Ad: This forum contains affiliate links to products on Amazon and eBay. More information in Terms and rules
Long term radiation hazards were far from being understood.
My favorite example was the Davy Crockett.
View attachment 295140
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Davy_Crockett_(nuclear_device)
Range, depending on launcher . 1.25 miles or 2.5 miles.
"would produce an almost instantly lethal radiation dosage (in excess of 10,000 rem) within 500 feet (150 m), and a probably fatal dose (around 600 rem) within a quarter mile (400 m)"
Now which way was the Wind blowing? Final ones taken out of service in 1968.
Well...there is a common factor, the end result of Enola Gay's mission.This is getting pretty far off-topic and it doesn't address B-29's or the Enola Gay.
Maybe a thread about the evils of radiation?
Dave, I stand corrected and was not aware of that. During WWI my paternal great grandfather removed the "von" from our last name due to anti-German feelings while in Wisconsin the family was in an almost totally German town where German was the spoken language. As staunch Lutherans church services were in German and there was great pressure to remain German, though Lutherans were anti-Kaiser
It might be worth remembering that whoever was in office in WWI and WWII are no longer there.
I have frineds whose parents were extremely anti-Japanese and anti-German. Their children pretty much aren't and THEIR children harbor NO animosity against either nationality. Unless there is a very good reason to continue hatred, it is hard to sustain it from generation to generation. These days there isn't much of a reason except parental prejudice and that usually doesn't suffice for reasonable people, even if they ARE kids.
Not everyone is reasonable, but a lot are. I won't debate how many are unreasonable because it depends almost entirely on who you know, and we are diverse group with but a very small percentage of common acquaintences.
Really, it's hard to blame even that generation. These weren't a bunch of schoolyard bullies. These Nazi leaders were psychopaths, and a propaganda machine. The population was given a race to kick around for their troubles, because they were deep in the hole, just like everywhere else. Think of the kind who go along with that, and who relish it. There were a few. But the vast majority were simply scared to rock the boat.Good luck with that...
I don't know how many times my wife has been told by people here in the US that she should be ashamed and feel guilt for what the Germans did in WW2. Hell I read that ignorance from a few people here in the forum from time to time...
She was born 30+ years after the war. She had nothing to do with it, has no fault, and therefore should have no guilt or shame.
Good luck with that...
I don't know how many times my wife has been told by people here in the US that she should be ashamed and feel guilt for what the Germans did in WW2. Hell I read that ignorance from a few people here in the forum from time to time...
She was born 30+ years after the war. She had nothing to do with it, has no fault, and therefore should have no guilt or shame.
This has been forgotten, probably on purpose. If anything, the U.S. government had more animus toward German aliens than Japanese. The reason more weren't interned was there were just too many of them.
On the contrary...Americans with German or Italian heritage were assigned to the PTO early in the war.American military personnel of German descent were allowed to fight in Europe without general restriction, while American military persons of Japanese descent were generally not allowed to fight in the Pacific (there are a few exceptions, such as in certain military intelligence units). Japanese-Americans certainly did fight in WW II, but mostly in Europe.
T!
We are looking at 1940's emotions with 2015's morals. Big difference.