Nuclear Blatancy Day, a Modest Proposal
I have concerns about the political
dangers of a standing nuclear army; yet I also agree that SAC’s power to
destroy civilization should not be in the hands of recruits. How, then, do we
reconcile citizen armies with nuclear technology?
Jonathan
Schell offers a partial solution in his book, “The Abolition”, which proposes
that the USA become a “latent” nuclear power; that is, that it dismantle all
actual nuclear bombs, but retain (and indeed strengthen) its ability to swiftly
build those bombs. We keep the know-how and the infrastructure and the fissile
materials, but hold off on building the accursed things unless we need them
right away. You could call it just-in-time civicide; like taking the bullet out
of the rifle over the fireplace. Nuclear latency is purified deterrence; a way
for America to say to the world that we don’t feel like killing a million
people today, so don’t make us want to.
I
like Schell’s idea, but I think it’s incomplete. It’s too rational, it lacks
the aura of apocalyptic histrionics so natural to all things nuclear. I
therefore offer the following modest proposal: Nuclear Blatancy Day. It’ll work like this:
Every
Presidential election year, college and high school students across the country
submit their bomb designs. The winning entries are cast into metal and chips
(but no explosives and fissile materials, of course) and sent to the Nevada
Test Range. There the bombs are loaded with plutonium from the armory, and lowered
deep underground.
The
contestants arrive, and their families, and technicians, and generals, and
reporters, and Presidential candidates, and foreign dignitaries. Also on hand
are marching bands (pro-bomb) and satirical giant-puppet troupes (anti-bomb).
Both groups are welcomed as essential components of the inherently mixed
message being sent that day. The Presidential candidates speak blandly of
the People’s Bomb; the grandmother from Hiroshima pleads passionately for
peace.
The
countdown starts. Five, four, three, two, one, zero! Suddenly new craters
collapse in the Nevada desert. The marching bands cheer, the puppeteers boo,
and the foreign dignitaries look at each other nervously. Technicians announce
yields; the winning contestants get scholarships and job offers; and the
dignitary from Japan quietly tells the other dignitaries that these Americans
are indeed as crazy as they look, so don’t mess with them!
The
preceding three paragraphs are satire; but they are a satire that would work.
It’s absurd, but slightly less absurd than what already exists. I offer it as
my fulsome praise, and also my excoriating critique, of America and
civilization and the entire human race.
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