World Peace Symbol Zone of Peace Park in Nagasaki City長崎平和のモニュメント
Peace Park in Nagasaki World Peace Symbol Zone
I will introduce the monument of peace given from all over the world.
長崎の平和公園「世界平和シンボルゾーン」
世界各国から贈られた平和のモニュメントを紹介します。
LeeLeeプランツのジャンル:長崎花だより,多肉植物,ハオルチア,サボテン,花,植物,ガーデニング,コレクション植え付け,植え替え,栽培方法,日本の庭.LeeLeePlants Genre: Succulent plants, Haworthia, cactus, flowers, plants, gardening, collection planting, transplanting, cultivation methods, Japanese garden.Plantas suculentas, cactus, flores, plantas, jardinería, plantación de la colección, trasplante, métodos de cultivo, jardín japonés.Plantas suculentas, cactus, flores, plantas, jardinagem, plantação de colheitas, transplante, métodos de cultivo, jardim japonês.Plantes succulentes, cactus, fleurs, plantes, jardinage, plantation de plantes, transplantation, méthodes de culture, jardin japonais.Sukkulenten, Kaktus, Blumen, Pflanzen, Gartenarbeit, Sammlung Pflanzung, Verpflanzung, Anbau Methoden, japanischen Garten.多汁植物,海峡,仙人掌,花卉,植物,园艺,收集种植,移植,栽培方法,日本花园.พืชเร่าร้อน, Haorthia, แคคตัส, ดอกไม้, พืช, สวน, การเก็บรวบรวมการเพาะปลูก, การเพาะปลูก, วิธีการเพาะปลูก, สวนญี่ปุ่น.tumbuhan berair, kaktus, bunga, tumbuh-tumbuhan, berkebun, koleksi penanaman, diubah, kaedah penanaman, taman Jepun.즙이 많은 식물, 선인장, 꽃, 식물, 원예, 수집 심기, 이식, 재배 방법, 일본 정원.Cây mọng, cây xương rồng, hoa, cây cảnh, trồng trọt, trồng trọt, cấy ghép, phương pháp trồng trọt, vườn Nhật Bản.tetanduran succulent, kaktus, kembang, tanduran, gardening, tanduran koleksi, transplanting, cara budidoyo, Taman Japanese.Tanaman sukulen, kaktus, bunga, tanaman, berkebun, koleksi tanam, tanam, metode budidaya, taman jepang.रसीला पौधे, कैक्टस, फूल, पौधे, बागवानी, संग्रह रोपण, प्रत्यारोपण, खेती पद्धति, जापानी उद्यान.Sukkulente plante, kaktusse, blomme, plante, tuinbou, versameling plant, oorplanting, verbouingsmetodes, Japannese tuin.Succulents, kaktus, bunga, tumbuh-tumbuhan, berkebun, taman Jepun.Sulu meyveler, kaktüs, çiçekler, bitkiler, bahçe işleri, Japon bahçesi.Succulenten, cactussen, bloemen, planten, tuinieren, Japanse tuin.Sukulenty, kaktus, kwiaty, rośliny, ogrodnictwo, ogród japoński.Суккуленты, кактусы, цветы, растения, садоводство, японский сад.Сукуленти, кактуси, квіти, рослини, садівництво, Японський сад.العصارة، الصبار، الزهور، النباتات، البستنة، الحديقة اليابانية.گیاهان شاداب، کاکتوس، گل و گیاه، باغبانی، باغ ژاپنی.Succulents، کیکٹس، پھول، پودے، باغبانی، جاپانی گارڈن,ਸੁੱਕੀਆਂ, ਕੈਪਟੂਸ, ਫੁੱਲ, ਪੌਦੇ, ਬਾਗ਼ਬਾਨੀ, ਜਾਪਾਨੀ ਬਾਗ਼.சதைப்பற்றுள்ள, கற்றாழை, பூக்கள், தாவரங்கள், தோட்டக்கலை, ஜப்பானிய தோட்டம்.সারকোজ, ক্যাকটাস, ফুল, উদ্ভিদ, বাগান, জাপানি বাগান.रसाळ, कॅक्टस, फुले, वनस्पती, बागकाम, जपानी उद्यान.સુક્યુલન્ટ્સ, કેક્ટસ, ફૂલો, છોડ, બાગકામ, જાપાની બગીચો.సుకులలు, కాక్టస్, పువ్వులు, మొక్కలు, గార్డెనింగ్, జపనీస్ గార్డెన్.Succulents, kaktus, cvijeće, biljke, vrtlarstvo, japanski vrt.Mingine, cactus, maua, mimea, bustani, Kijapani bustani.Sukulenty, kaktus, květiny, rostliny, zahradnictví, japonská zahrada.Sukkulenter, kaktus, blomster, planter, hagearbeid, japansk hage.Succulents, കള്ളിച്ചെടി, പൂക്കൾ, സസ്യങ്ങൾ, പൂന്തോട്ടപരിപാലന, ജാപ്പനീസ് തോട്ടം
