Aerial warfare

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    After the Vietnam War many former-soldiers came back from combat with stories that would bewilder the psyche of any common citizen. These stories highlight the extreme difference between the lives of a soldier both at home, and in the horrific situations of a field of combat. In Tim O’ Brien’s novel, The Things They Carried accurately conveys the removal that former soldiers felt by being ripped away from home by explaining with exquisite word choice and diction, the fear and horror that young…

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    Dear Mother & Father Fromelles, France I am alive, but barely. Yesterday, we attacked at Fromelles. It was shambles, we must have lost more than 5,000 to those Fritz. I swear our commanders are bloody idiots. I’m writing to you from a cold, wet trench somewhere in the North of France. But do not worry, Mother, for I am safe, although my best mate, Thommo was killed by artillery. One second he was there, the next second he wasn’t. The war is not what they make it out to be back in Australia…

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    The title of the story comes from the first line of the Sara Teasdale poem selected by the house to be read aloud. What do the poem and the story have in common? How are they different? Support your answer with details from both the poem and story. In the story, “There Will Come Soft Rains,” written by, “Ray Bradbury,” the story talks about an empty house where an tragic event killed many people. The animals was doing regular things without knowing that there was a war going on. Even…

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    Zombie fascination after World War II The recent fascination with the apocalypse and zombie scenarios can be traced back to the advent of nuclear warfare during World War II, as argued by Stanford literary scholar Angela Becerra Vidergar. After the destructive events of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the horrific violence of the Holocaust and World War II, human collective visions of the future were drastically altered and the disturbing realisation of human capacity for mass violence was brought…

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    Anthrax Research Paper

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    Anthrax Outbreak Out of all of the diseases, anthrax seems to have the most potential for a massive outbreak. In its respiratory form, anthrax could easily be spread globally. It’s high mortality rate and typically short incubation period would allow casualties to increase quickly. The most effective way to create an outbreak of anthrax would be through direct acts of bioterrorism. As anthrax is not communicated person-to-person the spores would have to be continually introduced into the…

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    The Necessary Atomic Solution The United States should have dropped the atomic bomb on Japan because it was the only way to stop them and finally put an end to World War II, and there were also several smaller conflicts that the deed would have resolved. By the near end of World War II, Japan was the last dictatorial country that needed to be taken care of in order to end it all. The Soviet Union was on somewhat good terms with the United States and the Allies after Hitler attempted to attack…

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    The 1950s is considered by many as the prime of the United States. The rates of unemployment and inflation were low. The so-called “baby boom” was an inclination of how well America was prospering. During that time, the United States had the strongest military force. The country was blooming and life seemed great. However, it was also the time where many controversies occurred. Millions of Americans were beginning to speak up against inequality, racism, and injustice. The ever-so famous court…

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    Did you know that about 200,000 people died in trenches during WW1? According to Britannica, trench warfare is, "Warfare in which opposing armed forces attack, counterattack, and defend from relatively permanent systems of trenches dug into the ground." Trenches are long dug-out ditches in the ground used to protect soldiers from new weaponry. The Carlisle Army website informs, "On the Western Front, Germany, Austria, and Hungary faced down the Allies, France and Britain over barbed-wired…

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    Ww1 Trench Life

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    the diggers Life in the European trenches and trench warfare is strongly associated with World War 1, when it was employed on the Western Front from September 1914 until the last weeks of the war. By the end of October 1914 the whole front in Belgium and France had solidified into lines of trenches. Trench warfare occurred when a revolution in firepower was not matched by similar advances in mobility, resulting in a grueling form of warfare in which the defender held the advantage. In World War…

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    When the United States first developed the nuclear bomb it had secured its place as the most powerful nation in the world. There was no need for deterrence back then because nobody else had acquired nuclear bombs yet. Essentially the United States could get away with nuking anyone without any major consequences and without sending any ground troops. Only a few planes were needed to do the trick. It was only a matter of time before another state pursued the same technology and within a few years,…

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