"Oppenheimer," the father of the atomic bomb

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  • Опубліковано 9 лис 2024

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  • @csh43166
    @csh43166 Рік тому +116

    Dr. Oppenheimer was another of those poor souls in world history who did what was asked of him, then was thrown under the bus by the people who asked him to do it. In my book, he is a true American hero. "Oppenheimer" is an amazing movie - everyone should see it.

    • @007ndc
      @007ndc Рік тому +3

      Erego American Prometheus

    • @fennyellis3366
      @fennyellis3366 Рік тому +5

      The same happened to Turing in Britain.

    • @lyncressler2608
      @lyncressler2608 Рік тому +3

      I'm planning to see it next week. I've been researching this man. His voice is almost scary.

    • @Christoph-sd3zi
      @Christoph-sd3zi Рік тому

      Nuclear weapons are fake. Your mind has been programmed since you were first plunked down in front of a TV screen.

    • @blackmoom
      @blackmoom Рік тому +2

      Totally agree. Saw it last week and what an experience. Fantastic!!

  • @davidhutchinson5233
    @davidhutchinson5233 Рік тому +91

    I think Dr. Oppenheimer was dedicated in his research but his regret at the extremely high loss of human life was not lost on him. I would offer that it changed him forever. Just makes me so sad that such a genius was hurting so badly.

    • @archangelmusic13
      @archangelmusic13 Рік тому +9

      also he knew inventing the atomic bomb would end the war but could also wipe out the human race in a future war.

    • @greentea9335
      @greentea9335 Рік тому +9

      But he still did it, because he knew it needed to happen. And, overall, he saved millions of more lives than were lost.

    • @TheStockportHatter1986
      @TheStockportHatter1986 Рік тому +1

      @@greentea9335 Who knows had the Nazi's had built it before us and the Solviets for the Cold War?

    • @greentea9335
      @greentea9335 Рік тому +2

      @@TheStockportHatter1986 Yep, the entire world could have been speaking German or Russian. A *very* grateful world says: "Thank You, Oppie!!!"

    • @YohankaDelRosario
      @YohankaDelRosario 9 місяців тому

      Thank you David hutchinson.5233
      I AGREE.

  • @Brianthomas24
    @Brianthomas24 Рік тому +15

    Finally a movie worth seeing in theaters - this is a masterpiece.

  • @subhankar_sarkar
    @subhankar_sarkar Рік тому +407

    Every time they show that clip of J.R Oppenheimer quoting a line of Lord Krishna from the Bhagwat Gita, i feel a little chill down my spine. That's a look of pure despair on a man's face, who knew about the horror and mass destruction his invention could cause. He did (in a way) gave humanity the absolute power to destroy themselves.
    It is a shame that the majority audience in India won't be able to see this film in it's preferable 70mm IMAX ratio (as there's very limited imax screens available in the country), but props to Nolan for telling his story. Seeing it this Friday!

    • @marniekilbourne608
      @marniekilbourne608 Рік тому +13

      I live in the US and there isn't an IMAX that I would consider fairly close to where I live, so don't feel bad!

    • @whatisjoedoing
      @whatisjoedoing Рік тому +5

      actually there’s no imax 70mm in India. maybe imax but not the 70mm. if i understand correctly, there are only 30 of them worldwide.

    • @texas3258
      @texas3258 Рік тому +8

      Dam India can't afford theaters with all the scam money flowing into that country. 😮

    • @christyag1177
      @christyag1177 Рік тому +5

      Europe doesn’t have them commonly either, so don’t feel bad. Only big capital towns have them

    • @iode9999
      @iode9999 Рік тому

      @@marniekilbourne608 Do you think it's worth it to see in imax 70mm if it's almost 2 hours from my location? I'm very tempted

  • @paulbunch5657
    @paulbunch5657 Рік тому +200

    My great uncle was in the army and present in the desert when it was developed and first tested. The soldiers were told to turn their backs when it was tested. Later in life my uncle had a cancer the size of a grapefruit on his back.

    • @DianaDeLuna
      @DianaDeLuna Рік тому +33

      No doubt about the original cause of the cancer. Your great uncle was a hero.

    • @NotHaunted...
      @NotHaunted... Рік тому +10

      Rip

    • @ginamosca7015
      @ginamosca7015 Рік тому +2

      Jesus.

    • @paulbunch5657
      @paulbunch5657 Рік тому +20

      @@losrajvosa0078 not a fool. Just a real American soldier from the greatest generation serving his country and doing his duty so that you can live free in the U.S.A.

    • @veramae4098
      @veramae4098 Рік тому

      Las Vegas sits on a huge underground reservoir of fresh water.
      It can't be used.
      It's radioactive.

  • @AzadParinda2023
    @AzadParinda2023 Рік тому +38

    Thank God that Hollywood coming back to senses and working on real stories and movies.

  • @party4keeps28
    @party4keeps28 Рік тому +147

    I love that Nolan chose to do a movie like this. He's clearly always had an interest in science and especially the concept of time, but this is a very different movie than what he's done in the past.

    • @Tan92lfc
      @Tan92lfc Рік тому +1

      Dunkirk is not science

    • @user-ts1rz7mf2h
      @user-ts1rz7mf2h Рік тому +2

      @@Tan92lfcread again

    • @party4keeps28
      @party4keeps28 Рік тому +10

      @@Tan92lfc Neither was the Batman trilogy. I didn't say every one of his movies played with scientific concepts, nor did I say his only interest is science.

    • @joinjen3854
      @joinjen3854 Рік тому +4

      ​@@Tan92lfcDunkirk Is history, which Nolan seems to love.

    • @BillBraz-b9o
      @BillBraz-b9o Рік тому

      Doctor rockenheimer

  • @Rheinmeister09
    @Rheinmeister09 Рік тому +77

    Can't remember the last time I looked forward to seeing a movie the way I am this movie. Also, delighted that Cillian is getting his chance to really shine on a whole other level. Fantastic actor who is very humble.

    • @brandoncausey645
      @brandoncausey645 Рік тому +2

      couldnt agree more. I have chills everyday thinking about going to see it. I never care about movies either. Its such an impactful subject and history was never the same. Cillian is going to win an oscar i hope!

    • @Rheinmeister09
      @Rheinmeister09 Рік тому

      @@brandoncausey645 don’t know if you have seen the - what could be - five minute trailer? The score for it is perfect, really building the tension and it gives you a better taster of what the movie is about. Worth a look if you haven’t done so already.