Hiroshima Bombing Story | Tour around the Atomic Hypocenter ★ ONLY in JAPAN
Today is the 74th anniversary of the Hiroshima Bombing - August 6, 2019
Hiroshima, August 6, 1945. It’s a day that changed everything. The atomic bomb decimated the city, killing nearly all nearby the blast. Fast forward about 75 years later, and Hiroshima is now a beautiful city, resurrected from the ruins of the post war period. Near the hypocenter is the Hiroshima Memorial Peace Park and Museum and across the river, the A-Bomb Dome which sits as it did, destroyed after the bomb in ruins. We'll look at the area around the hypocenter and see old video footage from 1945 after the bomb. We'll also meet a witness who will describe in detail the horror he saw as he volunteered to help in Hiroshima on August 7, 1945, the next day.
We’re now in the 4th generation since the bomb was dropped, those that were kids who could remember are now in their 80s and 90s. Yuji is a 3rd generation Hiroshima resident since the bomb and he wants to share the city of Hiroshima so people don’t forget the past. He learned a lot from his great uncle who told him stories as a kid of the horrors of that day and how the city rebuilt. Another reason is that he wants to teach his son so he can pass on the stories from his family who were alive nearby on that tragic day. They're now tour guides in Hiroshima.
At age 92, Yuji’s great uncle shares his story of the day he will never forget. He lived in Kure city near by, saw the mushroom cloud and went into the city to help. His account is graphic, the scene is grim and real.
The city cannot erase it’s past but it can move on and write the next chapter in its history and I think that is where Hiroshima is today. Tourism to the city is increasing, many international visitors stop by Hiroshima to understand what happened on that day, pay their respects, and tours like the one with Yuji and Magical Trip I took is a way to understand just how much the city changed that day and how it’s re-invented itself since. I hope you can feel something for Hiroshima and if you are in Japan, it's a must visit destination.
★ Hiroshima Peace (Heiwa) Walking Tour can be reserved here:
Note: The tour takes about 4.5 hours. Child tour guide assistant may not always be present during tours.
▶︎WHERE is Hiroshima and the Peace Park?
Thank you to Magical Trip for helping me with this story to connect the past with the present and get a better understanding of where Hiroshima came from and where it is gong in the future.
Magical Trip Website:
ONLY in JAPAN is a registered trademark. All rights are reserved. This show has been created and produced by John Daub ジョン・ドーブ. He's been living and working in Japan for over 21 years and regularly reports on TV for Japan's International Channel.
