The atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were a result of the long and violent World War II. After a nuclear weapon threat from Germany, America raced to prepare themselves with the Manhattan Project, which was to build the U.S.'s first atomic bomb. However, Germany gave up on …show more content…
learned they were no longer unbeatable with nuclear weapons. The Cold War came, and the world was clouded with an anxiety of mutually assured destruction from the U.S. and Russia. In other words, if one of them used their weapons, the other would too, and both nations would be rattled. This threat loomed in the air, but it did no more than that. No nuclear weapons were ever used in the Cold War.
With the impact we see it had now, you could evaluate how we would approach a similar situation in the future. Unfortunately, it is not an easy decision. Both sides of the situation had lives on the line, it is just a matter of which ones are more important in the eyes of those in power, and hopefully, the importance for the good of the world. As an 18 year old U.S. citizen, you can vote. If you knew that the person you were considering voting for supported nuclear weaponry, would you still make that choice? Had you not known about past events involving it, you could not make a very informed