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United States Government The Military

What's Wrong With the Manhattan Project National Park 160

Lasrick writes Dawn Stover describes the radioactive dirt behind the creation of the Manhattan Project National Historical Park, from its inclusion in the National Defense Authorization Act (the park legislation wouldn't pass otherwise) and lack of funding for national parks in general to the lack of funding for cleanup at Superfund nuclear sites like Hanford. And then there is how the Parks Service is presenting exhibits: at least some of them are described in the past tense, as if nuclear weapons were a thing of the past. Here's the description of the Minuteman Missile National Historic Site in South Dakota: "Nuclear war loomed as an apocalyptic shadow that could possibly have brought human history to an end." Can the National Park Service be ignorant of the fact that missiles remain on station, nuclear weapons are still being stockpiled, and saber rattling did not end with the fall of the Berlin Wall?"
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What's Wrong With the Manhattan Project National Park

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  • If this is the only way to get the sites maintained and cleaned up, that's one solution to lack of funding for the Superfund. As for the rest, it's a rant at the national park service for things outside its mandate. They're not some sort of historical society or museum.
    • by JJJJust ( 908929 ) <JJJJust AT gmail DOT com> on Wednesday January 07, 2015 @09:50PM (#48761217)

      It's hard to believe the National Park Service isn't a historical society of some sort when conservation and preservation of historic sites is their remit.

      16 USC 1: "The service thus established shall promote and regulate the use of the Federal areas known as national parks, monuments, and reservations hereinafter specified, except such as are under the jurisdiction of the Secretary of the Army, as provided by law, by such means and measures as conform to the fundamental purpose of the said parks, monuments, and reservations, which purpose is to conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wild life therein and to provide for the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such means as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations."

      • which purpose is to conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wild life therein

        That is not a mandate to educate people on the current geopolitical situation, which the poster is ranting on about:

        Can the National Park Service be ignorant of the fact that missiles remain on station, nuclear weapons are still being stockpiled, and saber rattling did not end with the fall of the Berlin Wall?"

      • by chmod a+x mojo ( 965286 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @12:19AM (#48762055)

        Maybe because the original poster can't seem to parse simple tenses...

        "Nuclear war loomed as an apocalyptic shadow that could possibly have brought human history to an end."

        is perfectly fine. The situation today is nowhere near what we had during the cold war, firmly placing the cold war in the past. It may come to pass that the situation will change again, but that is in the future and not completely determined so has no bearing on the sign that is there today.

        Russia / NK can saber rattle all they want, they won't actually DO anything though. Both try to influence world politics through threats that they will never carry out since they know they would lose just as much as anyone they attacked, if not more.

  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2015 @09:46PM (#48761189)

    Can the National Park Service be ignorant of the fact that missiles remain on station, nuclear weapons are still being stockpiled, and saber rattling did not end with the fall of the Berlin Wall?

    This shows a disturbing lack of understanding of how the world was then, vs. how it is now... we are vastly less likely to face a large scale nuclear assault than we were during the cold war. Even if a city or two is eventually hit by a terrorist nuclear weapon (likely), it's NOTHING like was was being nearly expected at the time.

    Heck, Russia con indiscriminately shoot down passenger jets now without repercussion, it's not like nuclear weapons are going to go flying over just abut anything.

    • by sg_oneill ( 159032 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2015 @10:21PM (#48761375)

      Yep. I still remember being a young teenager and kid in the 80s and how prior to Gorbachev (That guy really should be considered a hero to *everyone*, Russians and Americans. Forget Reagan, it was Gorbachev that ended the cold war.) there was a genuine feeling that we where all gunna die.

      I still remember the nuns at school (catholic primary school) making us kids pray that reagan and whoever it was at the time (Gromeyko? Andropov?) wouldnt hit the button and nuke us all after a bunch of sabre rattling over Afghanistan. She literally told us about the whole drop to the floor, roll into the corner and stuff.

      I never expected to make 20. And here I am at 40. Its a whole different world.

      • "I hate You", the punk song off Star Trek IV, really does sum it up...Just where is our future, the things we've done and said / let's just push the button we'de be better off dead / The sins of all our father, being dumped on us the sons / the only choice we're given is HOW MANY MEGATONS?

        My favorite punk song every, on my mp3 rotation list.
        • by ihtoit ( 3393327 )

          I would like a copy of that song that doesn't sound like it was recorded using a Radio Shack computer tape deck.

          • yeah, I know! There might be a "slightly" better version around, but they did it that way on purpose. It was supposed to be back in the 80's, garage punk band, etc...
    • by JSC ( 9187 ) <john@c[ ]n.com ['oxe' in gap]> on Wednesday January 07, 2015 @10:26PM (#48761393)
      It's kinda hard for me to ignore this bit of history. My mother was a Lab Technician in Oak Ridge during WWII (yes, I'm an older geek). Anyway, I grew up hearing stories from her about working in Oak Ridge and from my Dad about the war in Europe...so this "history" has a certain immediacy for me. Frankly, I think a museum about the Manhattan Project is a wonderful idea. Maybe it makes some people uncomfortable to talk about it but it IS our history and should never be forgotten. Got save us from preserving (and teaching) an edited "good parts" history that doesn't give the unvarnished truth. Those were difficult years and they needed difficult decisions. We need to remember that so that we can learn from it.
      • There are museums to remember all kinds of things that people would rather forget - I think the Manhattan Project is more worthy of a museum than most things, and would be a great asset to future generations.

