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America is accused of using everyone's money to destroy the world, with its actions described as historically focused on devastation, experiments, and resembling Nazi behavior. A propaganda film depicts the Bikini Islanders unknowingly facing the destruction of their paradise. 87 ships positioned three miles off Bikini were subjected to the impact of the fifth atomic bomb. An armada of warships was assembled in Bikini Lagoon to be blown to bits. Scientists on 73 test ships plotted experimental programs to gather data on the atom bomb's blast effects. Animals were strapped to the decks like a perverse Noah's Ark to observe how they died and burned. Special ointments were applied to some areas of the animals to test their protective quality against the atom blast, while other areas were left exposed.

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President Richard Nixon announced in 1969 that the United States would renounce the use of deadly biological weapons, but few Americans knew that the country had been operating a secret bioweapons program for over 25 years. Born out of fear during World War II, the program conducted extensive research and experiments, even using human subjects. The British and Japanese also had their own bioweapons programs, with the Japanese conducting horrific experiments on thousands of people. The US program, fueled by the Cold War, conducted tests on American cities and human subjects, proving the feasibility of biological warfare. However, concerns over the uncontrollable nature of these weapons and the mounting political pressure led to the program's eventual end in 1969.

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Nuclear power is a topic that is often avoided due to its devastating nature. There are two words associated with it, one being the obvious "nuclear," and the other being a word that should never be mentioned. I once made the mistake of saying it, realizing how terrible it was. However, now it seems that the nuclear word is being mentioned every single day.

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In April 1945, as Allied forces liberated Nazi concentration camps, the world learned about the horrors of Hitler's regime. However, what many don't know is that thousands of former Nazis went on to work for the US government, some of whom were war criminals. Declassified documents from the late 1990s reveal that these former Nazis were employed by the US as scientists and intelligence agents, even though they misrepresented and fabricated intelligence. The US government was willing to use these individuals to gain an advantage in the Cold War, despite the ethical concerns and the potential compromise of accurate intelligence. The full extent of the collaboration between the US and former Nazis may never be known.

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We received minimal information about the day of the nuclear bomb drop, instructed not to look at the flash. On the aircraft carrier Warrior, we faced the stern, covering our eyes. The flash was blinding, revealing our bones through closed eyelids. The heat felt like being engulfed in flames. Moments later, the blast knocked us down, causing injuries. When we were allowed to look up, we saw a massive fireball and an immense mushroom cloud. The experience was overwhelming, leaving some in tears. Over a decade of tests involved 22,500 personnel, with many later dying from cancers and leukemias, raising serious concerns about the government's treatment of its own people.

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During the Cold War, the government conducted high altitude nuclear explosion tests using the Thor missile, known as Operation Fishbowl. They aimed to break through the dome-shaped barrier they believed existed above the Earth. The glass-like material reflected the missile's explosion across the sky. This operation had a purpose and was not just a random experiment.

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Think the internet started in the nineties? Cute. It was already 20 years old. The first message? Sent in 1969. By 1973, people were already emailing each other. And by '83, domain names like .com and .gov were going live. But what else was lurking in those early days? Military databases, private intelligence networks, and the first experiments in artificial intelligence. You never saw it, but it was watching you. The internet you know today, that's version two point o, the original? It's still buried deep, still connected, whispering secrets of a digital age long forgotten. What else lies beneath the surface waiting to be uncovered?

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Units were arriving and being sent to work. For some, these would be their final moments. Then it happened.

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Humanity possesses over 13,000 atomic weapons, many thermonuclear and thousands of times more powerful than the Hiroshima bomb. One speaker laments signing the 1939 letter to President Roosevelt, fearing Germany would develop such weapons first, thus setting unstoppable events in motion. Science, once seen as a guiding light, became a blinding force. The weapons are a mirror reflecting humanity's worst, waiting for a mistake. Knowledge didn't bring wisdom, only restraint and empathy can. The greatest mistake was trusting humanity to wield such power. Regarding the film "Oppenheimer," one speaker found the Trinity test underwhelming, lacking the true terror of the real event. Nolan's avoidance of CGI and insistence on practical effects was a mistake, failing to convey the horror. The omission of Hiroshima was also a critical error. The film should have shown the consequences to avoid becoming a story of ambition rather than aftermath and guilt. The speaker wanted the consequences undeniable, lest history remember Hiroshima more kindly than it should.