#Hiroshima #ONLYinJAPAN
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Hiroshima Memorial Park
The Hiroshima Peace Memorial (Genbaku Dome) is the only structure left standing near the hypocenter of the first atomic bomb which exploded on 6 August 1945, and it remains in the condition right after the explosion. Through the efforts of many people, including those of the city of Hiroshima, this ruin has been preserved in the same state as immediately after the bombing. Not only is it a stark and powerful symbol of the most destructive force ever created by humankind, it also expresses the hope for world peace and the ultimate elimination of all nuclear weapons. The inscribed property covers 0.40 ha in the urban centre of Hiroshima and consists of the surviving Genbaku Dome (“Genbaku” means atomic bomb in Japanese) within the ruins of the building. The 42.7 ha buffer zone that surrounds the property includes the Peace Memorial Park.
The most important meaning of the surviving structure of the Hiroshima Peace Memorial is in what it symbolizes, rather than just its aesthetic and architectural values. This silent structure is the skeletal form of the surviving remains of the Hiroshima Prefectural Industrial Promotional Hall (constructed in 1914). It symbolizes the tremendous destructive power, which humankind can invent on the one hand; on the other hand, it also reminds us of the hope for world permanent peace.
The Hiroshima Peace Memorial (Genbaku Dome) is a stark and powerful symbol of the achievement of world peace for more than half a century following the unleashing of the most destructive force ever created by humankind.
Japan-Tour-2011-2012-Nagasaki-The-Atomic-Bombing.mp4
At 11:02 a.m on August 9th 1945 an atomic bomb exploded 500 meters above Nagasaki.
The fierce blast wind, heat rays reaching several thousand degrees and deadly radiations generated by the explosion reduced the City Center to ruins.
About one-third of Nagasaki City was destroyed and 150,000 people killed or injured and it was said at the time that this area would be devoid of vegetation for 75 years.
Now, the hypocenter remains as an International Peace Park and a symbol of aspiratin for world harmony.
A black monolith was the first structure built after the bombing to mark the hypocenter of the atomic bomb explosion.
Atomic bombing of Nagasaki - BBC
Accounts of the American justification for dropping a second bomb in Nagasaki. From the BBC.
Over 900 Asian activists arrive to promote peace
1. Wide shot Peace Boat
2. Close up of the Peace Boat sign
3. Close up of the ship's name, The Topaz
4. Wide of Veakeio Amphitheatre
5. Mid shot of Japanese supporters dressed in festive clothing
6. Close up of two women in traditional dress
7. Close up of supporter
8. Wide of supporters
9. Mid of supporters
10. SOUNDBITE (Japanese) Ichiro Guttierrez, International Coordinator Peace Boat: (ROUGH TRANSLATION)
The peace flames from Hiroshima and Nagasaki act as a symbol of olympic truth and the Olympic ideal of peace
11. Mid shot of audience with Peace flag in background
12. Close up of olive branch
13. Wide of audience
STORYLINE:
A Japanese peace Boat carrying 950 activists docked in Piraeus on Friday with the aim of spreading good will and peace.
The Topaz set sail from Japan on July 14 to spread its message of the Olympic Truce, stopping off in Taiwan, Vietnam, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Eritrea and Egypt before docking at Piraeus harbour.
During the original Olympics, from seven days before and after the Games, all hostilities between rival city-state nations would stop and athletes, artists and spectators could travel to Olympia and return safely to their homeland.
The organisation was set up to learn about Japanese actions during World War Two and to promote human rights in conflict and post-conflict zones.
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Visiting HIROSHIMA Today: IS IT SAFE from RADIATION?!
Hiroshima today is a city transformed, but it's known for harrowing history. The Peace Memorial Park, Atomic Bomb Dome and Peace Memorial Museum are very important for everybody to experience… but I didn’t expect to find so much fun on my city tour.
From tasty Okonomiyaki to craft breweries and rooftop bars. Hiroshima in 2019 is a really vibrant, modern place. But it also owns it’s history, presented best by the story of Sadako Sasaki.
This is my Hiroshima travel video, that I hope captures my thoughts and feelings of the place.
ONE SHOT ADVENTURES / THE JAPAN SERIES / EPISODE 4
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PLACES AND SIGHTS FEATURES IN THIS FILM:
Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum - 0:40
Somewhere that everyone should visit in their lifetime. A poignant reflection on the bomb blast through interactive exits and artefacts.
