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wellerstein's profile
Alex Wellerstein
Alex Wellerstein
Alex Wellerstein
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@wellerstein

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Alex WellersteinVerified account

@wellerstein

Historian of science, secrecy, and nuclear weapons. Professor of STS at @FollowStevens. UC Berkeley alum with a Harvard PhD. NUKEMAP creator. Coder and web dev.

Hoboken, NJ / NYC
blog.nuclearsecrecy.com
Joined September 2011

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    1. Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein Aug 6
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      74 years ago today, the United States detonated an atomic bomb over the Japanese city of Hiroshima. There are some pictures of this event from the air, and a few from the ground, and many of the aftermath. But this is the one I find most affecting.pic.twitter.com/xPD7DPpkkL

      54 replies 1,366 retweets 2,635 likes
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    2. Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein Aug 6
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      This teacher and his students were at the Noboricho Elementary School, located 0.7 mi / 1.1 km from ground zero. The smiles are so human, so genuine, so unpolitical. These are the main victims of war. (To acknowledge this is neither an anti-US, nor a pro-Japanese statement.)

      2 replies 76 retweets 497 likes
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    3. Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein Aug 6
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      After the war ended, the US sent scientists to Hiroshima and Nagasaki to learn what they could about the effects of the bombs. Records of school children provided a key dataset for calculating the casualty-distance curves of the atomic bombs.pic.twitter.com/MutDE9Z58E

      6 replies 88 retweets 265 likes
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    4. Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein Aug 6
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      It was the child deaths that affected Harry Truman the most, too. When he ordered no further atomic bombing, on August 10th, he invoked "all those kids" as the justification. Throughout his life Truman would refer to the bomb as a killer of "women and children."pic.twitter.com/tsyLF0iar2

      6 replies 132 retweets 473 likes
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    5. Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein Aug 6
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      There are many ways to think about the damage caused by the bomb. Structural damage is a potent way to illustrate it. As is the art of survivors. But it's that first photo (which is from the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum) that really gets me — all that joy, snuffed out.pic.twitter.com/HI79JhD0UE

      3 replies 73 retweets 282 likes
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      Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein Aug 6
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      This isn't meant to be a naive statement. "War is hell." I know the causes of WWII, and the reasons why the atomic bombs were seen as an expedient and necessary action by those who were involved in dropping them. I do not absolve the Japanese militarists for their role in this.

      6:46 AM - 6 Aug 2019
      • 32 Retweets
      • 227 Likes
      • samuel シンえせ千種 Jim Young monshir0 Camilo Andrés Reyes addy😈 Mitch [̲̅t][̲̅a][̲̅g][̲̅s][̲̅i][̲̅t]🍑 🦋 Asaya 🦋
      2 replies 32 retweets 227 likes
        1. New conversation
        2. Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein Aug 6
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          In principle, if you think the bombings were necessary, you should still be able to accommodate that belief without ignoring any of the above. In reality, I find most defenders want to look the other way when it comes to the consequences. To do so is to take an incomplete view.

          2 replies 49 retweets 399 likes
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        3. Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein Aug 6
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          Even Truman, the endless defender of the bombings, seemed to harbor deep unhappiness about their collateral damage. In Dec. 1945 he referred to the bomb as "the most terrible of all destructive forces for the wholesale slaughter of human beings" — he didn't whitewash it.

          2 replies 56 retweets 313 likes
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        4. Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein Aug 6
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          One can invoke, of course, the hypothetical lives the bomb saved. Because they are hypothetical, they can be nearly as many as you want them to be (and the defenders of the bombings revised that number upwards and upwards over the years), and whomever you want them to be.

          2 replies 33 retweets 204 likes
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        5. Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein Aug 6
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          But I can't help but feel that the actual dead deserve a bit more attention, versus the hypothetical dead. I know: your grandfather was slated to be in the invasion, you might not be here, etc. (Assuming the war didn't end prior to November 1945, which it may well have.)

          4 replies 31 retweets 264 likes
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        6. Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein Aug 6
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          But even in that situation you've still got to reconcile with the costs. You've got to say, "I am OK with all of those children having died, so that I may live." I find that a defensible statement. But I rarely hear people say it — because it's hard.

          8 replies 47 retweets 281 likes
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        7. Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein Aug 6
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          I guess that's my argument, here: if you want to defend the bombings, that's fine with me. There are certainly arguments to that end. But you can't ignore the consequences of them. To do that puts us in a dangerous place; an "ends justify the means" that overlooks the "means."

          6 replies 45 retweets 307 likes
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        8. Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein Aug 6
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          Truman managed to defend the bombings, while being very open about the horror, once he learned of it. He turned that into a desire not to have nuclear weapons be used ever again, if it was possible. He's a more complex figure on this than his detractors or defenders tend to know.

          25 replies 49 retweets 402 likes
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        9. End of conversation
        1. New conversation
        2. MrMueller and her  😺 🐱 😸 🐱 😽 🐱 😽 🐱‏ @MrMuellerIsHere Aug 6
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          Replying to @wellerstein

          Here is is today:pic.twitter.com/AWQ20lidRH

          1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
        3. MN‏ @chibio Aug 7
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          Replying to @MrMuellerIsHere @wellerstein

          I'm in Ito, Shizuoka. There was a public announcement on the municipal PA system at 8:15 a.m. yesterday. It was to tell citizens to pause and silently pray for the victims who dyed 74 years ago in Hiroshima.

          0 replies 0 retweets 1 like
        4. End of conversation

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