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At a meeting, we discussed the possibility of using geophysical systems as military weapons. Ideas included causing tidal waves by detonating hydrogen bombs underwater, but it was deemed easier to just drop the bombs on a city. Another idea was to release pathogens in a cloud to rain down on enemies, particularly effective against the former Soviet Union.

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President Truman announced the first use of an atomic bomb, a secret weapon of unparalleled strength, which was deployed sixteen hours prior and engulfed Hiroshima. Japanese officials confirmed over 78,000 immediate deaths, with total casualties exceeding 130,000. Truman called for Japan's surrender or warned of unprecedented ruin from the air. When asked if he regarded the atomic bomb as a curse or blessing, Truman stated he thought it was a blessing that could win the war, which it did. He was not worried about it being a curse, but rather a weapon to end the war.

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During World War 2, a virtual environment was discovered, leading to a race for control between opposing sides. Germany, in particular, sought to alter time and gain administrative access to this system. Eventually, power shifted to the United States, acting as a proxy for England. An agreement was made to establish a global surveillance system for ongoing monitoring of the world.

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Units were arriving and being sent to work. For some, these would be their final moments. And then it happened.

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Berlin 1941. Deep beneath the Reich chancellery, a German officer taps out a coded message on a machine that looks more like a typewriter than a weapon. He finishes, smiles, and says, they'll never break this one. That machine was called Enigma, the pride of German engineering and the beating heart of Nazi communication. Every order, every convoy, every secret encrypted through it. The code changed every single day with 150 quintillion possible combinations. To the Germans, Enigma was unbreakable. But across the channel, a small team was about to prove them wrong. A quiet English mansion buzzing with noise and tension, rows of young mathematicians. Linguists and chess players sit at long tables, covered in cables, punched cards, and coffee cups. Among them, Alan Turing, a quiet, awkward genius from Cambridge. Turing had one goal. Crack enigma. Every night, new intercepts arrive from the front coded messages filled with gibberish. And every morning, the Germans changed the settings, wiping out a day's progress. Turing realized that no human could beat Enigma, so he built something that could. In a backroom at Bletchley, Turing's team constructed a massive machine of worried drums and clicking switches. They called it the bomb. It wasn't a computer yet, but it was the beginning of one. The bomb tested thousands of combinations per minute, searching for one clue, a word, a phrase, anything predictable. One operator smiled when she saw it. You mean we're going to fight the war with mathematics? Turing replied softly, yes. And we're going to win. In 1941, they got their first success. A careless German radio operator had sent the same message twice with the same code settings. That tiny mistake gave Turing's machine the foothold it needed. Suddenly, the noise of random letters turned into words. U boat positions. Atlantic coordinates. The allies could now see the invisible war at sea. Convoys at once vanished under the waves began arriving safely. U boats started dying faster than Germany could replace them. The enigma, the symbol of Nazi confidence, had just been turned against them, but the Germans never suspected. For the rest of the war, they kept sending orders, confident that their secrets were safe. They had no idea that the British were reading them all. Historians estimate that the breaking of Enigma shortened the war by two years and saved over 14,000,000 lives. When Allied documents were declassified decades later, surviving German officials were stunned. They learned that every secret message they had sent, every convoy, every code, every command had been quietly intercepted and deciphered by a group of civilians in a countryside mansion. The Nazis believed their machine could never be broken, but it wasn't brute force that defeated Enigma. It was brilliant. And at the center of it all stood a quiet man named Alan Turing, who changed not just the war, but the entire future of human intelligence.

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The first footage of Nagasaki, the target for the second atomic bomb, is captured from a distance. Below the ominous smoke, the devastating power of the bomb has been unleashed, leading to catastrophic results that are now well known.