Atomic Bomb Dome (Genbaku Dome) - 1:00
The former Hiroshima Prefectural Industrial Promotion Hall is one of the few ruins left standing from the blast. It is now a centrepiece of the peace park and a designated UNESCO World Heritage Site
Peace Memorial Park - 1:19
A beautiful place to visit, dedicated to the victims of the bomb. Very peaceful with several museums, memorials and art installations.
Hiroshima Trams - 1:37
The vintage trams have been a feature of the city since long before the bombing. They are still the best way to get around the city.
Orizuru Tower Hiroshima - 1:43
The best rooftop bar and viewpoint I visited in Japan, located right next to the Atomic Bomb Dome. A beautiful and modern design with several floors and interactive exhibits. It’s a great place to come with kids to learn about the history and a great spot to drink and unwind. You can also get down the building through a series of slides - lots of fun! There is a ¥1000 JPY entrance fee for tourists.
Okonomoyaki - 1:47
A savoury Japanese pancake and a native speciality dish of Hiroshima. Nagataya is a great restaurant to try it for the first time, but get there early - there’s always a queue!
Miyajima Ferry - 2:07
¥180 JPY for a one way trip, there is also a dedicated JR Line Ferry for anybody with a rail pass.
Itsukushima Shrine - 2:15
One of the most famous Torii gates/shrines in Japan. Partially submerged by water at high tide. You can view it from the land or take a boat through it.
Miyajima Brewery - 2:33
A great little stop for craft beer lovers on the Main Street on Miyajima island.
Hiroshima Carps - 2:35
The loudest and proudest baseball fans in the country! They play at the Mazda Zoom-Zoom Stadium. You can buy tickets at the stadium box office or from 711, Family Mart and Lawson.
Hiroshima Arcades - 2:48
There are a couple of Taito Stations in the city, which are good fun as always!
Paper Crane Memorial - 4:12
At the Hiroshima Orizuru Tower, you can make your own paper cranes to drop into the memorial on the 10th floor.
#HiroshimaToday #HiroshimaTravelVideo #HiroshimaCityTour
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Secret Papers Reveal Hero Scientists! Russia Spared Fate of Hiroshima With Counter Nuclear Bomb!
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The new technological image of civilization - smartphones and supercomputers - could not appear without the atomic bomb. The president of the Kurchatov Institute Mikhail Kovalchuk spoke today about this connection unexpected at the first glance. From the archives of the Foreign Intelligence Service, previously classified documents on developments that played a key role 70 years ago were handed over to the National Research Center.
Historical Images of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
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The United States, with the assent of the United Kingdom as set down in the Quebec Agreement, dropped atomic weapons on the Japanese urban communities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945, amid the last phase of World War II. The two bombings, which executed no less than 129,000 individuals, remain the main utilization of atomic weapons for fighting ever.
In the last year of the war, the Allies arranged for what was expected to be an exorbitant intrusion of the Japanese terrain. This was gone before by a U.S. firebombing effort that decimated numerous Japanese urban communities. The war in Europe had finished up when Nazi Germany marked its instrument of surrender on May 8, 1945. The Japanese, confronting the same destiny, declined to acknowledge the Allies' requests for unequivocal surrender and the Pacific War proceeded. Together with the United Kingdom and China, the United States required the genuine surrender of the Japanese military in the Potsdam Declaration on July 26, 1945—the option being speedy and utter decimation. The Japanese reaction to this final offer was to overlook it.
In July 1945, the Allied Manhattan Project effectively exploded a nuclear bomb in the New Mexico desert and by August had delivered nuclear weapons in view of two substitute outlines. The 509th Composite Group of the United States Army Air Forces was outfitted with the specific Silverplate rendition of the Boeing B-29 Superfortress, that could convey them from Tinian in the Mariana Islands.
