel in concrete from the original tower. And it was here where history pivoted on a knife's edge. It could have been Haigerloch Germany, or some small island held by the Imperial Japanese army for military research, but it wasn't. It was central New Mexico. It makes one very aware how precarious the trajectory of a free people can be. Protesters who whine about our own nuclear weapons arsenal never stop to think what the world would be like under the Swastika or Rising Sun. Never crosses their tiny minds.


14 posted on 07/15/2005 10:24:39 PM PDT by SpaceBar
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To: Tennessee_Bob

Thanks for your post. These people (nuclear materials workers) are entitled to our acclaim. They finished the war and saved lives.


15 posted on 07/15/2005 10:32:34 PM PDT by stillwater
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To: Tennessee_Bob

Is it true that the editor of Scientific American figured out something was going on when he received so many subscriptions from Oak Ridge?


20 posted on 07/15/2005 10:45:28 PM PDT by GOPJ (Phil Donahue "has made the world safe for emotion masquerading as thought."-BOZELL III)
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To: Tennessee_Bob
When Can We Have That Bomb?"
24 posted on 07/16/2005 7:02:44 AM PDT by Lonesome in Massachussets (Deadcheck the embeds first.)
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To: Tennessee_Bob

Thanks for the post, Bob. I'm a native Oak Ridger myself. Dad was a scientist at X-10.

I remember those "flat tops" fondly! We were in one of the cinderblock duplexes. You're not in Woodland, are you?


25 posted on 07/16/2005 7:49:31 AM PDT by solzhenitsyn ("Live Not By Lies")
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To: Tennessee_Bob
My father on the island of Tinian.
28 posted on 07/16/2005 8:39:10 AM PDT by Boazo (From the mind of BOAZO)
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To: All
A few pictures I took at Trinity April, 2004. The site is only open the first Saturday of April and October but I believe they made an exception and it is open today. At least that is what I heard on the radio Thursday as I was driving home from New Mexico. And yes, that is rain on the monument.


33 posted on 07/16/2005 9:39:50 AM PDT by COEXERJ145 (Just Blame President Bush For Everything, It Is Easier Than Using Your Brain)
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To: Tennessee_Bob
It was golden, purple, violet, gray, and blue. It lighted every peak, crevasse and ridge of the nearby mountain range with a clarity and beauty that cannot be described but must be seen to be imagined..."

I would like to see how that light reflects off of this...


37 posted on 07/16/2005 9:18:11 PM PDT by montag813
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To: Tennessee_Bob
With this quote from the Bagavad-Gita

Who needs the multi-demon-gods of Hinduism when there are better verses in the New Testament?

"I am the Alpha, and the Omega, the beginning and the end.."

43 posted on 07/17/2005 12:11:48 AM PDT by Windsong (FighterPilot)
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To: Tennessee_Bob
God bless the men and women of the Manhattan Project.

My feelings exactly. Each project member got one of these neat little lapel pins after the war. There's probably quite a few down your way.

44 posted on 07/17/2005 5:58:19 AM PDT by Fresh Wind (It is Watergate yet? Is it Watergate yet?)
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To: Tennessee_Bob

"...part of the Manhattan Project."

My Grandfather was a machinist in Milwaukee, WI during those years. He & his company (P&H) worked on the project, too. He knew what he was doing and why. Had no reservations about building anything needed for the project.


45 posted on 07/17/2005 6:03:13 AM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin (Save The Earth. It's The Only Planet With Chocolate.)
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To: Tennessee_Bob

The actual quote is “Now I am become death, the destroyer of worlds.”


49 posted on 11/02/2007 10:17:54 AM PDT by Petronski (Here we go, Steelers. Here we go!)
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