A Is for Atom (1953) Poster

(1953)

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7/10
When Americans believed in Science
jtyroler14 June 2012
This cartoon short from the early 1950s showed a time when many Americans thought that there were few, if any, limits to what science could do. This piece of history was brought to you from the folks of General Electric, a company that most people of the time, associated with kitchen appliances and light bulbs and not in the business of creating nuclear and non- nuclear weapons, medical appliances, etc.

This showed how useful nuclear research had been to this point and was more than just creating weapons of mass destruction. This gives a rudimentary understanding of chemistry and atomic structure before showing what could happen with nuclear fission and natural radioactive decay - and it does so in a somewhat amusing way. Radioactive elements, such as Radium are shown as hyperactive people with atoms for heads (or at least what atoms were thought to look like at the time). Radium is shown wearing a tux, dancing fairly maniacally before becoming Radon and then Lead. Uranium isotopes are shown to split and how that can be used to create electricity (and Plutonium).

It's not enough to allow you to develop your own nuclear program, but it does show the benefits of nuclear research. This was definitely a time when most Americans thought science had all sorts of potential - now, many Americans seem to question some of the basic principles of science, preferring to use writings that are 2000 year old or older to answer questions about how the world works.
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7/10
B Is For Bomb
boblipton8 April 2023
Here's a short from John Sutherland's cartoon factory produced for General Electric. It gives an up-to-date outline -- for 1953 -- of how the atom is made, what radioactivity is, how scientific advancements led to artificial isotopes and the A-Bomb. From there, it discusses how atomic energy can be used, from power generation to isotopes for medicine and farming.

When we think of atomic energy, we think first of the Bomb, and then perhaps of power plants. We fail to understand how knowledge is power, not only for power plants, but in permitting us to do things that we have not done before. This optimistic cartoon does a very good job of telling us that we can do more than kill and destroy.
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