On August 6, the U.S. dropped a uranium weapon sort nuclear bomb (Little Boy) on the city of Hiroshima. American President Harry S. Truman required Japan's surrender 16 hours after the fact, cautioning them to expect a downpour of ruin from the air, the like of which has never been seen on this planet. After three days, on August 9, the U.S. dropped a plutonium implosion-sort bomb (Fat Man) on the city of Nagasaki. Inside the initial two to four months of the bombings, the intense impacts of the nuclear bombings killed 90,000–146,000 individuals in Hiroshima and 39,000–80,000 in Nagasaki; generally 50% of the passings in every city happened on the primary day. Amid the next months, vast numbers passed on from the impact of smolders, radiation ailment, and different wounds, intensified by sickness and unhealthiness. In both urban areas, the greater part of the dead were regular folks, in spite of the fact that Hiroshima had a sizable military battalion.
On August 15, six days after the bombarding of Nagasaki and the Soviet Union's assertion of war, Japan reported its surrender to the Allies. On September 2, it marked the instrument of surrender, viably finishing World War II. The bombings' part in Japan's surrender and their moral defense are still faced off regarding.
Atom Bomb Dome || Hiroshima | My Vlog
The A-BombDome, also known as the #HiroshimaPeaceMemorial is what remains of the former Prefectural Industrial Promotion Hall. The building served as a location to promote Hiroshima's industries. When the bomb exploded, it was one of the few buildings to remain standing, and remains so today. A UNESCO World Heritage Site, the A-Bomb Dome is a tangible link to Hiroshima's unique past.
Hiroshima is a bustling modern city is located towards the western/central part of the main island of Honshu. Today, the city is known for many things, such as its waterways, trolley system, a castle, and many, delicious specialty foods such as the famous dish Hiroshima yaki. Though the city is so much more than its dark legacy, Hiroshima will always be most known throughout the world as the first city in history to experience an atomic bomb. On August 6, 1945, Hiroshima was changed forever, and the history and significance of that day will forever be remembered. However, from this dark history comes an important message and message of peace that the residents try to keep alive. The history of the city is kept alive lest we forget the consequences of war, and as such they have created a museum and park to symbolize peace and as a memorial for the lives that were lost. The Atomic Bomb Dome is a major tourist attraction to countless visitors every year.
Hiroshima Peace Memorial (Genbaku Dome)
The Hiroshima Peace Memorial (Genbaku Dome) was the only structure left standing near the hypo centre area where the first atomic bomb exploded on 6 August 1945 and it remains in the condition right after the explosion
Through the efforts of many people, including those of the city of Hiroshima, this ruin has been preserved in the same state as immediately after the bombing. Not only is it a stark and powerful symbol of the most destructive force ever created by humankind, it also expresses the hope for world peace and the ultimate elimination of all nuclear weapons. The inscribed property covers 0.40 ha in the urban centre of Hiroshima and consists of the surviving Genbaku Dome (“Genbaku” means atomic bomb in Japanese) within the ruins of the building. The 42.7 ha buffer zone that surrounds the property includes the Peace Memorial Park.
The most important meaning of the surviving structure of the Hiroshima Peace Memorial is in what it symbolizes, rather than just its aesthetic and architectural values. This silent structure is the skeletal form of the surviving remains of the Hiroshima Prefectural Industrial Promotional Hall (constructed in 1914). It symbolizes the tremendous destructive power, which humankind can invent on the one hand; on the other hand, it also reminds us of the hope for world permanent peace.
At 8:15am on 6th August 1945, the first atomic bomb in human history was dropped on Hiroshima. Although, the Atomic Bomb Dome was located almost directly underneath the explosion, it somehow avoided complete destruction and the remains of the building still stand today. The residents of Hiroshima decided to keep this tragic reminder of war intact. The site was designated as a World Heritage Site in 1996. Visit the Atomic Bomb Dome, the Cenotaph for Atomic Bomb Victims and the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum to gain a deeper understanding of the suffering caused by war and nuclear weapons and the true value of peace.