      • Absolutely. Imagine if this Disney Mentality had been around in the aftermath of WWII? The holocaust would be turned into a fable within just a few generations.

        If something is both historically significant, AND uncomfortable -- it absolutely should be remembered and preserved. Else we wind up whitewashing the past -- which may make us feel better, but robs future generations of important lessons =/

    • by Nemyst ( 1383049 )

      Even if a city or two is eventually hit by a terrorist nuclear weapon (likely), it's NOTHING like was was being nearly expected at the time.

      I have to say, you really think that would happen? Considering the most successful attack done by terrorists so far still had many things go wrong, I just don't see that sort of group being able to pull off a nuclear detonation, nevermind that ground-level nukes are extremely limited in yield and impact versus airborne ones. Plus, if terrorists manage to trigger one, the only chance they'll have at a second one is within the few days after, because the entire planet is going to mobilize to get their sorry a

      • Even if a city or two is eventually hit by a terrorist nuclear weapon (likely), it's NOTHING like was was being nearly expected at the time.

        I have to say, you really think that would happen? Considering the most successful attack done by terrorists so far still had many things go wrong, I just don't see that sort of group being able to pull off a nuclear detonation, nevermind that ground-level nukes are extremely limited in yield and impact versus airborne ones. Plus, if terrorists manage to trigger one, the only chance they'll have at a second one is within the few days after, because the entire planet is going to mobilize to get their sorry asses to Allah or whoever else is the extremist religion of choice at that time.

        While in general, terrorists have been largely incompetent, they by and large haven't had real goals that would be achieved by the attacks they have staged. For example, the 9/11 attacks didn't really state a goal, they didn't really have a clear result from which we could infer a goal, and credit was never actually claimed by a group with a preexisting set of stated goals.

        I expect that eventually, we will have to face a "Heavy Weather" [Bruce Sterling] style terrorist scenario, in which the emergent goals

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) *

        The most likely danger is that someone acquires a weapon from a state, either through theft or state sponsored terrorism. We have seen state sponsored terrorism before, from places like Syria and the US.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Freedom Bug ( 86180 )

      Certainly, the chances of a nuclear weapons attack have lessened significantly, but the danger is still very real.

      Over 10 thousand nuclear weapons still exist, held by 9 different countries (assuming Israel still has them). That list includes North Korea and Pakistan. I don't have to say anything about North Korea. Pakistan can almost be called an active war zone. Putin appears to be deliberately antagonizing the States, and has just had his primary income source taken away from him. Incidents have c

      • Some experts place the probability of a nuclear incident in the next 10 years at 29%

        I think it's more like 80%. But we are talking about a smaller attack against one city.

        Back then we were looking at ALL LARGE CITIES in the U.S. and Russia being wiped out, with the remaining best case being a nuclear winter, the worst case being that plus a lot of radiation making the whole Earth unlivable. That scenario was not unlikely at the time; that kind of thing is not going to happen anymore. We have moved well p

  • by r1348 ( 2567295 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2015 @09:47PM (#48761191)

    It's going to be a blast.

  • by Crashmarik ( 635988 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2015 @10:06PM (#48761303)

    Seriously ? I read the rant and it sounded like a caricature of the old point counterpoint skits on saturday night live. I really expected him to end with we should have "vegetarian native americans running the country".

    I mean look at this

    Preserving a history that dates back thousands of years is apparently of less value to the United States than preserving the mid-20th century apparatus of war.

    When he talks of the less important history, he means land that might have historical sites and will be surveyed before it is put to other uses. The " Mid 20th century apparatus of war" is from WWII and the Cold War, two of the most significant events in human history and arguably shaped the world we live in now.

  • You expect the government to take responsibility and act respectfully towards its citizens by telling them the truth?

    LOL.

  • Bill Riders (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Jezral ( 449476 )

    its inclusion in the National Defense Authorization Act (the park legislation wouldn't pass otherwise)

    You guys seriously need to fix your shit. Having bill riders is a fundamental government fail.

    In the civilized world, a bill has a strictly defined topic, and anything not directly pertaining to that topic simply isn't allowed to be attached.

  • by RogueWarrior65 ( 678876 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @11:54AM (#48765039)

    Big deal. Would you dredge up and dispose of the USS Arizona? Would you sell off Gettysburg to real estate developers? The point is that those who ignore history are doomed to repeat it. The Manhattan Project has tremendous historical significance and peaceniks need to pull their heads out of the sand and remember why we went to such lengths.

  • Have a "The Future" exhibit, a three-room 1:1000-scale model of cities, parks and suburbs showing what a full-scale nuclear war by major powers would look like. The first room would be pre-war, the second as it was happening, and the third what it would look like 100 years later. It that doesn't sober people up then only the real thing will.

I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning. -- Plato

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