Thursday, August 06, 1970

1945 and the bomb



Image result for hiroshima bomb images

We remember another anniversary of one of the most consequential days of the 20th century.

Back on this day in 1945, many people heard about Hiroshima on the radio or perhaps saw the scenes on one of those newsreels.

In the summer of 1945, President Truman was confronted with one of those decisions that only a president faces.  He looked at the horrible options and made the right call, as my friend Bill Katz explained.   The bomb stopped the war and the killing:

Of course we regret the lives that were lost, as we always regret death and destruction in war, but guilt is not required.  In what is sometimes called the  bloody arithmetic of war, the nuclear bombs reduced the ultimate death toll of World War II dramatically.  And as the late historian Paul Fussell, a soldier in the Pacific at the time of Hiroshima later wrote, recalling his thoughts when he learned of the atomic bomb's use, "We were going to live.  We were going to grow to adulthood after all."  For that we can be grateful.

We will probably hear the usual criticism of President Truman's decision, specially from those who were not alive back then nor have taken the time to study the real options on his desk.   In other words, President Truman was not choosing between war and peace but rather war and more war.   He also knew that there would be huge casualties on both sides, if he decided to invade Japan.

Today's anniversary reminds us that presidents often face awfully difficult choices.  In this case, President Truman made the right decision. 


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August 1966: Remembering The Beatles' Revolver, my 2nd favorite album!




(P.S.  You can listen to my show (Canto Talk)

In a previous post, I wrote that Rubber Soul was my favorite Beatles' album. Today, we remember my 2nd favorite: Revolver.

In the UK, and most places, Revolver was released after Rubber Soul.

In the US, Revolver was released after "Yesterday and Today", a collection of 45's and other songs from the UK Rubber Soul.

The US Revolver was interesting because Paul did most of the lead vocals. It also confirmed that George Martin is one of the great pop music producers ever! You can see Martin's creative influence all over this album.

George had 3 songs, including the classic "Taxman".

John was limited to lead vocals on two songs, like "Tomorrow never knows" and "She said, she said". He had more tracks on the UK version. He had a couple more in the UK Revolver and were released in the aforementioned "Yesterday and Today:.

Why were the US and UK versions different? I don't know but they were.

What else do they say about Revolver:
"If you don't like Revolver, then you probably don't like rock music." (Reviews)
I would agree with that.

Let me go further: If you don't like Revolver then you don't understand The Beatles!


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