In order for the United States to accurately measure the power of the bomb, potential target cities were selected with an urban center measuring more than three miles in diameter. On 28th May, US bombing of potential target cities was halted to keep cities intact for the atomic bomb. On 25th July, the order was given that an atomic bomb would be dropped on Hiroshima, Kokura, Niigata, or Nagasaki. On 2nd August, it was decided that Hiroshima would be the designated target. One reason for the decision was the US planners believed no American prisoners of war were being held in Hiroshima. The atomic bomb was to be dropped using visual targeting. On 6th August, the skies over Hiroshima were clear, the target was confirmed visually and the bomb was dropped.
The atomic bomb exploded at a height of 600 meters, 160 meters to the southeast of the Atomic Bomb Dome. At the time, the building was the Hiroshima Prefectural Industrial Promotion Hall. At the moment of detonation, the blast exerted 35 tons of pressure per square meter and created a fierce wind speed of 440 meters per second. The building absorbed the powerful explosion and heat, and burst into flames. Because the impact of the blast came almost directly overhead, curiously the thick outer walls and the steel dome escaped complete destruction. However, the people who were inside at the time died instantly and the interior of the building was completely gutted by fire. Although the exact time is unknown, the building with its exposed steel dome began to be referred to as the Atomic Bomb Dome.
In contrast to other cultural heritage buildings, the Atomic Bo
Titans of Nuclear: KunMo Chung | History of Nuclear Energy Development and Impact on Korea (Pt.1)
History of Nuclear Energy Development and Impact on Korea
Bret Kugelmass: You’ve played an incredible role in South Korea’s nuclear power. What is the origin story of how South Korea developed nuclear power for peaceful energy purposes?
KunMo Chung: KunMo Chung goes back to the beginning of when nuclear power was first discovered. The global war of World War II had many worried that Hitler was going to find the way to develop a nuclear weapon first. Albert Einstein wrote a letter to President Franklin D. Roosevelt, which began the Manhattan Project, and the United States succeeded in making a nuclear bomb before anyone else.
The Russians were also trying to develop a nuclear bomb, and when President Harry Truman announced the successful deployment of the first nuclear bomb, Josef Stalin already knew about it. This started a race of sorts between the United States and Russia. In August of 1945, in order to stop the Pacific War which was growing very costly for the United States, President Truman authorized the deployment of nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan. The two bombs were different types of nuclear bombs, something people often don’t realize. Hiroshima was a uranium-based bomb, while Nagasaki was a plutonium-based bomb. The Emperor of Japan, Michinomiya Hirohito, then gave Japan’s unconditional surrender.
Now, people all over the world knew the power of a nuclear weapon, and the people who had developed the bomb were worried because it could be an incredibly destructive force that could fall into the wrong hands or be used irresponsibly and kill innocent people. Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer, who was the key person in developing nuclear technology at that time, did not want it to continue to be used in weaponry and decided not to join in the development of the hydrogen bomb.
At the time, Korea was an underdeveloped country. They had just been liberated from Japan, so they only knew how awesome the nuclear warheads were and saw it as a symbol of power, but didn’t think much about the ethics of responsible use of nuclear power. When the Korean War broke out in 1950-1953, it was a long, ongoing war and many people were killed. The Chinese supported the North, and sent a lot of soldiers in to help fight the South Korean forces and Americans. The idea of using a nuclear bomb to end the war was discussed, but it was ultimately decided against because it would just kill too many innocent people. Unfortunately, after the war the North Koreans knew about the power of a nuclear bomb and feared the South Korean-United States alliance, so they secretly developed their own nuclear weapons. Despite the South reaching an agreement with the North to stop nuclear warhead production and development, the North did not honor that agreement.
Initially, Korea only thought about the power of the nuclear warhead, but President Dwight D. Eisenhower also knew that clean energy was the key to helping develop countries all over the world. In December 1953, President Eisenhower delivered his key speech to the United Nations called Atoms for Peace, which called on countries to use nuclear energy for peaceful application.The Argonne National Laboratory opened a school to teach experts how to develop nuclear energy for peaceful purposes, and this eventually made its way around the world.
