Call us:
0-9
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
  Wage & Wages  ·  Wait & Waiting  ·  Wales & Welsh  ·  Walk & Walking  ·  Wall Street  ·  Wander  ·  Want  ·  War (I)  ·  War (II)  ·  War (III)  ·  War in Heaven  ·  War on Terror (I)  ·  War on Terror (II)  ·  Washington DC  ·  Waste  ·  Watch (See)  ·  Watch (Time)  ·  Watchers  ·  Water  ·  Watergate  ·  Weak & Weakness  ·  Wealth  ·  Weapons  ·  Weather  ·  Wedding  ·  Weep  ·  Weight  ·  Welfare & Welfare State  ·  Werewolf  ·  West & The West  ·  West Virginia  ·  Westerns & Western Films  ·  Whale  ·  Wheat  ·  Wheel & Wheels  ·  Whisky & Scotch  ·  Whistleblower  ·  White  ·  White Dwarf  ·  White Hole  ·  White House  ·  Wicked & Wickedness  ·  Widow  ·  Wife  ·  Wild & Wilderness  ·  Will (Death)  ·  Will (Resolve)  ·  William & Mary  ·  Win & Winner  ·  Wind  ·  Window  ·  Wine  ·  Winter  ·  Wisconsin  ·  Wise & Wisdom  ·  Wish  ·  Wit  ·  Witch & Witchcraft  ·  Witness  ·  Wizard  ·  Woe  ·  Wolf  ·  Woman & Women (I)  ·  Woman & Women (II)  ·  Wonder  ·  Wood  ·  Woods  ·  Wool  ·  Woolly Mammoth  ·  Words  ·  Work & Worker (I)  ·  Work & Worker (II)  ·  Working Class  ·  World  ·  World War I & First World War (I)  ·  World War I & First World War (II)  ·  World War II & Second World War (I)  ·  World War II & Second World War (II)  ·  World War II & Second World War (III)  ·  World War II & Second World War (IV)  ·  World War III  ·  Worm  ·  Wormhole  ·  Worry  ·  Worse & Worst  ·  Worship  ·  Wound  ·  Wrath  ·  Wrestling  ·  Write & Writing & Writer  ·  Wrong  ·  Wyoming  
<W>
Weapons
W
  Wage & Wages  ·  Wait & Waiting  ·  Wales & Welsh  ·  Walk & Walking  ·  Wall Street  ·  Wander  ·  Want  ·  War (I)  ·  War (II)  ·  War (III)  ·  War in Heaven  ·  War on Terror (I)  ·  War on Terror (II)  ·  Washington DC  ·  Waste  ·  Watch (See)  ·  Watch (Time)  ·  Watchers  ·  Water  ·  Watergate  ·  Weak & Weakness  ·  Wealth  ·  Weapons  ·  Weather  ·  Wedding  ·  Weep  ·  Weight  ·  Welfare & Welfare State  ·  Werewolf  ·  West & The West  ·  West Virginia  ·  Westerns & Western Films  ·  Whale  ·  Wheat  ·  Wheel & Wheels  ·  Whisky & Scotch  ·  Whistleblower  ·  White  ·  White Dwarf  ·  White Hole  ·  White House  ·  Wicked & Wickedness  ·  Widow  ·  Wife  ·  Wild & Wilderness  ·  Will (Death)  ·  Will (Resolve)  ·  William & Mary  ·  Win & Winner  ·  Wind  ·  Window  ·  Wine  ·  Winter  ·  Wisconsin  ·  Wise & Wisdom  ·  Wish  ·  Wit  ·  Witch & Witchcraft  ·  Witness  ·  Wizard  ·  Woe  ·  Wolf  ·  Woman & Women (I)  ·  Woman & Women (II)  ·  Wonder  ·  Wood  ·  Woods  ·  Wool  ·  Woolly Mammoth  ·  Words  ·  Work & Worker (I)  ·  Work & Worker (II)  ·  Working Class  ·  World  ·  World War I & First World War (I)  ·  World War I & First World War (II)  ·  World War II & Second World War (I)  ·  World War II & Second World War (II)  ·  World War II & Second World War (III)  ·  World War II & Second World War (IV)  ·  World War III  ·  Worm  ·  Wormhole  ·  Worry  ·  Worse & Worst  ·  Worship  ·  Wound  ·  Wrath  ·  Wrestling  ·  Write & Writing & Writer  ·  Wrong  ·  Wyoming  

★ Weapons

Deadly and more addictive than crystal meth and with horrific sleepwalking side effects – the horse tranquillizer – Xylazine – it’s known on the streets as Anesthesia.  ibid.  