    • @sgtpepper1138
      @sgtpepper1138 Рік тому +2

      My 21yo son and I are going to drive 2.5hrs to see it at the closest IMAX theater.

    • @Rheinmeister09
      @Rheinmeister09 Рік тому +4

      @@sgtpepper1138 finally got to see it tonight. Will just say that the 3 hours goes by really quickly. It’s a haunting story and Cillian and RDJ deserve Oscars for their parts particularly Cillian. He carries the movie right through to the end. I’ve seen a lot of his roles and he completely embodies the role. With some actors, they can overact to try and force the audience to forget the other characters they’ve played. Cillian is just a whole other person to the point that I thought I was watching the real guy. (Watched some of his interviews after the fallout and he does a great take on him). RDJs Strausse pulls the strings of everything together and he is so effective in the role. Haunting story but really worth the price of the ticket. You won’t regret it.

    • @sgtpepper1138
      @sgtpepper1138 Рік тому +2

      @@Rheinmeister09 Heck yeah, that's what I was hoping to hear.

  • @Jacubamustoff
    @Jacubamustoff Рік тому +10

    My friends Dad worked at Los Alamos during the building of the bombs, where they were fabricating the parts for it. He had kept a diary stating how much fun everyone had on the weekends, and how they all knew they were building parts for the military but no one knew what they were building. Some guessed aircraft, some guessed military vehicles. He had stated everyone was in shock to find out they were building bombs of this magnitude. Everyone had real mixed emotions when they learned the death tolls. I guess they felt being at war with soldiers who have guns is one thing, but murdering an unsuspecting innocent population of people is another. War is war, but in a way they have a point. I mean, we gave them payback with Hiroshima for Pearl Harbor, but NAGASAKI??? If you look closely, Lady Liberty still has blood on her knuckles...

  • @coolcat6303
    @coolcat6303 Рік тому +54

    Great segment and looking forward to seeing this film more than any other this year. Especially since it was filmed in IMAX.

    • @evelynbonner3908
      @evelynbonner3908 Рік тому +2

      @coolcat. Me, too. I think it's such a really significant life and time to explore. I mean, nuclear science, war, the ethics of atomic bombs, the intelligence of the scientists, the moral struggles, Oppenheimer's depression, the consequences to Nagasaki and Hiroshima.....just so very much consequential science, intellectualism, human strength and weakness, just so much history. I think Cillian Murphy will be totally captivating as Oppie.

  • @itsaashish
    @itsaashish Рік тому +375

    What America did to Oppenheimer is unforgivable. I’m glad Christopher Nolan’s movie will clear all of that.

    • @exlost245
      @exlost245 Рік тому +23

      Agreed. If he was in the UK. he would've been knighted

    • @azimisyauqieabdulwahab9401
      @azimisyauqieabdulwahab9401 Рік тому +2

      The Manhattan Project story

    • @allsomatt
      @allsomatt Рік тому +124

      Unlikely.. What the UK did to Alan Turing was if mot more unforgivable so I doubt very much the UK would've treated Oppenheimer any better.

    • @PascoZach
      @PascoZach Рік тому +55

      @@exlost245 Because they treated Turing so well...

    • @stevenjacobs2750
      @stevenjacobs2750 Рік тому +14

      ​@@exlost245like Turing? >.> nowhere has a great record treating all academics and experts, especially ones instrumental in some great effort, very well at all.

  • @elizabethevangeliste8725
    @elizabethevangeliste8725 Рік тому +91

    My Aunt worked under Oppenheimer ~ she worked as a nuclear scientist for Westinghouse Bettis, Pittsburgh and designed the nuclear reactor for the atomic submarine the Nautilus as well as other nuclear reactors in Pennsylvania. I miss her 🙏

    • @JohnathanHouston-uq6hy
      @JohnathanHouston-uq6hy Рік тому

      What did she say about Oppenheimer was like during the manhattan project

    • @Hollywood42081
      @Hollywood42081 Рік тому +2

      @@JohnathanHouston-uq6hyi seriously doubt she ever met him

    • @JohnathanHouston-uq6hy
      @JohnathanHouston-uq6hy Рік тому

      @@Hollywood42081 OK how did she Is felt about the Manhattan project after they successfully detonated first atomic bomb and changed the world forever

    • @stevengerson6307
      @stevengerson6307 Рік тому +2

      From what I understand that Oppenheimer cried many nights in his bed knowing what the bomb would do.

    • @AlexZ-lc6nl
      @AlexZ-lc6nl Рік тому +4

      The nautilus is now in Groton CT, I’ve been there. Grew up there. Thanks for her service.

  • @dorty4088
    @dorty4088 Рік тому +12

    For those who were curious like I was, that IMAX camera is probably around 500,000$. And fun fact, Nolan broke 3 of them while making a single movie. :) .

  • @catzenhouse
    @catzenhouse Рік тому +46

    I saw the play "In The Matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer" when I was in high school - a very powerful experience for a teenager. Indeed, he was a very tragic figure.

  • @theylied1776
    @theylied1776 Рік тому +115

    Here's the thing. Being a member of the American "communist party" in the 1930s-1950s was not the same as being in the Communist Party in Russia. Lucille Ball was a member of the American communist party. When she was asked about it, she basically said most people joined as a protest against the Robber Barrons. During the Great Depression, millions of people starved while people like John D Rockefeller got richer and lived in several homes. It was never to overthrow the country, it was just something to do.

    • @josephprice4095
      @josephprice4095 Рік тому

      like a pocket-book boycott? I don't like what this store does so I don't shop there? Or it has to be more than that. It's to make their voice heard, I get that, but what the they expect the end result would be? What was the goal? You make a good hypotheses, and I'm curious to know what your theory leads to the end result.

    • @AldousHuxleysCat
      @AldousHuxleysCat Рік тому +4

      What Lucy said was she joined to make her grandfather happy

    • @theylied1776
      @theylied1776 Рік тому +5

      @@AldousHuxleysCat Exactly. It was never a serious political movement in the United States. You do know I'm referring to the UnAmerican Activities Committee interview.

    • @AldousHuxleysCat
      @AldousHuxleysCat Рік тому +5

      @@theylied1776 I know exactly what you're talking about I've read at least three autobiographies of Lucy and Desi. Lucy claimed that she was completely apolitical and she only signed up to appease her grandfather. Any motivations she speaks of were his and not hers

    • @theylied1776
      @theylied1776 Рік тому

      @@josephprice4095 Look, this was all covered in the UnAmerican Activities Committee investigation. No One was actually charged with treason. The Committee surmised that the American Communists Party in the 30s and 50s was nothing more than a social club at worst. There were no links to the USSR or any Communist movement of note. Joe McCarty bet and lost his entire political career trying to prove they were a threat.