UN chief calls for nuclear disarmament
UN chief Ban Ki-moon calls for total nuclear weapon ban during visit to Japan. Bringing with him a message of support for nuclear disarmament, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon visited the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which had been devastated in 1945 nuclear attacks, and he toured the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum where he spoke with survivors of that time. He also became the first UN secretary-general to attend the annual Hiroshima Peace Memorial Ceremony held this year on Friday, August 6, commemorating those who lost their lives 65 years ago. Other first-time representation at the internationally attended ceremony included the United States, France and the United Kingdom. With more than 400,000 lives lost to the 1945 nuclear attack, Secretary-General Ban urged for all nations to be rid of nuclear weapons as he addressed the Peace Memorial Ceremony and stated, Together, we are on a journey from ground zero to Global Zero -- a world free of weapons of mass destruction. That is the only path to a safer world.
We share and respectfully commend your peaceful vision, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. May all nations awaken to the unnecessary devastations of war and step toward the expansion of peace and companionship to all corners of the world.
Nagasaki Peace Declaration 2013 Subtitled 平成25年長崎平和宣言・日英CC字幕版 (2013.08.09)
Source: IWJ
平成25年長崎平和宣言 全文
※字幕は全文のまま
Full text of the Declaration (English)
*Subtitle appears as read out in the original Declaration.
Subtitles provide by: Office BALÉS
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The Attack on Pearl Harbor - Surprise Military Strike by the Imperial Japanese Navy Service
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Today, we take a look at the events leading up to and surrounding this tragic event, in this episode of The Infographics Show, The Attack on Pearl Harbor – Surprise Military Strike by the Imperial Japanese Navy Service
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Downfall - German Surrender in Berlin
Here’s a scene from the 2004 German Film “Downfall” (“Der Untergang”). Hitler is dead and the Battle for Berlin is over, though many choose not to accept it.
Traudl Junge, Hitler’s last secretary, has escaped his underground fortified bunker and flees the war torn city of Berlin. Through her eyes we witness Hitler and his inner circle’s dramatic final days; the most intense display being their mass suicides. Their pride and unwillingness to accept defeat, and I would say their fear of being held accountable for their actions, led them and many high ranking officials (even civilians) to commit suicide.
Young Peter Kranz, member of the Hitler Youth and Volksturm draftee has survived intense street fighting and witnessed Nazi fanaticism first hand. He personifies an indoctrinated child soldier manipulated by mass Nazi propaganda. He is Emboldened by staunch, faithful SS soldiers and encouraged to fight simply by being given no other choice. He soon realizes the hopelessness of their defense and abandons his post. He returns home, but discovers his parents have been killed by German Greifkommando squads.
This climactic scene brings these two characters together for the first time in the film. Both have struggled through different but intense experiences; building tension the entire movie culminating with coming face to face with Russian soldiers.
I think their desperate attempt to just walk past the Russians as a non combatants after everything they’ve gone through is an unexpected release of all the tension.
This film clip is being used strictly for educational purposes. Viewer discretion is advised.
Nuclear Watch: USA Atomic bomb building sites to become US national park 12/13/2014
The US Congress has approved a bill that authorizes sites related to the development of atomic bombs during World War 2 to be designated as a national park.
On Friday, the Senate passed by majority vote the National Defense Authorization Act, which outlines the US defense budget for fiscal 2015. The House of Representatives had already passed the bill.
The bill includes the establishment of a national park that encompasses sites related to the Manhattan Project.
The sites are located in the states of New Mexico, Washington and Tennessee, where engineers enriched uranium and produced plutonium.
The project led to the creation of the atomic bombs that were dropped on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945.
President Barack Obama is expected to sign the bill into law soon. Within one year after the law's enactment, the sites will be designated as a national park.
The bill calls for preserving the historical sites for future generations and for promoting public understanding of the Manhattan Project.
