"H-Bomb Secret" Now Online 502
DrDNA writes "In 1979, the US Government sued Howard Morland, Erwin Knoll and Sam Day at The Progressive Magazine for prior restraint over the planned publication of 'The H-Bomb Secret: How We Got It--Why We're Telling It,' citing national security. Six months later, a Federal appeals court vacated the restraining order on publication, and the article was published. There's an interview about the case with George Stanford, of Argonne National Lab, Illinois, a technical adviser for the Progressive Magazine. After all this time, the Progressive article is now online (4Mb pdf)."
*Awesome* editorial in this article (Score:5, Insightful)
Head in the Sand (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, this is bull. But I found this quote from the article puts it best:
GS: It should by now be clear to everyone that in the past we
relied far too much on secrecy. We arrogantly assumed that we
were the only ones who could develop nuclear weapons, and that
therefore we could retain our monopoly. That kept us from
pursuing international arrangements that might have held the
nuclear arms race under some sort of control.
I don't wanna dive into a political rant here, but I think the balance of power, combat, and international discussion is vital to keeping the world safe from the threat of nuclear war.
Re:Is it just me.. (Score:3, Insightful)
If you post a 4 meg file on your site, you gotta be ready to get it slapped around a bit.
The magazine should break it up, place it on several ad covered pages, and enjoy the slashdot traffic.
Data files are different... it's harder to manipulate those.
PDF is just a big ass text file... there is very little reason to keep it in that format.
Re:ahhh (Score:5, Insightful)
It's certainly better than destroying freedom in the name of national security.
Re:Is it just me.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:damnit, some people just can't shut up. (Score:3, Insightful)
Where we've gone from there (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:damnit, some people just can't shut up. (Score:5, Insightful)
Telling ordinary people how a bomb is made presents negligible threat; it's impractical for them to make one themselves but does give insight into the most significant arms race of the last century. As for other nations and terrorist groups, they have spies to obtain such information for them, and it's still very difficult to obtain the relevant amounts of bomb-grade material.
Smart student can already do this. (Score:5, Insightful)
Frankly once you know this *IS* feasible, as a physicist then you can come up with a solution. that then the engineereer can work upon and come up with an effective device.
Secrety is worthless in nuclear weapon run. Only experience and engineering is somethign worth.
As the article author I wish US , France , Russia and China would have worked together on stoping nuclear proliferation thru treaty , because as we may now observe every country which have money to spend on engineering can get the bomb (Pakistan, India, N-K maybe and whoever else).
Re:FYI (Score:5, Insightful)
Which is why we are probably never going to be at anything other than orange or yellow alert. Because if we ever go to some "reduced" alert level and there is an attack then whoever is in charge of the alert system will get in trouble for not vaguely warning us.
Nothing I didn't learn in Highschool Physics.... (Score:4, Insightful)
I saw better diagrams in highschool textbooks from that era. Go to a use book store. The theory has been out there, but the precision parts and the highly toxic and radioactive components are just a trifle hard to come by.
I know that you alarmists believe that the local militia is going to hurry over to Ace Hardware and get all the supplies tonight to be the first one on the block to have their own H-Bomb. Can't let those Pinkoes and Furriners beat them to it.
Re:damnit, some people just can't shut up. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Head in the Sand (Score:3, Insightful)
If you think mp3 are easily traded, 30 sheets of text/information has been traded and sold a million times over.
To hide behind this information prevents countries from forming the deals and treaties that really protect us.
Re:ahhh (Score:2, Insightful)
I think you must be living in a time warp. The only 'rouge' states left are Cuba, China and N. Korea. It's nonsense to think of any of them attacking western democracy. If you mean rogue states, I am sorry to say I live in one of them; Blair completely flouted international law when he joined Bush on his crusade in the Persian Gulf.
Re:Immediate Doom Of The Earth Predicted (Score:3, Insightful)
Every 5 minutes someone "discovers" that the world is going to end because of something science came up with. This is getting really old now. Could all those pessimists finaly realise this planet is going to be here for quite some time. What else would God play with?
Re:*Awesome* editorial in this article (Score:4, Insightful)
John, is that you, posting as Anonymous Coward?
We've missed you in Missouri ever since that dead guy beat you, but we've so proud during this Christmas season for all you've done to let those liberals know that America is a Christian nation [au.org]!
