Fair 50.0°F Fair [Forecast] :: Sunday, November 8th, 2009
Vacation Info Wedding Info Kids/Parents NEW! Pets

Codfish Press

Where oysters speak only to lobsters and lobsters speak only to cod!
Please visit these local CapeCodToday sponsors:
Graci Nolan Photography/Fanciful Fete
We provide a unique style of portraiture, at an affordable price. We know you want more than just a smile into the camera, but a timeless treasure. Fanciful Fete brings you the best and most unique child parties. Girly girl and now boy party options! (Yarmouth)
Neagle & Associates
Making your business fun by making it work, Barry Neagle is a business and executive coach who can help your business with sales leadership and business planning. (Barnstable)

From The Outer Beach Looking West To An American Hiroshima

By Greg O?Brien Codfish Press The closest Cape Codders have ever come to witnessing war firsthand?or the direct affects of war?was in 1918 when Orleans residents were stunned to see a German U-Boat surface just offshore and fire on an unarmed tugboat and four barges it was pulling. The moment was surreal; as if it were an eerie out-take from a 1960s classic, like The Russians Are Coming! ?Torpedoes set the tug ablaze and injured its crew, while constant shelling sank the barges,? notes the Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities history of the event. ?Thanks to the skill and courage of Coast Guardsmen, everyone was rescued. Some of the shells fired from the sub landed on the beach, making this the first time the U.S. mainland had been attacked since the War of 1812, and the only time the country was attacked during World War I. Massachusetts had been producing arms, vehicles, and supplies for the war effort and sending soldiers abroad, but no one expected what occurred that Sunday in Orleans.? Cape Codders since have regularly stood on the eastern shore and pondered wars, conflicts and weapons worlds away, sensing the tragedies of its victims. But lost in the recent newspaper headlines of the 60th anniversary of the dropping of nuclear bombs over two Japanese cities that brought World War II literally to a screeching halt are the ?downwinders? of this country?the forgotten victims of our atomic testing program in the 1950s and 60s, the road kill of this American Hiroshima, the scores who have died from radiation exposure and their families who were left to cope with this numbing loss. The government had told the downwinders it needed to test these fireballs to stay ahead of the Soviets, who had detonated their first atomic device on Aug. 29, 1949; in the years to follow, the Soviets ignited 266 surface and air nuclear bombs in the Kazakhstan region of Semi Palatinsk. And so no one in the remote downwind corridor of southern Utah and northwest Arizona blinked when over the course of two decades more than 100 nuclear weapons were exploded above and below the ground at the Nevada Test Site, 65 miles northwest of Las Vegas. Residents?many of them patriotic Mormons who seldom questioned the government?s authority?were not dissuaded in the early days from viewing the explosions at a distance. The warnings at first were casual. Families were told there would be a test, and hours later the ash would fall?at first light, then heavy?as pink clouds of fallout, carried by downwind air currents, drifted over Arizona and Utah. The ash tingled the skin, almost stung. Children brushed it off. The debris covered playgrounds, homes and fields where milk cows ate the grass coated with radioactive ash. It wasn?t long before children and their parents began getting sick. Many died, and soon the downwiders began to feel that they had been deemed ?expendable? by their government in its quest for nuclear superiority. Government officials privately specified that ?if it turns out that we have killed children, as we were clearly doing in the 1950s, lie about it,? Stewart Udall, Interior Secretary in the Kennedy and Johnson Administrations, and a lawyer for some of the downwinders, said several years ago in an interview for a documentary, ?Downwind of Morality,? produced by Bill Turpie. I served as associate field producer on the project and co-wrote the script. The government lies would hide a multitude of sins: at the Nevada Test Site and the Los Alamos (New Mexico) Lab where the bombs were designed; at Hanford reservation in southwest Washington where the government processed plutonium during World War II and the Cold War, and secretly released radioactive iodine up the stack of a plutonium processor in 1949; and at government laboratories throughout the country, like Oak Ridge Laboratory in Tennessee where a number of terminal patients were injected without consent many years ago with plutonium (the critical isotope needed in a nuclear chain reaction) to determine how much exposure humans could endure. Not only is radiation that is injected or burns the skin deadly, but equally lethal is the absorption into the body of plants and animals that have been contaminated. ?We have killed off or maimed millions of people without any war at all,? Rudi Nussbaum, an expert on the nuclear issue who then taught at Portland State University in Oregon, noted in Downwind of Morality. ?In our fear, we sacrificed whole parts of this country by the creation of these weapons,? William Lanouette, biographer of Leo Szilard, the Hungarian scientist who first contemplated a nuclear chain reaction, said in the documentary. ?We sacrificed a generation of people?through the radiation affects of producing these weapons.? The litany of suffering and death in the wake of atomic test explosions in the Nevada desert is stunning. It defies any coincidence suggested by defenders of the testing program, or statements by nuclear energy officials, that evidence of radiation poisoning is anecdotal. One woman interviewed for the documentary said she had a brother whose entire class, with the exception of one, ultimately died from cancer. A retired Air Force worker said that after Nevada test blasts Geiger counters were often placed on cars in the area, and ?they buzzed like rattlesnakes!? And in nearby Utah, a hardware store owner lost 14 members of his family to cancer. ?The government lied to us,? said a downwinder in Northern Arizona. ?That?s the greatest travesty. They told us we were safe, and they knew that we were not.? More than 50 years later, the tragedies continue. Entire family trees have been seared, and the toll, passed down through heredity, sadly keeps rising.