  • @amtrakfan2
    @amtrakfan2 Рік тому +46

    Gary Oldman is also in Oppenheimer. I don’t know if it’s small part in the film, however he plays President Truman in Oppenheimer.

    • @alexandercummins
      @alexandercummins Рік тому +7

      From what I've heard he has 1 sentence of dialogue. For Nolan big actors will take these small roles.

    • @GuineaPigEveryday
      @GuineaPigEveryday Рік тому +3

      @@alexandercumminsstill, its an awesome casting, I love Gary and its a shame he’s retired from acting

    • @tuckerbugeater
      @tuckerbugeater Рік тому +1

      @@GuineaPigEveryday Oldman is actually playing the Oppenheimer character.

    • @alexandercummins
      @alexandercummins Рік тому +3

      @@tuckerbugeater no he isn't!

    • @azimisyauqieabdulwahab9401
      @azimisyauqieabdulwahab9401 Рік тому +2

      Cillian Murphy make playing leading role

  • @user-xpdlj2065
    @user-xpdlj2065 Рік тому +31

    A repost, but I remember when I read all the books on Oppenheimer there were on a little section of the bookshelf at the university library (and later purchased at the bookstore) some years ago. His life read like a novel that couldn't be put down, and now that one of my favorite directors made a film about him it's incredible to think of! I also hope, given that Oppenheimer led the effort on something that much of foreign policy revolves around to this day, this movie reminds people of the value of being amicable with one another and the importance of global cooperation and unity.

  • @Chertoff88
    @Chertoff88 Рік тому +92

    THANK GOD, THEY ARE FINALLY MAKING AMAZING MOVIES BASED ON REAL HISTORICAL EVENTS!! PLEASE DISPENSE WITH THE SUPERHERO MOVIES AND DO MORE OF THIS!

    • @paulzammataro7185
      @paulzammataro7185 Рік тому +8

      Both have their places..

    • @MichaelGerard-t2i
      @MichaelGerard-t2i Рік тому +4

      I think Batman has a cameo.

    • @NotLikeUs17
      @NotLikeUs17 Рік тому +9

      Or they can just have a healthy balance of both?

    • @DavidinSLO
      @DavidinSLO Рік тому +5

      agree with your sentiment, but - please - learn to use lower case letters (all caps feels like you’re yelling, or worse). thanks

    • @xoxo__adr
      @xoxo__adr Рік тому +1

      Both can exist.

  • @jude999
    @jude999 Рік тому +9

    NIce to see David Martin again. He is a dinosaur from the previous world of objective journalism.

  • @DR32000
    @DR32000 Рік тому +93

    "I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones." - Albert Einstein

    • @eddiebright5587
      @eddiebright5587 Рік тому +6

      What if the real atomic bombs were the friends we made along the way?

  • @texastoast5202
    @texastoast5202 Рік тому +11

    Cilian Murphy is an insanely talented actor. Watched him in 28 days later and he played the best role that i have ever seen, save a few others. Matt Damon looks ridiculous with a mustache and is such an average actor but I’m glad Gary Oldman is in it. He’s one of the top 10 best actors ever.

  • @robertdunford8610
    @robertdunford8610 Рік тому +15

    Movie of the year can't wait until Friday!

  • @MaliahParker
    @MaliahParker Рік тому +9

    Such a tragic hero, cant wait to see the movie.. Book is tremendous. The movie looks incredible. What an amazing story..

  • @philaman1972
    @philaman1972 Рік тому +51

    An important movie for historical purposes and also as a reminder of today's sobering reality!

    • @14isoldenough
      @14isoldenough Рік тому +1

      Ive played so much fallout. Im ready for nuclear warfare.

    • @HokkaidoSan
      @HokkaidoSan Рік тому

      No dude...For historical purposes, watch a documentary about this guy that isn't bias and full of theatrics and hollywood spin. This movie is good for entertainment purposes, not historical. But maybe that's why US education is trash because they look at movies for educational 😂

    • @datatsushi2016
      @datatsushi2016 Рік тому

      @@HokkaidoSan Entertainment? I saw the film. It's the complete opposite of entertaining. Sure, it might stimulate you intellectually, but god is it a borefest.
      I foresee a flop (with the budget that it had) the youth simply isn't interested in this and there's notjing here for them. And THAT'S where the money comes from.

    • @HokkaidoSan
      @HokkaidoSan Рік тому

      @@datatsushi2016 You're mistaking what I'm saying. I didn't say it was entertaining. I'm saying it's entertainment. Whether it was entertaining or or not, a movie is still a form of entertainment and should be taken as entertainment rather than for it's historically accurate depiction compared to a documentary

  • @robvangessel3766
    @robvangessel3766 Рік тому +25

    The irony in Oppenheimer's descent in the way he would be treated is that his German counterpart, Werner Heisenberg, who had been conducting cold water tests for the Nazis to attain atomic fission but FAILED - causing Hitler to abandon the project - later went on to a fruitful teaching career.

    • @sgtlamancha805
      @sgtlamancha805 Рік тому +8

      And a massive meth making, distribution empire…

  • @DimMakTen
    @DimMakTen Рік тому +6

    The Pistol leaf blower analogy was the understatement of all understatements.

  • @barbarapatten2603
    @barbarapatten2603 Рік тому +17

    There is an amazing book about the location where the specifics of the atomic energy were monitored in total secrecy. The book is Denise Kiernan's 'The Atomic City.'
    I came across this book (it is not the novel with a smilar title) while reading everything I could find on WWII. I intend to reread it now that this movie is out.

    • @laurieberry162
      @laurieberry162 Рік тому

      I want to read the book about the Japanese survivors of Nagasaki or Hiroshima. Is there a book like that? I heard it is like Lord of the Flies. Can you imagine being an orphan in Japan and wondering if you were going to live for the next ten years or not. Yes, there are survivors from Japan. Japanese people are nice. They gave us cherry blossoms. Japan is a great vacation area. My cousin married a Japanese lady. They have the cutest son in the world. He speaks Japanese. Pride in family.

  • @munmunkhatua1411
    @munmunkhatua1411 Рік тому +2

    Scientists in that era were so passionate..

  • @stevengerson6307
    @stevengerson6307 Рік тому +7

    From what I understand that Oppenheimer cried many nights in bed knowing what the bomb would do.