And thanks for making us safer by
After all you've done to dismantle that pesky Fourth Amendment with the Patriot Act [villagevoice.com], it's especially heartening to learn that you don't know what the First Amendment is!
Keep up the great work John, and know that I'll be voting for George Bush in 2004 to make sure you spend four more years as our Reichsminis-- I mean, Attorney General!
Re:Head in the Sand (Score:3, Insightful)
[...paragraph cut...]
In the end, it comes down to something very simple. Freedom of speech is nearly an absolute, and it is also the most important freedom we have. Giving it up is foolish no matter what the reason.
I think this thinking takes into account a number of assumptions which aren't necessarily tight. Can we expand this line of thinking?
Say one person discovered some weapon which could destroy all life and the entire world instantly (for argument's sake). Let's say he in some way appreciates the gravity of this creation.
1. In regards to him, this secret has been "discovered"
2. In regards to everyone else, it is "undiscovered".
If he does not publish this material and at some point dies, this secret remains "undiscovered" for the remaining population on the earth for at least that time-being.
If he publishes it ad hoc to the world now the whole world has it. And here is where this argument you cite fails. It assumes that
1. People had this technology anyways (they didn't necessarily) and
2. Everyone on earth is even-tempered, interested in discussion of problems, and sane.
These are heavy assumptions and I think you'll find they aren't necessarily true.
Re:usually I dont feed the trolls ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Let us not forget that during WWII the targeting of cities and civilians was the norm, starting with Japan's bombing of Shanghi, and the German bombing of Rotterdam and London. Later in the war, with air superiority virtualy allied, huge waves of bombers pounded axis cities day and night. The Americans, with their superior Norden bombsites were able to do daylight bombing, while the British had to resort to nightime city bombing. Attack the workers while they work, and attack them while they sleep. The bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was only different in that one bomber commited all the destruction, as opposed to hundreds of bombers. Indeed, the two bombings using atomic weapons killed less than some of the other bombings of the war, such as the firebombings of Dresden, Hamburgh and Tokyo.
I always get a bit irritated by people who demand that the U.S. appologise for using atomic weapons, because they don't know their history. The invasion of Okinawa cost 48,000 American casualties, and close to 200,000 Japanese casualties (Including civilians). And that was just the begining. The human cost of an invasion of Japan was estimated to be over a million lives. While the loss of 100,000 lives in the two bombed cities was bad, it would have been much much worse for the Japanese had the United States NOT used the bomb.
Re:Head in the Sand (Score:1, Insightful)
Excellent. So you would there for have no problems with North Korea exporting nuke bomb technology to, say, Iran or Syria? I know the Slashdot Group-Think is Isreal == Bad, but that does not mean it's OK for other Mideast nut-cases to nuke them...
I wonder if interpersonal violence might be avoided or blunted by allowing open access to personal weapons?
Excellent. Give everyone guns and we'll all be safer? Go live in Liberia or one of the "stans".
Does allowing anyone to have a (nuclear/personal) weapon work better than trying to deny everyone (nuclear/personal) weapons?
No.
All your base are belong to us. (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:usually I dont feed the trolls ... (Score:5, Insightful)
There's another choice, you know: they might thank us.
Re:Automatics with 10 Round Clips (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:damnit, some people just can't shut up. (Score:3, Insightful)
The invention of the hydrogen bomb was done independently at least twice, both by extremely smart specialists, not your BS physics grad.
However, the basic design of the Teller-Ulam fusion bomb is now readily available, including many of the relevant equations. A less detailed source is here [nuclearweaponarchive.org].
Because the article is slashdotted, I can't judge what it gives away, but probably not as much as is now readily available (which may be very different from what was available in 1979).
Mass Media Easier to Sensor (Score:5, Insightful)
Thank God those days are behind us. The 21st century is a much more enlightened time.
Sadly, consolidation of the media and reduced competition will make them more likely to roll over on things like this in the future.
Re:Automatics with 10 Round Clips (Score:3, Insightful)
Please read my post again. I did not, and will not, say anything about the constitutionality or correctness of gun control. I merely stated that "automatic assault rifles with clips that hold over ten rounds" is a completely objective criterion. Give the same gun to two completely different people with completely different backgrounds and they will come up with the same answer to the question, "Does this gun conform to this rule?" Whereas any censorship of speech necessarily comes from subjective criteria; it is inherent in the nature of speech. Subjective criteria are much more dangerous, because they can easily be twisted by the enforcers of the law.
