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We cannot and
must not allow ourselves to have the message of Hiroshima and Nagasaki fade completely
from our minds, and we cannot allow our vision or ideals to fade, either. For
if we do, we have but one course left for us. And that flash of light will not
only rob us of our vision, but it will rob us of our lives, our progeny, and our
very existence. -- Mayor
Tadatoshi Akiba Environmental
scientists also show us clearly that from the environmental and ecological points
of view that nuclear war is not preventable. The only way to get rid of this danger
is to abolish all nuclear weapons -- Mayor
Tadatoshi Akiba |  |
Our
aim is to have a universal nuclear weapons convention signed by the year 2010
and ultimately abolish all nuclear weapons by the year 2020.
-- Mayor
Tadatoshi Akiba
as long as we have nuclear weapons on this earth, one could claim that no real
life is actually thriving on the earth. We do not have life actualizing its fullest
potential as long as there are nuclear weapons.
-- Mayor
Tadatoshi Akiba
What
the Hiroshima survivors are telling us is that no one else should ever go through
the experience they suffered. An atomic bombing creates a living hell on Earth
where the living envy the dead.”
-- Mayor
Tadatoshi Akiba
In
some ways more painful is the fact that their experience appears to be fading
from the collective memory of humankind. Having never experienced an atomic bombing,
the vast majority around the world can only vaguely imagine such horror, and these
days, John Hersey’s Hiroshima and Jonathan Schell’s The Fate of the Earth are
all but forgotten. As predicted by the saying, ‘Those who cannot remember the
past are condemned to repeat it,’ the probability that nuclear weapons will be
used and the danger of nuclear war are increasing.”
-- Mayor
Tadatoshi Akiba
“Passing
on to younger generations the memories and the will of those who suffered the
bombing is the most important step for humankind to survive in the 21st century,”
This
Aug. 6 ... is a time of inheritance, of awakening, and of commitment, in which
we inherit the commitment of the bomb victims to the abolition of nuclear weapons
and realization of genuine world peace,”
-- Mayor
Tadatoshi Akiba
 |
If the entire history of mankind were condensed into a single year, our knowledge
of how to destroy life on earth with weapons of mass destruction has been acquired
in the last thirty seconds. Never again will we lack the knowledge to eliminate
the world in a single act of madness. Therefore, we are faced with a dilemma unique
in our history. We must not only control the weapons that can kill us, we must
bridge the great disparities of wealth and opportunity among the peoples of the
world, the vast majority of whom live in poverty without hope, opportunity or
choices in life. These conditions are a breeding ground for division that can
cause a desperate people to resort to nuclear weapons as a last resort. Our only
hope lies in the power of our love, generosity, tolerance and understanding and
our commitment to making the world a better place for all of Allah's children.
-- Muhammad Ali |
The existence of
nuclear weapons presents a clear and present danger to life on Earth. Nuclear
arms cannot bolster the security of any nation because they represent a threat
to the security of the human race. These incredibly destructive weapons are an
affront to our common humanity, and the tens of billions of dollars that are dedicated
to their development and maintenance should be used instead to alleviate human
need and suffering. -- Oscar
Arias Sanchez |  |
 | "If
we fight a war and win it with H-bombs, what history will remember is not the
ideals we were fighting for but the methods we used to accomplish them. These
methods will be compared to the warfare of Genghis Khan who ruthlessly killed
every last inhabitant of Persia." -- Hans
Bethe
I call on all scientists in all countries to cease and desist from work creating,
developing, improving and manufacturing further nuclear weapons - and, for that
matter, other weapons of potential mass destruction such as chemical and biological
weapons. -- Hans Bethe |
Today we are rightly
in an era of disarmament and dismantlement of nuclear weapons. But in some countries
nuclear weapons development still continues. Whether and when the various Nations
of the World can agree to stop this is uncertain. But individual scientists can
still influence this process by withholding their skills.
-- Hans
Bethe
 | At
that time a senator who was on the Joint Committee of Atomic Energy said rather
quietly, 'You know, we're having a little problem with waste these days.' I didn't
know what he meant then, but I know now. -- David
R. Brower Is
the minor convenience of allowing the present generation the luxury of doubling
its energy consumption every 10 years worth the major hazard of exposing the next
20,000 generations to this lethal waste? -- David
R. Brower |
We're worrying for
the country and we're worrying for our kids. We say NO radioactive waste dump
in our ngura in our country. Don't waste our country. Don't waste our future.
-- Eileen Kampakuta
Brown & The Kungka Tju |  |
We know the poison
from the radioactive dump will go down under the ground and leak into the water.
We drink from this water. The animals drink from this water. We're worried that
the animals will become poisoned, and we'll become poisoned in our turn.
--
Eileen Kampakuta Brown
& The Kungka Tju
I've
also gotten to play in front of a million people in Central Park when there was
a grass roots movement calling for nuclear disarmament - it was about 1982 - they
called it Peace Sunday.