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Scientists in 1918 reanimated a sample of the pandemic flu to study it. Despite concerns, they went ahead with it. The world will not end due to issues like racism or resource depletion, but rather when someone in a lab says, "it worked."

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- "Retaliation was ordered for the attack." - "Condition November meant that nuclear armed a four bombers were to be used." - "Incredibly, The US was about to launch a nuclear strike against Egypt, the Liberty's presumed attacker." - "There was a flash message, as I recall, from one of the carriers that said they had launched ready aircraft." - "Cairo was about to be incinerated." - "McNamara directed Comm six fleet to recall the aircraft, and Comm six fleet said, are you sure? And he said, absolutely certain. Recall the aircraft." - "The attack on the Liberty had triggered an extraordinary response. Nuclear armed planes had been on their way to Cairo. A nuclear strike had been minutes away and had only just been averted."

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We were given little information about the day the nuclear bomb was dropped. We were told not to look at the flash. When it hit, we could see the x-rays of our hands through closed eyes. The heat felt like being set on fire. Some stood up before being knocked down by the blast. After, we saw the massive mushroom cloud. Many died from cancers and other illnesses. The government's actions were disgraceful and outrageous.

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At 5:29:45 Mountain War time, a blinding light illuminated the Jornada del Muertos, evoking a sense of awe and dread. The event left people speechless, with some laughing, some crying, and most remaining silent. The speaker recalled a passage from the Bhagavad Gita where Vishnu transforms into a destructive form, declaring, "Now I am become death, the destroyer of worlds." This moment made everyone reflect on the profound impact of what had occurred.

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Troops in Nevada are getting ready for an underground lake explosion, which is said to be as powerful as 1,000 tons of TNT. This new weapon, known as the atomic satchel, can be carried by just one person. Another underground explosion releases radioactive debris into the sky. America is adding the atomic satchel to its arsenal.

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Think the internet started in the nineties? Cute. It was already 20 years old. The first message? Sent in 1969. By 1973, people were already emailing each other. And by '83, domain names like .com and .gov were going live. But what else was lurking in those early days? Military databases, private intelligence networks, and the first experiments in artificial intelligence. You never saw it, but it was watching you. The internet you know today, that's version two point o, the original? It's still buried deep, still connected, whispering secrets of a digital age long forgotten. What else lies beneath the surface waiting to be uncovered?

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From Tinian, the mission began after a late meal; takeoff around 02:00. Paul, a colonel, flew the mission himself with Bob Lewis as copilot. He landed on Tinian after July 4, assembling a handpicked crew. The bomb was a pure uranium device; it would be used to make plutonium bombs. It was split into two parts: one half flew out by airplane, the other half arrived later; Los Alamos personnel helped in assembly. Three B-29s carried weather data; Hiroshima primary, Nagasaki secondary, Kokura tertiary. Drop at 31,700 feet; 42 seconds to explode at 1,500 feet; about 10.5 miles from the blast with 2.5 g. Return flight 12 hours 2 minutes; left with ~900-1000 gallons; could have flown two more hours. LeMay kept newsmen away; announcement next day. Nagasaki mission Aug 9 with a different crew. He reflected on publicity and Smoky Hill.