Also, at the risk of starting a flame war, the first amendment is more important than the second. It is more important than the entire rest of the bill of rights combined. Without the right to speak out about injustice, none of your other rights are worth anything. Again, I'm not going to actually go into my position on gun control because that is completely off-topic, but given the choice between the two, I'd choose the first amendment over the second any day, any time, any place.
Re:All of you absolutists.... (Score:5, Insightful)
I am against censorship. I am not against secrecy.
Secrecy is saying, "I do not wish to publish my personal information."
Censorship is the government telling you, "Publishing your personal information is illegal, and we will put you in jail if you do so."
Secrecy is fine. If the government wants to keep secrets, that's fine, up until the point where it uses censorship to do so. Keeping secrets with encryption, lockboxes, barbed-wire fences, and armed guards is fine. Keeping secrets by forbidding publication of material gathered from public sources is not fine.
Until and unless you understand the difference between secrecy and censorship, and how it is possible to be completely against one while accepting of the other, there is no point in responding.
Re:usually I dont feed the trolls ... (Score:5, Insightful)
The human cost of an invasion of Japan was estimated to be over a million lives. While the loss of 100,000 lives in the two bombed cities was bad, it would have been much much worse for the Japanese had the United States NOT used the bomb.
And therein lies the issue. An invasion of Japan would have cost lives on both sides, many more than were lost by using two atomic bombs. Noone in the longterm learnt from it, noone had to deal with the many dead that would have resulted from an invasion. The lessons that were presented by the 100,000 dead were easily forgotten, precisely because the deaths were all on one side, and were easily dealt. Two bombers dropping two bombs killed 100,000, and it was all too easy.
The victory over Germany was earnt, precisely because we had to fight them all the way to Hitlers doorstep. Now please do not get me wrong, I understand that a great many people died in the pacific front fighting for our freedoms, and I sincerly thank all the surviviors and the fallen, but the victory over Japan was far too easy to learn any long term lessons from. We now have the bomb, killing a large population is now easy. We tend to forget the people involved, and go after anti ballistic missile systems, so we can throw our bombs at them while they cant throw theirs at ours. We try and regain the same advantage that we had when we dropped the bombs on Japan, lack of the ability to retaliate, so there is no kick back on using these weapons.
Attacking Afghanistan, Iraq, threatening North Korea, Iran and god knows who else is easy to us western nations because there is little kickback. The US people got to know a bit about civilian casualties when the WTC was hit, and they didnt like it one bit. 3000 people died that day, and the voice of America that day was one of retaliation. And they got it.
Why do the people who back these wars think Germany, France and other nations were against hte invasion of iraq? Because they have felt the ramifications of war first hand, and fairly recently. They have knowledge that the US, the UK and others are sorely lacking, that of oppression and internal strife. They know that it is better to resolve difficulties through diplomatic channels, however long it takes, rather than in battle. Hitler would never have come about if Germany had been better treated after World War 1. World War 1 would never have taken place if the European royalty had sat down and talked about the assassination of a minor political figure, rather than square off against one another.
I applaud the current stance taken by Libya. They held secret talks with potential enemies, talks that had to be secret so there was no pressure to deliver. They discussed their problems, and settled on a solution. Some could say they did this because of Iraq, but if this was the case, then Iraq has had a net negative effect on the world. Its a case of the play ground bully making an example of one of his victims. They didnt pay up, you could be next.
Re:not quite right... (Score:2, Insightful)
The REAL threat to free speech.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Strange that you didn't mention the abolute *WORST* thing our government has done to free speech and that is the unconsitutional campaign finance reform [aclu.org] that was passed in large part through the efforts of so-called "progressives". If there was anything that the First Amendment was supposed to protect it was POLITICAL SPEECH. Apparently, protecting tax dollars for "Cruifixes in Urine" is far more important than protecting the right of groups of people to gather resources and voice their collective political opinions.
The problem with this rant (and many others) is that you pick and choose your freedoms. Free Speech is OK, unless it is "Evil Right Wing Nazi Hate Speech". Freedom of Religion is great unless it involves protecting a Christian's speech [christiantimes.com]. Fourth Amendment is awesome but screw the evil Second Amendment because guns are bad! And to far too many people there are only NINE articles in the Bill of Rights. The mythical Tenth Amendment states:
"The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people."