  • @AnilKumar-xl2te
    @AnilKumar-xl2te Рік тому +2

    I helped the team solve problems, my boss taps and listens to my team meetings....

  • @imcnagpc2
    @imcnagpc2 Рік тому +9

    I think Enrico Fermi had a lot to do with conceiving the bomb. But Oppenheimer made it happen, definitely.

  • @marvinshenk
    @marvinshenk Рік тому +310

    The greatest achievement by humans ever, and at the same time the worst thing humans ever achieved.

    • @Tsepete
      @Tsepete Рік тому +10

      AI will top that.

    • @margaretash9706
      @margaretash9706 Рік тому +5

      ​@@TsepeteScary thought but probably true.

    • @number420pencil
      @number420pencil Рік тому +14

      You think a bomb is humanity's best achievement? Wow

    • @srh361
      @srh361 Рік тому +9

      ​@@number420pencilIt's nuclear fusion, the bomb is secondary.

    • @Weirdletter
      @Weirdletter Рік тому +5

      @@srh361the bomb was a fission reaction not a fusion one. But fusion is just the reverse and will probably be one of humanities greatest achievements when we make it more efficient

  • @connecting-minds-network
    @connecting-minds-network Рік тому +6

    I watched movie today. Loved it as physist myself. Worth watching trust me!

    • @samsaunders9487
      @samsaunders9487 Рік тому +1

      Absolutely I've seen it twice now I'm even thinking of seeing it one more time lol.

  • @josephkitchens1644
    @josephkitchens1644 Рік тому +8

    Going to be excellent!! An important moment on history!!

  • @CathyS_Bx
    @CathyS_Bx Рік тому +18

    That he was a modern-day Prometheus is such an apt comparison. Prometheus, a god himself, in Greek myth stole fire from the gods and gave it to humankind; hence he is known as the Friend of Man. And Zeus punished him for it by binding him to a rock in the Caucasus mountains where an eagle fed on his liver. Eternal punishment, because his liver regenerated each night, only to be eaten again. Here is a sonnet by the late Australian A. D. Hope which builds on this very Prometheus-Oppenheimer comparison:
    Prometheus Unbound
    Still fettered, still unconquered, still in pain,
    Bold in his hope and steadfast in his right,
    The Friend of Man on the Caucasian height
    Saw one vast flash to northward blast the plain.
    As Hermes, swooping down, struck off the chain
    And raised him, smiling, in that dazzling light,
    "Does the old tyrant, then, repent his spite,"
    He asked, "or has Zeus ceased at last to reign?"
    "His wisdom is not mocked," the god replied,
    "Nor alters nor repeals the great decree.
    These are his words: 'Go, set the Titan free;
    And let his torment be to wander wide
    The ashes of mankind from sea to sea,
    Judging that theft of fire from which they died.'"

  • @guslevy3506
    @guslevy3506 Рік тому +5

    Oppenheimer’s high intelligence is simply a wonder and a marvel…

    • @ernesthill4017
      @ernesthill4017 Рік тому +4

      As Lisa Simpson pointed out, happiness often goes down as intelligence goes up 😮

  • @mizninvictor2189
    @mizninvictor2189 Рік тому +3

    Thomas Shelby finally turned over a new leaf, got a physics PhD and invented the atomic bomb.

  • @Bun800
    @Bun800 Рік тому +10

    What a fascinating story!
    Funny enough, I was thinking of Robert Downey Jr. in the original Iron Man and how he was giving speeches against Stark Enterprises and causing ruckus. Didn't know he was in the film!

    • @ytuser_3122
      @ytuser_3122 Рік тому +2

      Not to mention the first Iron Man mentioned that Howard Stark helped build the atomic bomb

  • @Go-Dawgs
    @Go-Dawgs Рік тому +1

    Christopher & Cillian will both get Academy Awards for this film.

  • @DH-gk8vh
    @DH-gk8vh Рік тому +3

    Very very best video I have seen so far of the upcoming movie Oppenheimer. Highly recommend seeing this movie. I intend to see it in IMAX.

  • @maximilian9295
    @maximilian9295 Рік тому +6

    Absolutely cant wait to watch a drama again in the theatre. Not oversaturated action, unfunny comedy, and well just kinda, junk. Miss real dramas, real dialog.

    • @thebeasters
      @thebeasters Рік тому +2

      Real talk.
      It's been 20 years of Superhero movies

  • @nickbarcheck1019
    @nickbarcheck1019 Рік тому +36

    Book is tremendous. The movie looks incredible. What an amazing story.

  • @debbiesims138
    @debbiesims138 Рік тому +9

    I found out a neighbor of mine had worked at Los Alamos. Unfortunately found out after he had died. Would have loved to talk to him about it.

    • @Cybersawz
      @Cybersawz Рік тому +3

      Odds are he wouldn't have had much to say.

    • @EdDunkle
      @EdDunkle Рік тому +1

      A college buddy of mine works at Los Alamos right now. He's doing a lot REDACTED stuff.

  • @margaretash9706
    @margaretash9706 Рік тому +3

    I can't wait to see this film.

  • @Rawkstar1960
    @Rawkstar1960 Рік тому +24

    As a child of the sixties, I wonder how much of this is grasped by later generations.

    • @DH-gk8vh
      @DH-gk8vh Рік тому +2

      I have the same concern. I remember being told to hide under our desks for protection. What is not spoken about is how much more destructive these bombs are now, how many different types there are and what the radious is of each one. You can easily look it up on line or here on UA-cam. Or how preppers talk about trying to live after such a destructive event, not taking into account how horrific it could be. I hope this movie opens eyes.

    • @simonu2044
      @simonu2044 Рік тому

      @@DH-gk8vhhere’s a website out there where you can find different bombs blast radius’ (mostly nuclear) and put it on a map to see casualties and other info. pretty mind blowing how small the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs were comparatively. really scary that there are weapons capable of so much death just out there in the world

    • @incufan32
      @incufan32 Рік тому +3

      I am a child of the 80’s and am fully aware of the destructive power and double edge sword that the bomb created. We must be teaching history completely so that we do not repeat our mistakes

    • @davidschmidt9339
      @davidschmidt9339 Рік тому

      Nothing before the current culture is grasped by the current generation.

    • @Italkmadshitlol
      @Italkmadshitlol Рік тому

      ​@@DH-gk8vhthe difference is today the need to do a mass bombing is no longer necessary, yields can be dialed back, and the threat from cyber attacks and on infrastructure are far more dangerous and likely. Nuclear exchanges would more than likely be a limited event, relatively speaking to the height of the cold war M.A.D. plans.
      Neither are desirable, one's just a little less bad. I guess.