3 comments
Blog posts and comments are entirely the thoughts and ideas of the people who write them and in no way represent the views of CapeCodToday.com, eCape, Inc., or its employees or owners.

11/27/05 @ 8:30 pm
Tom Knutson, MPLS [Visitor] writes:
We as a country say we have a war on terrorism, however - it may be a sad note to say that we are the terrorists. The USA is in over a dozen countries now without ever declaring war. We use the word diplomatic and democracy as a sword to mow down any country that does not see things our way, or do business our way ... which is a bit presumptious of a country who is younger than most of the others out there.
11/27/05 @ 8:59 pm
Jack Coleman [Visitor] writes:
In response to Tom Knutson - were "we" the terrorists on Sept. 11?
11/28/05 @ 10:55 am
Codfish Press [Member] writes:
Tom/Jack:

I find myself in the middle of your comments, somewhere in between the lines.

However, there is no question in my mind that our government experimented with downwinders for more than two decades, those unsuspecting souls in Northern Arizona and southern Nevada and Utah, living downwind of the Nevada atomic test site.

What happened to them and their families is a national disgrace. The fallout is indisputable.

O'B.
Codfish Press
Please visit these local CapeCodToday sponsors:
Intercity Alarms
We remember what is most important to you. It's impossible to place a value on the safety of your family, property and possessions. That's why our company is committed to providing the highest level of service, products and support to ensure your safety.
Curves of Cape Cod
Curves is a facility specially designed for women featuring a complete 30 minute workout. You can burn over 500 calories in one strength training workout! New 30 Day Diet Plan. Lose weight and keep it off! Five convenient Cape locations.
IMPORTANT NOTICE FOR COMMENTORS & BLOGGERS: CapeCodToday now requires a one-time validation of your account email. When logging in or registering for the first time, you will be emailed a link to click that will validate your email and complete your login. The link in the email must be clicked in the same session when you are logged into the site for security purposes (i.e. retrieve the email right away and do not close your web browser).

This is a one-time-only process (or if you change the email on your account), and will help CCToday keep out the spammers. If you cannot validate your email because it is invalid, and you are a legitimate user, feel free to contact us and we will update your account to your current email.

Please Login or Register to leave a comment. There are 3,190 registered commenters!

CapeCodToday requires readers register an account with us in order to post comments. Become a trusted commenter and receive the benefits of posting instantly throughout the site. It's quick and easy!

Please note: If you are a CapeCodToday registered blogger, you can use your blogger login. Your login for the blogs is separate from your CapeCodToday main site login (if you have one).

Previous/Next posts in this blog

About This Blog

Greg O'BrienGreg O'Brien, author/editor of several books about Cape Cod & The Islands, a Boston Metro newspaper columnist, freelance writer for national and regional magazines, and a television script writer, comments about Cape Cod and the world beyond Codfish Press.

- site sponsors -


CCT Blog Tools

Login to comment or manage your blog:

Username: 

Password:     

Become a CapeCodToday Blogger!

Are you passionate about your community? Do you blog or at least harbor thoughts of doing so?

If so, CapeCodToday.com would like to host your blog on our CapeCodToday weblog publishing platform.

Blog Newsfeed

CapeCodToday uses standard web "newsfeeds" (RSS) to automatically update the latest blog entries in your browser or newsreader.

Use any of the links below in your newsreader or web browser to get "Codfish Press" postings delivered to you, or use the RSS icon in your browser's address bar.

RSS 2.0 Atom 0.3