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Edited on Fri Jul-29-05 05:21 PM by anarchy1999
Here it is...
The Cost is Too High by
This past May, the last of the brilliant atomic pioneers, who developed the first atomic bomb, Philip Morrison, died. Morrison, like many of his Los Alamos colleagues became a leading advocate of international arms control. like the director of the Manhattan Project, J. Robert Oppenheimer, who said to President Harry Truman after the bomb was used, “ Mr. President, I have blood on my hands.” and became a leading critic of the efforts of his main rival, Edward Teller to develop the hydrogen bomb. President Truman as well, said later (and I may paraphrase) “We can never use that bomb again, especially against kids.”
Another atomic scientist who made the transition from the use of military nuclear power, was my brother, Dr. Malcolm Stuart. He received his Phd in Atomic Physics in 1955 from the University of Iowa at the age of 26, and went to work immediately under Admiral Hyman Rickover, as a Senior Scientist on the first nuclear-powered submarine, the Nautilus. Of course we only discovered this later, as his work was all classified. Growing up, Mac was a fine big brother to me, smart, funny, handsome and a whiz at the piano. He used to joke when we asked what he wanted for Christmas, “Just a little peace and quiet”…… He helped me with my story problems, and I helped him with spelling! He married my sorority sister, had a family, and worked hard at his job, being primarily responsible for the heat shield protecting the crew from the nuclear core. After a few years, he quit the work with the military to go into the design of nuclear power plants, disillusioned about the continued buildup of weapons. But when he began to see the problems that could occur with construction, waste disposal, etc. of the power plants, he became concerned that there would be an accident, a meltdown, that would also endanger many lives. He asked for, and was granted a two year sabbatical to work in Palo Alto, California as a consultant on the safety of the reactors, and development of alternative energy. That was in 1978. Unfortunately, the first month after he arrived, he was diagnosed with cancer of the lung. He had already suffered several glandular inflammations, which we reasoned later were probably caused by his exposure to the many “hot” nuclear sites where he had worked.
In January of 1979, his cancer metasticized to his brain, and in March the Three Mile Island accident occurred. Mac continued to work despite his debilitating therapy, until the last week of May, determined to contribute what he could. He died June 2, having just had his 50th birthday,and ironically, the Nautilus Submarine made its last voyage that same week and was taken out of service and put in drydock in Groton, Ct .
At his memorial service in California, a lady sang “Let There Be Peace on Earth, and Let It Begin With Me”, the first time I had heard it. When we moved to Costa Rica, one of our new friends told me that his mother-in-law had written it. I hoped that Mac had finally found his “peace and quiet” and every time I sing that song, I think of my brother and dedicate myself anew to my peace work.
There has not been a new power plant built in the US since the Three Mile Island meltdown. And I’m sure that Mac would be appalled today to know that this administration is seeking to build new types of nuclear weapons, as well as using depleted uranium to infest the earth and kill and mutate new generations. Three years after his death, Mac’s wife died of leukemia, and his three daughters all suffered some form of infertility, low birth weight baby or tumors of the uterus. At the 1999 Second World Peace Conference at the Hague, I attended a seminar fpr “Peace Scientists” where I shared the story of my brother, who, ironically, would have turned 70 years old that day. Many people came up to me afterwards to say that his story was similar to many of their associates in the early nuclear field.
When President Eisenhower said in his speech of 1953, “The world in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children.”
For me, and many others, the cost has been too high!!!!
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There is more info on --- available, we just need to wait. This woman has been my inspiration for several years. I did not know this much until today. I believe her message is significant and it will be public record on a Sunday soon.
www.veteransforpeace.org
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