 

 

Willingdon has stolen a UR-12 bomb from the magazine at Wallingford.  He’s also written a personal letter to the prime minister.  He says that unless it’s publicly announced that Great Britain will stop making any more such weapons, he’ll set it off and destroy what he calls the seat of government.  Seven Days to Noon 1950 starring Barry Jones & Olive Sloane & Andre Morell & Sheila Manahan & Hugh Cross & Joan Hickson & Ronald Adam & Marie Ney & Wyndham Goldie & Russell Waters & Martin Boddey et al, director Roy and John Boulting, men in car

 

 

But why?  Why did he come to Copenhagen?  Copenhagen 2002 starring Stephen Rea & Daniel Craig & Francesca Annis et al, director Howard Davies, opening scene Mrs Bohr to Bohr getting off bus

 

There are only two things the world remembers about me.  One is the uncertainty principle, the other is my mysterious visit to Niels Bohr in Copenhagen in 1941.  ibid.  Heisenberg’s commentary

 

The more I look back on it the more I think Heisenberg was the greatest of them all.  ibid.  Bohr

 

So what was Bohr?  He was the first of us all.  The father of it all.  Modern atomic physics began when Bohr realised that quantum theory applied to matter as well as energy, 1913.  ibid.  Heisenberg’s commentary

 

He taught Relativity and they said it was Jewish physics.  ibid.  Bohr to wife  

 

No-one is going to develop a weapon based on nuclear fission.  ibid.

 

The ashes have become very cold indeed.  ibid.  Mrs Bohr

 

Mathematics becomes very odd when you apply it to people.  ibid.  Heisenberg to Bohr

 

Does one as a physicist have the moral right to work on the practical exploitation of atomic energy?  ibid.  Heisenberg to Bohr

 

Do you actually think uranium fission can be used for the construction of weapons?  ibid.  Bohr to Heisenberg

 

Niels Bohr says that in his considered judgment supplying a homicidal maniac with an improved instrument of mass murder is shall we say an interesting idea ... A really rather uninteresting idea.  ibid.  Bohr to Heisenberg

 

There was a report in a Stockholm newspaper that the Americans are working on an atomic bomb.  ibid.  Heisenberg to Bohr

 

You built the bomb.  And used it on a living target.  ibid.

 

The bomb would have been built whether he’d gone or not.  ibid.  Mrs Bohr to Heisenberg

 

That’s the point.  Under my control.  ibid.  Heisenberg to Bohr, with Mrs Bohr

 

Sense is mathematics.  ibid.  Heisenberg

 

I shatter the objective universe around you, and all you can say is, There’s an error in the formulation!  ibid.  Heisenberg to Bohr

 

We turned the world inside out ... We put man back at the centre of the universe.  ibid.  Bohr to Heisenberg

 

I can only say that it worked.  ibid.  Heisenberg to Bohr & Mrs Bohr

 

The critical mass – that was the most important thing.  ibid.  Bohr to Heisenberg, with Mrs Bohr

 

And suddenly a very different and very terrible work begins to take shape.  ibid.  Bohr

 

What will be left of our beloved world?  Our ruined and dishonoured and beloved world.  ibid.  Mrs Bohr

 

 

Hi There  Dear John.  Dr Strangelove: Or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb 1963 starring Peter Sellers & George C Scott & Sterling Haydenn & Keenan Wynn & Slim Pickens & Peter Bull & James Earl Jones & Tracy Reed & Shane Rimmer et al, director Stanley Kubric, names imprinted on nuclear bombs

 

I can no longer sit back and allow Communist infiltration, Communist indoctrination, Communist subversion, and the international Communist conspiracy to sap and impurify all of our precious bodily fluids.  ibid.  Jack Ripper

 

Mandrake, do you recall what Clemenceau once said?  He said, ‘War is too important to be left to the generals.’  When he said that, fifty years ago, he may have been right.  But now war is too important to be left to the politicians.  They have neither the time nor inclination for strategic thought.  ibid.