In Nagasaki City, Mayor Tomihisa Taue expressed concern that the bill might justify the atomic bombings and promote further development of nuclear arms.
An NHK reporter says the bill is likely to cause controversy in Japan and the US ahead of the 70th anniversary of the end of World War 2 next year.
History of nuclear power
Let's retrace on a map a summary of the history of civilian and military nuclear power since the discovery of radioactivity.
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English translation & voiceover: Rahul Venkit
Original French version:
Russian version:
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Spanish version:
Music: Whitefish Salad - Latasha (YouTube Library)
Software used: Adobe After Effects
АТОМНЫЙ ПЕПЕЛ ТРЕТЬЕГО РЕЙХА. Альтернативный взгляд на бомбардировку Японии
Атомный пепел третьего рейха был возможен. Альтернативный взгляд на бомбардировку Японии американцами.
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Что, если атомные бомбы упали бы на фашистскую Германию ? Каждый год в августе Рунет сотрясают стоны и негодование. «Плохие американцы разбомбили Хиросиму и Нагасаки из чистого империалистического зверства. Чтобы убрать побольше гражданского населения, поэкспериментировать над людьми и напугать товарища Сталина». А что, если бы США не менее злодейски разбомбили города, над которыми развевалось знамя со свастикой? Тысяча девятьсот сорок пятый год, август. Над всё ещё сопротивляющимся Третьим рейхом один за другим встают два атомных «гриба»… Не было? Могло быть. В нашей реальности Берлин пал и нацисты капитулировали раньше. Ядерные бомбы упали на японские Хиросиму и Нагасаки. Но такой исход совсем не был гарантирован. Что, если бы атомное оружие применили по тому врагу, для сдерживания которого оно и разрабатывалось изначально?
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Авторы статьи: Алексей Костенков и Евгений Белаш
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What if America Had Invaded Japan? (Operation Downfall)
At the end of World War II, the U.S was ready to take down the Japanese by force. This was Operation Downfall, the alternate invasion of Japan which would have happened had Japan not surrendered.
Can Humans Survive Nuclear Winter? (LifeNoggin):
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Music by myuuji:
Opening Song by GWScores:
An entire channel dedicated to the 'What If?. Using knowledge of geography, population and other historical facts I predict what could have happened had things gone differently in history.
Learn about how the world would be different if, the Axis won World War II, if America lost the Revolution, or if Reagan was never president. I do pop culture videos which explored the worlds of Fallout and the Purge. Learn controversial topics such as if Christianity never existed and many other subjects.
The Most Radioactive Places on Earth
Who on Earth is exposed to the most ionizing radiation?
Check out Audible:
I'm filming a documentary for TV about how Uranium and radioactivity have shaped the modern world. It will be broadcast in mid-2015, details to come. The filming took me to the most radioactive places on Earth (and some places, which surprisingly aren't as radioactive as you'd think). Chernobyl and Fukushima were incredible to see as they present post-apocalyptic landscapes. I also visited nuclear power plants, research reactors, Marie Curie's institute, Einstein's apartment, nuclear medicine areas of hospitals, uranium mines, nuclear bomb sites, and interviewed numerous experts.
Notes about measuring radiation:
Sieverts are a measure of 'effective dose' - that means they measure the biological impact of the energy transferred to tissues from radiation.
Obviously I owe a debt to the fantastic chart made by xkcd, which inspired my visual approach to this video.
DOSES MAY VARY
The level of radiation varies widely around the world depending mainly on altitude and geology (excluding nuclear accidents).
Estimates of particular doses also vary. All numbers reported in this video should be taken as order of magnitude only.
The most contentious claim may be that smokers receive the highest dose of ionizing radiation. This is not a whole body dose, but a dose to the lungs as specified in the video. References are here:
Special thanks to:
Physics Girl:
MinutePhysics:
Natalie Tran:
Bionerd23:
Nigel and Helen for feedback on earlier drafts of this video.
Music is Stale Mate