  • @johnprimm35
    @johnprimm35 Рік тому +35

    Am looking forward to the movie. Finally a balanced, non-ideological story from a network. All of you should remember however, the vast majority of people in the US, UK, China and Japan and other nations, are alive because the US didn’t have to invade the mainland of Japan. Revisionist history says Japan would have surrendered anyway. No. Look at the last year of the war and the fanatical behavior of the Japanese. They were planning to die by the hundreds of thousands to force the Allies to give up. Truman made the right decision.

    • @allsomatt
      @allsomatt Рік тому +5

      If I call recall there was a requirement for every Japanese citizen woman and children included to bear arms at home and join the Japanese failing war effort. The Japanese administration at the time was in complete denial the casualties on both sides in the theatre of war would've been tenfold.

    • @MrDada120
      @MrDada120 Рік тому +1

      You're saying after Germany surrendered, Japan posed a threat to the UK, US, etc?

    • @johnprimm35
      @johnprimm35 Рік тому

      @@MrDada120 --yes. Japan was still quite strong and the people had been indoctrinated to die for the Emperor. Had the Allies been forced to invade, hundreds of thousands of many nations would have died. Read about the campaigns in Saipan, Iwo Jima and Okinawa.

    • @johnprimm35
      @johnprimm35 Рік тому

      @@allsomatt yes.

    • @hotdog9262
      @hotdog9262 Рік тому

      bit ironic you talk about `revisionist history` ..when your tale clearly is one. japan didn`t surrender because they were holding out for a truce, they were gambling on the soviets helping them negotiating for one. the soviets declared them war instead, and this is the main reason as to why japan surrendered, as the situation was now hopeless. the official story were an attempt to wash away genocide claims and US clearing its own concience, as the nukes/bombs were probably never needed for japans surrender. in any event, IF your story were true..im a bit surprised people still fall for the idea `ending the war` killing 300 000+ women and children somehow is an excuse for genocide

  • @glnnchrstphr9717
    @glnnchrstphr9717 Рік тому +124

    If it hadn't have been Oppenheimer, it would have been someone else. The atomic bomb was inevitable.

    • @Me97202
      @Me97202 Рік тому +14

      That’s the way with most inventions.

    • @coolcat6303
      @coolcat6303 Рік тому

      Had the Nazi’s survived for several more years, it’s very possible they would have developed a bomb as well.

    • @azimisyauqieabdulwahab9401
      @azimisyauqieabdulwahab9401 Рік тому

      2 years after US bombed the Hiroshima & Nagasaki in the end of World War 2

    • @glnnchrstphr9717
      @glnnchrstphr9717 Рік тому +25

      @hexedits369 how can you possibly disagree with that fact? Oppenheimer wasn't the only person with the knowledge to be able to build an atomic bomb. Maybe you need to educate yourself on the history of atomic energy? Disagreeing without explaining why you think that is a typical response from someone that knows nothing about the subject or the people involved.

    • @andrewf2
      @andrewf2 Рік тому +2

      So what is your point?

  • @zinussan50
    @zinussan50 Рік тому +9

    The power of the Sun, in the palm of his hands.

  • @Nektopoulo
    @Nektopoulo Рік тому +5

    "The big bang, took and shook the world, shot down the rising sun. The end was begun, it would hit everyone. When the chain reaction was done." - RUSH

    • @jodonnell64
      @jodonnell64 Рік тому

      "Big shots try to hold it back
      Fools try to wish it away
      The hopeful depend
      On a world without end
      Whatever the hopeless may say" - Rush

  • @maxlinder5262
    @maxlinder5262 Рік тому +10

    Humans killing each other ........😢

  • @Rinifi
    @Rinifi Рік тому +1

    I don't bemoan the fact that the atomic bomb was developed in the U.S. but I firmly believe it wasn't necessary to drop it on Japan. Japan was all but defeated. It lost all of its foreign bases and was hemmed in by U.S. forces. Also the Soviet Union was poised to join the fight. The end of the war was evident, there was no need to actually invade the islands of Japan.

  • @lindagarland5223
    @lindagarland5223 Рік тому +15

    AI, the newest "Oppenheimer"

  • @tommyt1971
    @tommyt1971 Рік тому +37

    “Imagine someone firing a pistol very close to you and putting a leaf blower on your face.” I know witnessing this event is beyond comparison but a Navy friend of mine did a tour in Iraq during their high summer months and he talked about how it was like being in the barrel of a hair dryer for months. Felt bad for him but at least he came home completely unharmed.

    • @jacquelinesternberg8461
      @jacquelinesternberg8461 Рік тому +2

      Except his hearing could well have been permanently damaged.

    • @michaelvaughan8
      @michaelvaughan8 Рік тому +2

      That’s how I describe the heat of Iraq when someone asks how hot it was over there. It’s a good comparison though and feels a lot like a blow dryer.

    • @bluesmanish
      @bluesmanish Рік тому

      @@michaelvaughan8 Sounds like Arizona

    • @michaelvaughan8
      @michaelvaughan8 Рік тому

      @@bluesmanish yes I imagine AZ to be similar for sure. The average high is about ten more degrees in Iraq during the summer months but once the temp is over 110 you can’t tell the difference you just know it’s hot.

    • @kimberlyenglehardt5770
      @kimberlyenglehardt5770 Рік тому +2

      Completely?

  • @RHTeebs
    @RHTeebs Рік тому +10

    Out of all the contributors, I would say that David Martin, and Mo Rocca are my favorites.

  • @trottheblackdog
    @trottheblackdog Рік тому +1

    Notice that the film clips for this video are remixed so you can hear dialogue very well.

  • @emiliobello2538
    @emiliobello2538 Рік тому +4

    Can’t wait to see

  • @SMElder-iy6fl
    @SMElder-iy6fl Рік тому +1

    My father was in the Manhattan Project.

  • @helenwheels3341
    @helenwheels3341 Рік тому +11

    It's been a beautiful planet 🌏

  • @mmai5651
    @mmai5651 Рік тому +2

    While I think it’s a an absorbing story, to me it seems a missed opportunity to highlight the work of female scientists at the time. The Manhattan Project would not have been possible without the work of Lise Meitner, who along with her lab partners, discovered the energy released by splitting atoms. As a Jew she was forced to flee from the Nazis.
    And although she wanted no part in working on an atomic bomb, she was also never recognized for her important role in the discovery of nuclear fission.
    This is the type of story I would like to see told.