-- Jackson Browne
"It is my profound
conviction that nuclear weapons did not, and will not, of themselves prevent major
war. To the contrary, I am persuaded that the presence of these hideous devices
unnecessarily prolonged and intensified the Cold War. In today's security environment,
threats of their employment have been fully exposed as neither credible nor of
any military utility." -- General
Lee Butler, head of US Strategic Nuclear Forces 1991-1994. |  |
It is a measure
of arrogance to assert that a nuclear weapons-free world is impossible when 95%
of the nations of the world are already nuclear-free. I think that the vast majority
of people on the face of this earth will endorse the proposition that nuclear
weapons have no place among us. There is no security in nuclear weapons. It is
a fool’s game.”
-- General
Lee Butler, head of US Strategic Nuclear Forces 1991-1994
“I
am the only person who ever looked at all twelve thousand five hundred of our
targets. And when I got through I was horrified. Deterrence was a formula for
disaster. We escaped disaster by the grace of God. If you ask one person who has
lived in this arena his whole career, I have come to one conclusion. This has
to end. This must stop. This must be our highest priority.”
-- General
Lee Butler, head of US Strategic Nuclear Forces 1991-1994
Nuclear
weapons play on our deepest fears and pander to our darkest instincts. They corrode
our sense of humanity, numb our capacity for moral outrage, and make thinkable
the unimaginable. They prey on democracies and totalitarian societies alike, shrinking
the norms of civilized behavior and dimming the prospects for escaping the savagery
so powerfully imprinted on our genetic code.
-- General
Lee Butler, head of US Strategic Nuclear Forces 1991-1994
People
who say to me that the elimination of nuclear weapons is utopian have somehow
managed to completely ignore the fact that the end of the Cold War was a far more
utopian prospect only ten years ago than eliminating nuclear weapons is now.
-- General
Lee Butler, head of US Strategic Nuclear Forces 1991-1994
A
world free of the threat of nuclear weapons is necessarily a world devoid of nuclear
weapons…. Nuclear weapons pose an intolerable threat to humanity and our habitat….
-- General Lee
Butler
There
are still thousands of warheads loaded on operational systems and standing on
high states of alert on virtually hair-trigger posture. And you have to ask yourself:
Why is that? Who is the enemy? What is the threat?
-- General
Lee Butler
 | "As
a doctor, as well as a mother and a world citizen, I wish to practice the ultimate
form of preventive medicine by ridding the earth of these technologies that propagate
disease, suffering, and death." -- Helen
Caldicott |
“American
leaders have declared that nuclear weapons will remain the cornerstone of US national
security indefinitely. In truth, as the world’s only remaining superpower, nuclear
weapons are the sole military source of our national insecurity. We, and the whole
world, would be much safer if nuclear weapons were abolished.”
-- Rear Admiral
Eugene J Carroll, US Navy
| The risk of an
all-out nuclear holocaust destroying all life on the planet has diminished, but
the danger of actual nuclear weapons use has increased. -- David
Cortright
If the United
States wants to prevent other countries from acquiring the bomb, it must be prepared
to reduce and eventually end its own reliance on nuclear weapons.
-- David Cortright |  |
Reducing the nuclear
danger will require a universal, consistent opposition to all forms of weapons
development
-- David
Cortright
There’s a very
simple reason for focusing on the nuclear issue. Many, many issues are of supreme
importance in one way or another, but if we blow ourselves up with nuclear weapons,
no other issue is really going to matter. Quite possibly there would be no other
human beings left to be concerned about anything else. -- Alan
Cranston Unprecedented
warnings by officials most closely linked with nuclear arms negotiations and defense
strategy indicate that we are running out of time. If we fail to act soon, the
scars of a major nuclear disaster will mark our immediate and distant future.
-- Alan Cranston
|  |
The probability
of a fatal nuclear detonation is greater now than at any time during the Cold
War. As the Russian military deteriorates, and as rogue governments and terrorists
seek to acquire nuclear capabilities, the threat continues to grow.
-- Alan
Cranston
As they were during the Cold War, urban population centers remain the most likely
targets of a nuclear attack. Now, however, an attack may come without warning
from an unknown enemy, to achieve unclear motives.
-- Alan
Cranston
The
explosion of a terrorist’s single nuclear device in a major metropolitan center
would trigger an unparalleled humanitarian and environmental disaster. An accidental
military launch of multiple warheads could result in a worldwide nuclear holocaust.
Medical researchers and military analysts forebode grim consequences.
-- Alan
Cranston
|
I know that nuclear
is better than fossil fuels when it comes to carbon dioxide, but nuclear energy
is by no means clean. We don't know what to do with the waste we already have
and it seems like a bad idea to me to make more when we have so many cleaner options
such as wind and solar.
-- Sheryl Crow
|
|
Quotes
for a Culture of Peace |

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