Nuclear Weapons Destructors
When one thinks of complete and total annihilation, the plumage of an infamous mushroom cloud is undoubtedly an image which comes to mind. This ominous image is ". . . a tiger which must be looked in the eye," (Looking the Tiger in the Eye, 1982). The reason for which we must examine the issue of nuclear weapons, is best stated in the words of J. Robert Oppenheimer, ". . . until we have looked this tiger in the eye, we shall ever be in the worst of all possible dangers, of which we may back into him." In an attempt to prevent ourselves from backing into this proverbial tiger, we will discuss the following subheadings of nuclear arms: should countries dismantle their nuclear arms; and whether a nuclear war can occur, without resulting in a total nuclear holocaust of both conflicting parties. Virtually all, who know of the rise in modern?day technology, oppose the first subheading, dismantling nuclear weapons; but, before stating their reasoning, we will change our viewpoint to that of the naive (no insult intended) or too optimistic. Assuming all nations dismantled their nuclear weapons tomorrow; the world would be peaceful: no more nucle
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Some common words found in the essay are:
Robert Oppenheimer, Assured Destruction, Nuclear Controversy, JeanPaul Sartre, , William Faulkner, Tiger Eye, NoFirst Strike, nuclear weapons, nuclear war, nuclear arms, nuclear war occur, nuclear holocaust, tiger eye, war occur, conflicting parties, acceptable defensive,
Approximate Word count = 780
Approximate Pages = 3 (250 words per page double spaced)
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