  • @jorelldye4346
    @jorelldye4346 Рік тому +17

    We certainly give too much credit to the organizer. We had most of the famous names in science of that day in Los Alamos, and they all contributed greatly.

    • @realalehomebrewer8273
      @realalehomebrewer8273 Рік тому +6

      Yes there were very famous scientists but with their famous egos with them. Oppenheimer was able to wrangle them together and get the thing done in an incomprehensible amount of time so yes he does deserve the credit.

  • @Normie2388
    @Normie2388 Рік тому

    Amazing how network TV focuses on this movie and completely ignores “sound of freedom.”

  • @jacobfromallstate4963
    @jacobfromallstate4963 Рік тому +23

    What happened to him and his family is a tragedy. Especially his daughter

    • @CEDL4072
      @CEDL4072 Рік тому +2

      Surprised that wasn't brought up....

    • @burpeesquad
      @burpeesquad Рік тому +2

      What happened?? Can you please tell me

    • @JDoe-gf5oz
      @JDoe-gf5oz Рік тому +6

      @@burpeesquad The government harassed her until she committed suicide.

    • @burpeesquad
      @burpeesquad Рік тому +2

      @@JDoe-gf5oz dammn. What was the reason for the harassment?

    • @ImmuneNimatoad
      @ImmuneNimatoad Рік тому +6

      ​@burpeesquad there isn't a lot of information as to what happened. What is known is the FBI denied Toni's security clearance to become an interpreter at the UN. This caused the accusations against her father to come back into light again and she secluded herself in a cabin out in the Caribbeans where after her 32nd birthday she took her life.

  • @rorytribbet6424
    @rorytribbet6424 Рік тому +2

    Absolutely awesome movie. Recommend to anyone who loves a great drama or is interest in atomic bombs/quantum physics

  • @ledeyabaklykova
    @ledeyabaklykova Рік тому +3

    I hear the film will be a blast .

  • @jackjohnsen8506
    @jackjohnsen8506 Рік тому +1

    I saw the picture, and was a little dissappointed....it was long minutes of convestaion, but the actor who played The opppenheimer part was scary he was so good, and looked Like the actual man

  • @christinacascadilla4473
    @christinacascadilla4473 Рік тому +34

    After Oppenheimer lost his security clearance he lived at the Hotel Chelsea. No one ever mentions that.

    • @JoseMorales-lw5nt
      @JoseMorales-lw5nt Рік тому +7

      Or the fact that THE MANHATTAN PROJECT got its name because the original offices were Oppenheimer and Company got the paperwork started was actually in a building opposite the northwest corner of City Hall Park in NYC! Along with key members from the scientific field being connected to Columbia University in Upper Manhattan...❤

    • @LynneJordan11
      @LynneJordan11 Рік тому +1

      Wow! I never heard that!

    • @vetiverose128
      @vetiverose128 Рік тому

      What does it mean to "lose security clearance"? That he can no longer work at Los Alamos anymore, is that it?

    • @christinacascadilla4473
      @christinacascadilla4473 Рік тому

      @@vetiverose128 you can’t see secret documents or work on secret projects. You are considered a security risk. Go watch the movie when it comes out.

    • @jahleajahlou8588
      @jahleajahlou8588 Рік тому

      Yep the criminal mafioso thuggery "military/corporate/banking" cabal chimera has a LONG HISTORY of chew ya up an spit ya out. Just ask Tesla. Even happened to Ike Eisenhower. Unlimited tax dollars for over 100 years, guess what CRIMINAL THUGS !!!

  • @SethBeck
    @SethBeck Рік тому +5

    I wonder if Nolan approached Bryan Cranston to play Heisenberg.

  • @thawkxing
    @thawkxing Рік тому +7

    War is so terrible, yet has led to some of humanity's greatest technological achievements out of necessity.

  • @Whyufollowos
    @Whyufollowos Рік тому +56

    Such a tragic hero, cant wait to see the movie.

    • @marvinmartin4692
      @marvinmartin4692 Рік тому

      Same here! Can’t wait to see it!

    • @Divorcedhousemaid666
      @Divorcedhousemaid666 Рік тому

      මේ තියෙන්නෙ ඇමරිකන් ජෙපි මරක්කල තමිල්නාඩු මිශන් එක. මට හුකා එක්ක හු... දවස ලගයි හුකේ...දැන් ලයික් කරපියව්.....මහා පරමානු පදු බෝමබෙ මගෙ හුකාට හෙලනවෝඕඕඕ... මට බලං ඉංට බැරියෝඕඕඕඕ... ඌරෙක් හම ගහපියෝ

    • @bjornragnarsson8692
      @bjornragnarsson8692 Рік тому

      ⁠@@Divorcedhousemaid666Hookah, hookah, hookah!

    • @Divorcedhousemaid666
      @Divorcedhousemaid666 Рік тому

      ජෙප්පොඇමරිකාවෙ නා සා ල එක්ක මිනි මරන හැටි. තොපිට කොහෙද ලෝකයක්. අම්ම අප්ප උනත් විකුනං කන තොපිට කොහෙද ලෝකයක්. විකෘත කාම ලෝකෙ මිස.

    • @Divorcedhousemaid666
      @Divorcedhousemaid666 Рік тому

      අනේ නාලිනි ගෙ කොල්ල සමංත. සෙකුරූට්ට උනාට ලෝකෙ අතේ කරකවන්නෙ. උගෙ කාම ආසව නිවපියව්. බෝම්බ දාහක් හරි ගහල

  • @EyeOnTheTV
    @EyeOnTheTV Рік тому +1

    it occurs to me that Oppenheimer was seen as an easy scape-goat if things didn't pan out

  • @Seekthetruth3000
    @Seekthetruth3000 Рік тому +12

    Humanity should do away with nukes and warfare.

    • @jflsdknf
      @jflsdknf Рік тому +2

      According to commenters here it was the greatest invention since sliced bread.

    • @Italkmadshitlol
      @Italkmadshitlol Рік тому

      ​@@jflsdknfand it was. How it was used can be up for debate, but it is certainly one of the greatest achievements of man kind. How can it not be?

    • @Italkmadshitlol
      @Italkmadshitlol Рік тому

      @@weemadhatter2273 That's not a counter argument.

  • @timf2279
    @timf2279 Рік тому +1

    Just remember it's a Hollywood movie, not a documentary.

