The Vanishing Fear of Nuclear Bombs

The Vanishing Fear of Nuclear Bombs
James Quillian, Political Analyst, Natural Law

The world once lived under a shadow so dark it shaped every waking thought. After Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the fear of nuclear bombs was not an abstraction — it was the atmosphere. It governed diplomacy, restrained leaders, and kept ordinary people aware that one mistake could end civilization. That fear acted as a kind of global circuit breaker. And then, almost without notice, it disappeared.

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