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NUCLEAR BOMBS (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   118748


Electronic iron curtain and virtual democracy: lessons for Uzbekistan / Tolipov, Farkhad   Journal Article
Tolipov, Farkhad Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract At the beginning of July 2012, the media and Internet reported that a documentary film shown on Uzbekistan's Eshlar TV channel had compared social networks (in particular Facebook and Odnoklassniki) to machineguns and nuclear bombs. Social networks were also likened to weapons in the hands of the enemy. During the program, an expert from the Spirituality and Enlightenment Center asked the following question: "What is the difference between a terrorist and a blogger's page on a social network showing photographs of naked people?" He also noted that "if terrorists kill people using weapons and bombs, Internet users are ultimately being killed with the aid of 'sweet words;' this kind of mass culture poses a direct danger to our state policy and our sovereignty."
Key Words National Security  Media  Sovereignty  Uzbekistan  Nuclear Bombs 
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2
ID:   145893


Nuclear bombs and the morality dilemma: towards ‘global zero’ or apocalyptic abyss? / Chakraborti, Tridib; Chakraborty, Mohor   Journal Article
Chakraborti, Tridib Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, led by the US in August 1945, remains the most brutal insignia of the Second World War. Seventy-one years after this incident, the recent visit of the US President, Barack Obama to the Hiroshima War Memorial has resurrected several issues related to the apocalyptic bombings, foremost among which is the question of a pending apology by the perpetrators of this ‘crime against humanity’. The devastating consequences of the use of nuclear weapons in war cannot be justified on moral grounds, in keeping with which, the International People’s Tribunal (2007) has declared the twin bombings as both a ‘war crime’ and a ‘crime against humanity’. Although President Obama espouses a world free of nuclear weapons, their complete elimination seems too far-fetched and utopian, at least in the short-term. Fortunately, the existence of mechanisms to prevent non-proliferation could contribute towards checking the increase in nuclear stockpiles and facilitate steps towards greater international peace and security.
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