  • @jrfields321
    @jrfields321 Рік тому +3

    It happened on my grandmother’s 45th birthday 🥳

  • @mrrandom1265
    @mrrandom1265 Рік тому +2

    I can't wait to watch the movie

  • @honesttruth8064
    @honesttruth8064 Рік тому +3

    One individual is not soley responsible for this 'project'.... yes it haunted him😢

  • @weareparamore1597
    @weareparamore1597 Рік тому +1

    Now that the tension between Russia and USA is on all time high.. perfect timing for this movie

  • @paulacopeland8360
    @paulacopeland8360 Рік тому +30

    The government turned on Oppenheimer like a rabid dog.

    • @azimisyauqieabdulwahab9401
      @azimisyauqieabdulwahab9401 Рік тому +1

      A war crime

    • @PhilipSwan-lj2pj
      @PhilipSwan-lj2pj Рік тому +1

      ​@@azimisyauqieabdulwahab9401No it wasn't

    • @rantoolio
      @rantoolio Рік тому

      A case of greedy , ignorant Republicans frightened by their own stupidity. Not unlike today.

    • @deanschulze3129
      @deanschulze3129 Рік тому

      No. The fact is that there was a network of spies operating at the highest levels of the Manhattan Project and they gave the secrets to the atomic bomb to the Soviets. The government was correct to revoke his security clearance.
      Oppenheimer lived out his life as head of the most prestigious lab in the world at Princeton.

    • @coreybeyond3311
      @coreybeyond3311 Рік тому

      Good he was an intellectual lunatic

  • @jacobgoldenofficial4321
    @jacobgoldenofficial4321 Рік тому +2

    It's a long movie
    So go early to watch it

  • @JoieGirl
    @JoieGirl Рік тому +15

    My grandfather was among the 66,000 Filipinos, along with 10,000 Americans who marched in Bataan Death March, during the Japanese occupation of the Philippines. My husband’s father was in the Dutch Royal Army, he was a foot soldier who fought and ended up as a POW during the Japanese occupation of Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) during WWII. Thank you Oppenheimer. I am glad the atom bomb was unleashed. #sorrynotsorry

    • @sugarkane4830
      @sugarkane4830 Рік тому

      You make a very good point. And I agree # sorry not sorry.

    • @sneakerset
      @sneakerset Рік тому

      The Japanese Kempeitai/marines under the command of Gen. Yamashita slaughtered between 100,000 to 500,000 civilians between Feb. 3 and Mar.3 1945. source (Wiki) The Manila massacre.

    • @Mike44460
      @Mike44460 Рік тому

      On the morning of March 10th, 1945, the emperor awoke to gaze upon his capital city on fire, more than 100,000 dead. Sixteen square miles were ablaze because the B-29's from Tinian, Guam, and Saipan had been there hours earlier. What could Japan possibly do to counter an attack of this magnitude. Nothing. They could not strike the islands nearly 1,500 miles away to put them out of action. The Americans will continue to burn Japan to the ground until they run out of bombs, yet you fight on. The emperor could have saved many lives on both sides had he just surrendered after these attacks. He is as guilty as any other war criminal.

    • @richardgarrett8087
      @richardgarrett8087 Рік тому

      What disturbs me is I get the impression Oppenheimer seemed not to care if the
      Russians had the Bomb and we should
      not have it.
      Supposedly Harry Truman threw Oppenheimer out of his office, get him
      out of here. The decision (Hiroshima/Nagasaki) was mine and I slept well on it.
      Leaving this country defenseless against Russia says a lot about his
      possible Communist ties.

    • @ginamosca7015
      @ginamosca7015 Рік тому

      It burned children alive.

  • @SeleneRulingTheMoon
    @SeleneRulingTheMoon Рік тому +1

    Talk about the movie the sound of freedom .

  • @DannyKlimt
    @DannyKlimt Рік тому +14

    The word "Narr" isn't Yiddish, it's German. It dates back to the 8th century.

  • @Stargazer771
    @Stargazer771 Рік тому +1

    Pivotal moment for humanity and the planet. We’re the only species in the entire history of the planet capable of now destroying it many times over. Sobering and humbling.

  • @Wizardof
    @Wizardof Рік тому +3

    Admiral Rickover didn't like Atomic power either but used it!

  • @catsj1767
    @catsj1767 Рік тому +1

    Ground Zero is open 2 times a year. In April & the first weekend in October, coinciding with the October Hot Air Balloon Fiesta.

  • @jamesfair5774
    @jamesfair5774 Рік тому +7

    Enrico Fermi. The real Architect and father of the atomic bomb

    • @JusdoinstuF
      @JusdoinstuF Рік тому

      why doesnt he get the credit then ?

    • @kurtvonfricken6829
      @kurtvonfricken6829 Рік тому +2

      That would be Leo Szilard.
      Oppenheimer was in charge, he gets the credit.
      That’s how it goes….

    • @jamesfair5774
      @jamesfair5774 Рік тому

      @@kurtvonfricken6829 Yes.. Leo with Federico both are the father and the architect of the gadget 👍🏻

    • @kurtvonfricken6829
      @kurtvonfricken6829 Рік тому +1

      @@jamesfair5774
      Another fun fact: when Fermi patented the nuclear reactor the paten was given to “Fermi et. al.
      “et.al.” was Szilard. No one could stand him.

  • @veramae4098
    @veramae4098 Рік тому +1

    It's a little strange how long it took scientists to realize this was something completely new. I'm a long time sci fi fan, and even writers with a science background kept writing in "atomics" as if it were just another chemical.
    The mania about keeping it secret was a little out of tune with reality. The basic research had all been published. Someone even wrote fairly accurate sci fi story about an atomic bomb, published in Analog magazine before VE Day, and the FBI nearly had heart failure. John Campbell, Analog's editor, pointed out that the magazine had already been distributed that month and if they tried to recover all the copies it would just call more attention to it. The FBI finally agreed.

  • @michaelquinn7710
    @michaelquinn7710 Рік тому +19

    He gave us the power to destroy ourselves, now that's a powerful statement!!!

    • @michaeld.williamsiii9026
      @michaeld.williamsiii9026 Рік тому +4

      Exactly and deeply disturbing.😐

    • @datatsushi2016
      @datatsushi2016 Рік тому

      Have you seen the state of the planet today? We don't need nuclear bombs in order to destroy ourselves.

  • @madameclark3453
    @madameclark3453 Рік тому +2

    I look forward to seeing the movie.

