Hello dear friends, I hope you all will be fine and doing good. It should be a potentially lifesaving event when big and small nations could meet in Glasgow to try to stall the march to mass extinction, by intervening against the senseless abuse of nature and the climate crisis thus incurred. There is a joined-at- the hip twin of the evil extinction threatening us with a more abrupt end. The threat of mass annihilation with nuclear weapons has been seldom discussed by powers that own them and also threaten to use them.
Absurdly enough, nations gloat about their
nuclear status and reward those who helped them get there by describing this or
that scientist as father of the nation's bomb. Alber Einstein said that though
that had he known his theories would lead to the making of the terrifying bomb,
he would have been a locksmith.
For this reason and more it looked
encouraging for the world at large that the British Prime Minister pressed
hard for urgent measures to pause global warming. On the other hand,
regrettably, he has been negating the promise by needling China and Russia
occasionally with the help of a solidarity warship at others by exhorting Nato
to inch menacingly closer to Russia's border. Does he not know this makes the
world vulnerable to a tragic possibility? Remember the meteor hit that
brought the era of dinosaurs to an abrupt end on the earth. Life then had to
crawl back through the fungus that alone survive the meteor strike,
rather reminiscent of the black fungus that defied treatment in Indian
hospitals recently. Do we want the earth to the return to the era of fungus?
With these questions in mind, Boris
Johnson's appeal to save the world while preparing it unwittingly for another
way of mass extinction bears a resemblance to the tragic story in a Gulzar
movie. A solider faces death penalty for killing his wife in rage and gets
critically shot during an attempt to escape his arrest. A team of
Doctors brings him back to life, but they have to hand him back to the
prison officials for imminent execution save the world from global warming to
destroy it with a nuclear winter?
Will there be feared destructive war in
the future is an absurd question to pose. We are assured that nuclear wars
will never happen because of the inbuilt fear of self-harm in the bargain. But
we are also told menacingly of how close the world came to an end in the
Kennedly Khrushchev spat and how such and such Soviet officer on duty
luckily doubled guessed a false nuclear alarm about the US missiles attack and
that saved the world. In South Asia embassies and UN offices had
evacuated their non-essential staff with their families from Delhi
during the May 2002 India-Pakistan stand- off. The belligerent rhetoric and
remotely observed military movements had prompted fears of nuclear conflict
erupting anytime. India and Pakistan officials since have denied there was such
a danger but they have not given convincing evidence this was so.
Idolization of nuclear weapons in some countries
appears to be of a peace with arrogance that comes with ignorance. Deniers of
the mask to fight the Covid outbreak or those who are in the denial
of climate change are more likely to be insensitive to the nuclear threat we
all face. It's surmise worth testing that those who refuse to wear the mask are
likely to be people who care little about the nuclear debate. The Johnson
-Biden genus is in all probability a rarity that strives to save the earth
but can be perceived as unwittingly prepared to destroy it. They are
not alone in this absurd contrariness.
There is a good news in an incremental
sort of way as Alice Slater, a highly regarded anti-nuclear weapons activist. Reminded
us in an online discussion on the fate of the Treaty on the Prohibition of
Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) the first legally bind international pact signed
by 86 countries, which became effective in January of this year.
Even though 60 % of the world's populations live
in countries that have not welcomed the new law that made nuclear weapons
illegal, majorities of citizens in most of those countries that have not
signed the TPNW where polling has been done, support the negotiated abolition
of nuclear weapons. So te new treaty is popular in many of those countries.
Slater believes canvassing is helping.
The more we can remind people that nuclear weapons are now illegal in every
way, the better our chances will be to create a rising tide of revulsion
at current nuclear policies, expenditures, and proliferation and for
creating a growing public demand for negotiations to abolish them.
As far as nuclear nationalism is
concerned, a hallmark of recent entrants to the weapons statu a stark
insight presented by a former Israeli intelligence analyst handling
Iran should deflate the egos. Dunny Citrinowicz said President Biden had
only one option on the Iran nuclear deal and Israel would have to learn to live
with it an agreement without any fresh conditions for Iran. An Israeli
attempt to militarily destroy the facilities would be unsuccessful,
because Iran would build everything back again and possibility and double the
speed. The message was that you cannot destroy the knowledge about
nuclear weapons even if you assassinate a few leading scientists. The
knowledge is universally wide spread. What the remarks by Citrinowicz imply
is that after Oppenheimer's original work every other nation's "father of
bomb" has in all probability only copies from the original work to
flaunt their adored capabilities. India and Pakistan have their nuclear heroes,
for example, but is there also a hero among them who has invented a new
aircraft or a ship. One flexes its sinews with Chinese and American planes, and
the other proclaims national triumph with French and Russian aircraft.
Time to invent an original plan to save the world. Hope to hear good from you. Dear friends, I am always waiting for your
positive comments and feedback.
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