Category: /Science & Technology
Electricity is the fuel and catalyst for so many peoples worldwide. What started as an experiment in Edisons laboratory has grown to mammoth proportions as we it today. Nuclear power, introduced in the late 50s, was thought by many to be the answer
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Category: /Science & Technology
were thought up, and then World War 2 started.
Thus began the Nuclear Age - you could also call it the Age of Fear. Nuclear weapons, electronics, computers. From then on, scientific research progressed at an exponential rate. Moreover, computing power
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Category: /Arts & Humanities/Film & TV
, and nuclear weapons for over a decade. This is a regime that has already used poison gas to murder thousands of its own citizens."
"States like these, and their terrorist allies, constitute an axis of evil, arming to threaten the peace of the world. By seeking
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Category: /History
their nuclear weapons and blow the entire world up. September 11, 2001 proved true miss use of technology more to a point that was unbelievable. President George W. Bushs words on the event made this clear.
Our fellow citizens, our way of life, our very freedom
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Category: /History
. This policy aimed to put weapons into orbit which would provide an effective shield against an attack by intercontinental missiles. In reality, even for the USA this was a prohibitively expensive strategy. For the USSR it meant that if its nuclear arsenal
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Category: /History
was planted into the minds of many Americans. Bush also warned his fellow Americans that Saddam would soon try to build a stockpile of nuclear weapons that could be used against The United States. All these actions cause a great bias against Iraq that continues
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Category: /History
of the unknown and fear of the known destructive powers of dangerous nuclear weapons. When Britain and the United States tried to consolidate capitalism and democracy in Western Europe, Stalin accused them of trying to devise an Anti-Soviet bloc. Basically everything
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Category: /History/War & Conflicts
the effect that the U.S.S.R.'s threat had on the allied world. (Cold War, Online)
Yet another example of his threatening inflexibility came with the development of the nuclear atomic bomb. In 1946, Stalin's government rejected a plan for U.N. weapons inspections
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Category: /Law & Government/International
negotiations, making recommendations and initiating studies. Negotiations have been held bilaterally and through international bodies such as the Conference on Disarmament, which meets regularly in Geneva. Under the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons
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Category: /Law & Government/Military
with the purpose of tallying the number of chemical, nuclear, and biological weapons present in the Iraqi arsenal. Despite various admonishments provided by Bush, U. N. leaders seemed to retort the presidents comments with skepticism. Witness to said proceedings Michael
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