  • @josephwatts314
    @josephwatts314 Рік тому +9

    Great Story! Thanls

  • @robvangessel3766
    @robvangessel3766 Рік тому +1

    More often than not, imo, the real events in any history make a better story than the changes Hollywood usually brings to them. Box office, to my disgust, has contested this argument. Valkerie - one of my favorite films - was VERY accurate, and it didn't do well. Titanic, on the other hand, Cameron's idiot chick-flick filled with every soap opera cliche, blew the box office away. That's why these days I more often turn to cable docudramas. Like Saving The Titanic, 2012, which was the little known yet mindblowing story of the electrians and firemen who were below till the last moment trying to keep the ship's power on to save as many people as they could on the deck far above them. I don't know how well Oppenheimer will do theatrically, but I'm REALLY looking forward to it, and I hope it makes big money in the returns from dvds and online media platforms.

  • @stevedeann
    @stevedeann Рік тому +3

    What sparked my interest in learning about this event is when I read the lyrics to the song, "Manhattan Project" by the Canadian prog-rock band, Rush. Great band. Great song. Music by G. Lee and A. Lifeson. Lyrics by N. Peart. I encourage everyone to watch the video (with the lyrics) and listen to the song. Powerful.

    • @thomasleffler6721
      @thomasleffler6721 Рік тому +3

      There really is a Rush song for everything

    • @johnIZaUWL
      @johnIZaUWL Рік тому +1

      @@thomasleffler6721HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA yes there is sometimes 💜🤘💜

    • @christinehayes839
      @christinehayes839 Рік тому +2

      It's an incredible song. Only Rush could make a great rock song about the Manhattan Project, ha. Greatest band ever.

  • @sgtlamancha805
    @sgtlamancha805 Рік тому +1

    ‘They won’t understand it until they’ve used it.’
    Thus as it ever is with humans.

  • @jinxysaberk
    @jinxysaberk Рік тому +8

    I’d gone under the false pretence that we’d never used nuclear bombs before because of what my parents told me and not being taught about it in school. What I found was extremely horrifying that every clip I watched of a nuclear bomb going off I felt actually sick after learning about Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
    In saying that it’s so god damn fascinating. Especially when learning specifically about the Manhattan project I found myself unable to stop researching. It’s made me terrified of nuclear weapons and to learn the man that made my favorite movie (interstellar) is making one all about that project??? With Cillian Murphy my fav actor??? I’m so excited because while this story is heartbreaking AND horrific it’s so interesting.

    • @datatsushi2016
      @datatsushi2016 Рік тому

      Problem is the nuclear bomb is not the biggest threat to our existence anymore. We're destroying the planet (and ourselves) perfectly fine without it.

    • @ginamosca7015
      @ginamosca7015 Рік тому +4

      If you ever ever are able to go to Japan, I cannot stress how life changing a visit to Hiroshima is. It made me see how dark humanity could be but also how resilient. The people there today have made the city a place to educate everyone about how nuclear weapons must never ever be used again. It is a peaceful, beautiful city. I felt so ashamed to be an American there but the people are so kind.
      Many countries have nuclear weapons now. Barack Obama was the FIRST head of state of a nuclear armed nation to visit Hiroshima. Astounding.

    • @joinjen3854
      @joinjen3854 Рік тому +1

      ​@@ginamosca7015ashamed to be an American? Japanese military in WW2 were unbelievably brutal. You know little real history.

    • @jinxysaberk
      @jinxysaberk Рік тому

      @@joinjen3854 bet you think the bombs were justified 💀💀

    • @jinxysaberk
      @jinxysaberk Рік тому +1

      @@ginamosca7015 I would love to visit Japan one day and if I ever do it will definitely be one of the destinations I travel too. It’s horrifying to think about what happened there and how much those types of weapons have gotten so much more needlessly stronger

  • @thomashusted
    @thomashusted Рік тому +13

    When Oppenheimer was asked if this is the first nuclear explosion, he significantly replied: "Yes, in modern times," implying that they had been used in the very ancient past according to the Indian Vedas.

    • @wbrown3907
      @wbrown3907 Рік тому

      source?

    • @PremierCCGuyMMXVI
      @PremierCCGuyMMXVI Рік тому +10

      I think he was saying that figuratively. Ancient civilizations didn’t have technology to nuclear fusion

    • @divinegon4671
      @divinegon4671 Рік тому +2

      @@PremierCCGuyMMXVIbut the comment about said Oppenheimer implied it, therefore it’s true!

    • @danieljoseph6404
      @danieljoseph6404 Рік тому

      I call bs

  • @thewatcher4552
    @thewatcher4552 Рік тому +1

    And unless those days were shortened, no flesh would be saved; but for the elect’s sake those days will be shortened. Matthew 24:22

  • @babangteo2853
    @babangteo2853 Рік тому +7

    This will make everyone so teary. Can't wait for my Oppenheimer screening. 😢

    • @coreybeyond3311
      @coreybeyond3311 Рік тому +1

      Yea from seeing all those flames lol

    • @babangteo2853
      @babangteo2853 Рік тому

      @@coreybeyond3311 also there will be so much theories and moral lectures 🤣

  • @casioamplifier
    @casioamplifier Рік тому +1

    Oppenheimer and Neil’s Bohr, two very reputed scientists were big believers and derived inspiration from Hinduism. In the movie and in his documentary Oppenheimer quotes a phrase from the Bhagavad Gita “I am Vishnu. Destroyer of worlds”. But there is more to it. In the Bhagavad Gita there is mention of an energy akin to a thousands suns burning at the same time (i.e. nuclear bomb which works on nuclear fission). Oppenheimer even in his interviews credited the Bhagavad Gita for his idea and inspiration. True story. I hope the creators of the Oppenheimer did not omit this crucial and factual information. God bless all! Jai Shri Krishna!

    • @coreybeyond3311
      @coreybeyond3311 Рік тому

      Actually your wrong an atomic bomb is not thousand suns burning at the same time because the wind velocity of a hurricane is just as impactful as 200 nukes being set off your over exaggeration doesn’t add up

  • @Graun
    @Graun Рік тому +2

    To say he (Oppenheimer) created the atomic bomb is a massive overstatement!

    • @ericsierra-franco7802
      @ericsierra-franco7802 Рік тому

      He was the top scientist in charge of the Manhattan Project. He rightly is the "Father of the Bomb".

  • @tompeace7907
    @tompeace7907 Рік тому +4

    Professor David Bohm, for whom Oppenheimer was a mentor, refused to testify against Oppenheimer to the government. Yet Oppenheimer later led physicists to unjustly ostracize Bohm regarding his theories in physics. Oppenheimer was a back-stabber.

  • @DemocracyFirst2025
    @DemocracyFirst2025 Рік тому +2

    Excellent piece.