And forget all that stuff in the Constitution about Congress or the people making laws. They are far too bigoted and stupid for that. We will just rely on the fair and wise Judges of this land to do that.
Brian EllenbergerRe:Has it ever occurred to you... (Score:2, Insightful)
Happening all the time (Score:4, Insightful)
An Omen of things to come... (Score:5, Insightful)
Does this sound vaguely familiar to anyone from a more recent case? Perhaps I'll jog your memory. In the DeCSS case, it was argued that Code is not protected because it has functional value. In effect it is technical rather than political or other speech. In this case, it doesn't seem to be the government making the assertion, rather an organization. But that would be misleading. The DMCA represents a restraint on speech just as broad as the Energy Act used against this article. The identity of the party pushing for the censorship is irrelevant. It's the laws with over broad, sweeping generalizations on what we can, and cannot say, as well as the idea that there is protected and unprotected speech that are truly dangerous. Surely some forms of speech are distasteful in the extreme, and prompt a gut reaction that they should not be allowed. But once you establish a form of speech that is officially "not OK", The worst of your obstructions as a censor are over.
What part of of this is confusing?
"That Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to assemble and consult for their common good, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances."
It's straight forward, black and white. Our nations third grade students can easily understand it. But once you add even ONE exception, however well meaning it might be, the floodgates have opened, and the end result is the muddle we have today. Sufficiently muddled, the citizenry are too afraid to use the rights they might have, for fear of a costly lawsuit, and then they basically don't have those rights. Then we require people like The Progressive, 2600, Penthouse and Lary Flint, and anyone else willing to put their livelihoods and privacy on the line for our freedom.
The base point is this. As soon as something I can personally say out loud becomes Illegal, the whole of my freedom of speech is gone. As soon as something I could sit down and write with my own pen becomes illegal, my freedom of press is gone. Be it technical specifications, computer code, poetry, a political indictment, a story about rape, or a shopping list, If one of those things is illegal, eventually fear will make them all impossible. And once our freedom of speech is gone, Our ability to claim to live in a free society will be a farce.
Re:You got it all wrong (Score:3, Insightful)
Holy freakin' crap, I knew the day would come!
The American way of thinking (Score:1, Insightful)
Haven't you learnt anything yet? They did untold damage with box cutter knives and airplanes. Why the heck would they bother trying to get something like a nuke when there are loads of methods a thousand times easier?
Terrorism isn't about who has the bad ass weapon, it is about inducing terror into your everyday of life. Well I hate to break it to you but he has already done that.
I could be run over crossing the road. I know the risk, so I am careful when crossing the road and I live my life normally. I don't have drivers dragged from thier cars off to some rat hole prison for a year or so to determine if they might of run me over or just wanted to go to work.
Precious Government Custodians v. un-Americans (Score:3, Insightful)
Claiming this article is an aid to terrorists is silly. Does anyone really think the rest of the world lives in grass huts and only the US has physicists and engineers? All this bomb-making information is old stuff and has been available openly for decades. For example, just because all the technical information to build a 747 is readily available doesn't mean that terrorists can just slap one together. If you need one you buy it or steal it. Same for nuclear weapons.
I suggest that we just forget the Constitution and form a secret government (made up of true-Americans of course) where we Americans (true-Americans and un-Americans alike) don't know who is in charge. That way we wouldn't aid the terrorists by actually publishing the names of our precious custodians and exposing them to risk. While we are at it why don;t we just make these true-Americans custodians for life. After all, they wouldn't do anything BAD, would they?
I don't trust the government one inch, and that is exactly WHY I am a patriot.
Re:Tsk tsk (Score:4, Insightful)
As long as the mods are feeling good about this topic for now, I'll just add that the poor translation comes from the Genesis game "Zero Wing" in case someone out there didn't know.
A telling comment (Score:2, Insightful)
What we learned last spring is that the Government of the United States is convinced that it must keep the people of this nation ignorant and slothful so that they can lead the only pleasant life while the rest of the world marches towards nuclear Armageddon.
What I have learned over the last few years is that too many Americans believe they have a right to "Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness" regardless of of whether this deprives others in the world of their "Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness". We are fast becoming global tyrants in the name of preserving our own freedom and "pleasant life". For every liberation of a tryannised population from a petty despot like Saddam there are many more populations slaving away producing raw resources (gold, oil, etc) and goods (Nike and the EPZs) for cheap consumption by the new Romans.