American Alchemy

UFOs Are Monitoring Nuclear Bases Globally (Ft. Robert Hastings)
Guests: Robert Hastings
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The conversation opens with a flood of mysterious drone sightings, challenging official assurances. 'You’re telling me we don’t know what the hell these drones are in New Jersey?' Hastings notes the sightings as more than isolated incidents, calling it the 'tip of a sunken continent' and saying they occur 'all over the world.' The speakers emphasize the pattern: drones near nuclear testing ranges and sensitive facilities, prompting questions about source and intent. Hastings is introduced as the author of UFOs in Nukes, described as 'the world's best database on this phenomena.' He has 'interviewed 167 employees of nuclear bases,' including 'missile technicians, ICBM security personnel, missileers, radar operators,' who report 'orbs, saucers, discs, and Tic Tacs' in restricted airspace. The episode promises to present 'two witnesses with mind-blowing stories' and to let listeners decide credibility. The history presented links UFOs to nuclear programs from the earliest days of atomic science. The claim is that 'UFOs consistently appear at nuclear weapons facilities and energy grids around the world' and have 'hovered over silos, tampering with comms links, and even disabling nuclear missiles themselves.' The narrative traces how after Japan's bombs and the hydrogen bomb tests, sightings supposedly ramped up across bases from Los Alamos to the UK. Specific incidents illustrate the pattern. At Malmstrom AFB in 1967, 'all 10 missiles were off alert'; at Minot in 1966, a UFO allegedly caused missiles to err, with operators describing 'a launch inhibit' process. A 1964 Vandenberg film supposedly captured 'an object flying in' and 'firing a beam of light at a dummy warhead,' after which 'Mansman said the film was confiscated' and 'you’re never to speak of this again'. Rendlesham/Bentwaters in England is discussed, with witnesses describing a 'triangle-shaped craft' and telepathic experiences. The transcript mentions beams of light into the weapon storage area and claims of two tactical nuclear bombs being removed for analysis. The pattern extends to a 1952 Washington DC flyover with 'saucers' over the capital and correlates it with the dawn of the atomic age. Modern sightings persist: 2010 FE Warren power failure that reportedly left 50 missiles offline; 2015 and 2010 cases near U.S. bases; Bedminster, New Jersey drone reports tied to ongoing concerns. The conversation discusses official responses and alleged suppression by groups like Arrow, plus prior official reports of 63 separate incidents at nuclear sites, and connections to Eisenhower, JFK, NORAD, and Project Blue Book. The theme is that the nuclear-UFO link remains active. Theories offered include benevolent protector, parasitic host, electromagnetic influence, simulation, and time-travel hypotheses, with the caveat that 'none of these theories really characterize the beings themselves' and they could be 'time traveling humans' or 'extraterrestrials.' The speaker emphasizes that the evidence is evidence of a persistent pattern, not definitive proof of origin, and urges openness and further investigation, warning that 'we're this close to nuclear annihilation' if the pattern continues.

Conversations with Tyler

Neal Stephenson on History, Spycraft, and American-Soviet Parallels | Conversations with Tyler
Guests: Neal Stephenson
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Tyler Cowen welcomes Neal Stephenson back to discuss his new book, *Poan*. Stephenson reflects on the interplay between history and speculative fiction, noting that while formal education in history is declining, autodidacts are increasingly engaging with historical themes through modern media. The title *Poan* is explained as a unique, searchable term related to polo, which features in the story. They discuss the psychological toll of espionage, suggesting that the best spies are often unremarkable individuals who blend into the background. Stephenson admires the Soviet Union's rapid industrialization and advancements in women's rights, while acknowledging the dark side of that history. He emphasizes the importance of human connection in art, arguing that AI-generated works lack this element. The conversation also touches on augmented reality, social media's evolution, and the potential for AI to enhance learning. Stephenson hints at future books in his series, exploring the intersection of physics and historical events leading up to the atomic bomb.

Coldfusion

Oppenheimer's Controversial Legacy
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J. Robert Oppenheimer, born on April 22, 1904, to wealthy German Jewish immigrants, became a pivotal figure in history as the father of the atomic bomb through his leadership of the Manhattan Project. His early life was marked by brilliance in science and literature, but also emotional struggles stemming from his privileged upbringing. Despite personal conflicts and a troubled academic journey, he excelled in theoretical physics and was appointed to lead the Manhattan Project in 1942, tasked with developing atomic weapons amid World War II. The project culminated in the successful detonation of the first atomic bomb on July 16, 1945. Oppenheimer famously quoted the Bhagavad-Gita, reflecting on the devastating implications of his work. The subsequent bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki resulted in immense destruction and loss of life, leading to Japan's surrender. Post-war, Oppenheimer advocated for nuclear control but faced scrutiny over his past political affiliations, culminating in a 1954 security hearing that stripped him of influence. He died on February 18, 1967, leaving a complex legacy intertwined with the ethical dilemmas of scientific advancement.
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