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American Ground Zero: The Secret Nuclear War (1993)

av Carole Gallagher

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952284,683 (4.39)Ingen/inga
American Ground Zero is the extraordinary product of one photojournalist's decade-long commitment, a gripping, courageous collection of portraits and interviews of those whose lives were crossed by radioactive fallout. For twelve years beginning in 1951, the United states government conducted aboveground testing of nuclear weapons in the deserts of Nevada. For more than four decades it has tried to cover up the human and environmental devastation wrought by this testing. In American Ground Zero, Carole Gallagher has penetrated the veil of official secrecy and anonymity to document the incredible untold story of the Americans whose misfortune it was to live downwind of the nuclear detonations - those citizens described in a top-secret Atomic Energy Commission memo as "a low-use segment of the population"--And of civilian workers and military personnel exposed to radiation at the Nevada Test Site. The aboveground nuclear testing was "the most prodigiously reckless program of scientific experimentation in United States history," as Keith Schneider notes in his foreword to the book. Many of its 126 fallout clouds floated across the American West and eastward with radiation levels comparable to those released at Chernobyl. Yet residents of the downwind areas were consistently told that there was no danger, and were even encouraged to "participate in a moment of history" by coming out to watch these fallout clouds drifting over their homes. Abandoning her career as a successful New York photographer, Carole Gallagher moved to Utah in 1983 and spent the next seven years networking among radiation survivors' groups and finding people willing to be photographed and tell their story. She covered six downwind states including test site workers and atomic veterans. The result is a striking gallery of the undecorated casualties of an undeclared war. Never exploitative, Gallagher's photographs only rarely convey the subjects' considerable physical sufferings: instead, they invite the viewer to witness the beauty and value in these ordinary lives.… (mer)
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Disturbing and revealing oral history of America's atomic testing program and the health impacts caused by radiation. Hundreds of atomic bombs were set off in the deserts of southern Nevada in the 1950s and 60s. The Government waited until the wind was blowing eastward because people in Utah "didn't give a shit about radiation", as they were Mormons who were a "low use population" that were taught never to protest or raise any concern and put God and Country as equals (the Mormons believe the US Govt is divinely inspired). Each bomb released more rads than the Chernobyl accident. Radiation has spread to every state in the country.

The effects have been devastating. Carole spent about 10 years in the 1980's traveling through Nevada and Utah interviewing people - cancer rates went through the roof and remain high to this day. Strange pregnancies and birth defects became the order of the day. The US government has done everything possible to cover it up going so far as to suggest radiation is good for you. The epidemic of cancer in the USA could be explained largely as a result of these tests which released enough rads to kill the world many times over.

As a result of reading this book, and the similar oral history "Voices from Chernobyl", I have purchased a new high quality Geiger counter. It is difficult reading to realize the scale of the horror but the US Govt has perpetrated a holocaust-scale crime on its own citizens and no one really knows about it. The evidence can be "soft" - how do you know what causes cancer? - but like global warming, or lung cancer caused by smoking - you don't need a scientist to tell you what your intuition and gut know to be true - the US has unloaded literally 1000s of Hiroshima's on US soil. ( )
  Stbalbach | Feb 24, 2007 |
About the author: quoting from www.atomicphotographers.com, "Carole Gallagher, Conifer, Colorado, first began her odyssey on the nuclear trail on March 28, 1979, the day of the Three Mile Island accident. Noting beads of sweat on the brow of Walter Cronkite as he reported on it, she packed her car, ready to travel far from the potential plume that could soon have enveloped her home town, New York City." About the book, quoting from the book's back cover, the reviewer for 'The New York Times,' said of this work, "As you look at Carole Gallagher's powerful pictures and read her angry words, you may be reminded of James Agee's 'Let Us Now Praise Famous Men'. . .Ms. Gallagher's book deserves to be read as a crusading story of the consequences of the nuclear-arms industry's lingering contamination and deception: as an American Chernobyl." This book includes maps, lengthy quotes from survivors and victims, and commanding photographs.
Den här recensionen har flaggats av flera medlemmar för att den bryter mot användarvillkoren och visas därför inte längre (visa den).
  uufnn | Nov 18, 2016 |
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Man, that "fickle, erratic, dangerous creature," whose "restless mind would try all paths, all horrors, all betrayals . . . believe all tings and believe nothing . . . kill for shadowy ideas more ferociously than other creatures kill for food, then, in a generation or less, forget hat bloody dream had so obsessed him."

Loren Eisely, Man: The Lethal Factor
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American Ground Zero is the extraordinary product of one photojournalist's decade-long commitment, a gripping, courageous collection of portraits and interviews of those whose lives were crossed by radioactive fallout. For twelve years beginning in 1951, the United states government conducted aboveground testing of nuclear weapons in the deserts of Nevada. For more than four decades it has tried to cover up the human and environmental devastation wrought by this testing. In American Ground Zero, Carole Gallagher has penetrated the veil of official secrecy and anonymity to document the incredible untold story of the Americans whose misfortune it was to live downwind of the nuclear detonations - those citizens described in a top-secret Atomic Energy Commission memo as "a low-use segment of the population"--And of civilian workers and military personnel exposed to radiation at the Nevada Test Site. The aboveground nuclear testing was "the most prodigiously reckless program of scientific experimentation in United States history," as Keith Schneider notes in his foreword to the book. Many of its 126 fallout clouds floated across the American West and eastward with radiation levels comparable to those released at Chernobyl. Yet residents of the downwind areas were consistently told that there was no danger, and were even encouraged to "participate in a moment of history" by coming out to watch these fallout clouds drifting over their homes. Abandoning her career as a successful New York photographer, Carole Gallagher moved to Utah in 1983 and spent the next seven years networking among radiation survivors' groups and finding people willing to be photographed and tell their story. She covered six downwind states including test site workers and atomic veterans. The result is a striking gallery of the undecorated casualties of an undeclared war. Never exploitative, Gallagher's photographs only rarely convey the subjects' considerable physical sufferings: instead, they invite the viewer to witness the beauty and value in these ordinary lives.

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