 

Gentlemen, you can’t fight in here.  This is the war room.  ibid.  president

 

Good, then.  Well then, as you say, we’re both coming through fine.  Good.  Well, it’s good that you’re fine, and – and I’m fine.  I agree with you.  It’s great to be fine.  [laughs] Now then, Dmitri, you know how we’ve always talked about the possibility of something going wrong with the bomb.  The BOMB, Dmitri.  The hydrogen bomb.  Well now, what happened is, uh, one of our base commanders, he had a sort of – well, he went a little funny in the head.  You know.  Just a little funny.  And uh, he went and did a silly thing.  ibid.  president

 

It’s a friendly call.  Of course it’s a friendly call.  Listen, if it wasn’t friendly, you probably wouldn’t have even got it.  They will not reach their targets for at least another hour.  I am, I am positive, Dmitri.  Listen, I’ve been all over this with your Ambassador.  It is not a trick.  Well, I’ll tell you.  We’d like to give your Air Staff a complete rundown on the targets, the flight plans, and the defensive systems of the planes.  ibid. 

 

Perhaps it might be better, Mr President, if you were more concerned with the American people, than with your image in the history books.  ibid.  Turgidson

 

Muffley: How long would you have to stay down there?

 

Dr Strangelove: Well let’s see now ah ... cobalt thorium G ... Radioactive half-life of uh ... I would think that uh ... possibly uh ... one hundred years.  ibid.

 

Turgidson: Doctor, you mentioned the ratio of ten women to each man.  Now, wouldn’t that necessitate the abandonment of the so-called monogamous sexual relationship, I mean, as far as men were concerned?

 

Dr Strangelove: Regrettably, yes.  But it is, you know, a sacrifice required for the future of the human race.  I hasten to add that since each man will be required to do prodigious ... service along these lines, the women will have to be selected for their sexual characteristics which will have to be of a highly stimulating nature.

    

Russian Ambassador: I must confess, you have an astonishingly good idea there, Doctor.  ibid.  

 

Peace Is Our Profession.  ibid.  motto of 843th Bomb Wing Strategic Command

 

 

Acquiring nuclear weapons for the defense of Muslims is a religious duty.  Osama bin Laden

 

 

This is the nightmare of the second half of the twentieth century: a suitcase with an atomic bomb inside it.  Once you steal the nuclear material any physics graduate can do the rest.  James Burke, Connections s1e3: Distant Voices, BBC 1978

 

The nightmare is what the result will be.  ibid.

 

The longbow would kill at four hundred yards ... A terrifying weapon.  ibid.

 

You make gunpower from urine and dung.  ibid.

 

The exciting new way of killing people ... Few inventions have been greedily seized on as the cannon.  ibid.

 

 

In 1942 the Japanese captured the Allied rubber plantations.  The solution to this crisis produces one of the most controversial weapons of all time ... Napalm is the name; interdiction is the game.  James Burke, Connections s3e9: Hit the Water, BBC 1997

 

 

Food is a weapon.  It is now one of the principle tools in our negotiating kit.  Earl Butz, Time magazine

 

 

In every major deal Mr Kissinger has done in recent years food has been a decisive factor ... For prolonging the war in Vietnam the generals in Saigon got American food, which they sold for arms ... There is a new more powerful weapon  food.  And this one is lethal.  John Pilger, Zap! The Weapon is Food for Dictators, ITV 1976

 

People starve to death for a number of reasons; the least understood reason is the denial of food for motives of politics and profit.  ibid.

 

One of the weapons that brought down the democratically elected Allende government in Chile was food.  On Dr Kissingers orders most American food aid to Chile was cut off, and hunger and disorder followed, leading to a military takeover which brought Chile back into the American fold.  And of course once the generals and admirals were in power, Chile got its food back.  ibid.    

 

Up to 1974 the US government had paid American farmers $3 billion not to plant millions of acres of cereal crops.  This kept the world price inflated.  And as a result the food that was available was beyond the reach of those countries on the Zap List like Chile, and countries like Bangladesh that were considered strategically expendable and had no reserves of hard currency.  Hunger, said President Harry Truman, is fostered not by scarcity but by greed.’  ibid.    

 

 

Well it’s a question we look at very carefully.  But I promise you we put under the most searching analysis the use to which equipment that we sell be put.  And we are quite confident the Indonesians will put our Hawks for jet training, for advanced jet training, which is why they were needed in the first place.  Alan Thomas, Ferranti Defense Systems

 

 

The planes will be used not only to train pilots but also for ground attacks.  General Bacharuddin Jusuf Habibie

 

3