Weeping

Why American culture fixates on the tragic image of J. Robert Oppenheimer, the most famous man behind the atomic bomb

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, August 1, 2023

Oppenheimer had many achievements in theoretical physics but is remembered as the so-called father of the atomic bomb.

Key Points: 
  • Oppenheimer had many achievements in theoretical physics but is remembered as the so-called father of the atomic bomb.
  • But he conveyed a sense of anguish – scripting his own tragic role, as I argue in my book about him.
  • “The physicists have known sin,” he remarked two years after the attacks, “and this is a knowledge which they cannot lose.”

‘Batter my heart’

    • As physicist Isidor Isaac Rabi later said, the bomb “treated humans as matter,” nothing more.
    • But Oppenheimer pointedly used religious language when talking about the project, as if to underscore the weight of its significance.
    • The atomic bomb was first tested in the early morning of July 16, 1945, in the arid basin of southern New Mexico.
    • Mathematician John von Neumann acerbically observed, “Some people profess guilt to claim credit for the sin.”

Describing the indescribable

    • On Aug. 6 and Aug. 9, these cities suddenly ceased to be.
    • Robert J. Lifton, an expert on the psychology of war, violence and trauma, called the Hiroshima survivors’ experience “death in life,” an encounter with the indescribable.
    • When it comes to Hiroshima and Nagasaki, however, he chooses to represent the attack without portraying it.

The bomb to end all wars?

    • After the end of the war, many of the scientists who had worked on the Manhattan Project sought to emphasize that the atomic bomb was not just another weapon.
    • Among them, Oppenheimer carried the most authority as a result of his leadership of Los Alamos and his oratorical gifts.
    • The form it ultimately took, known as the Baruch Plan, was rejected by the Soviet Union.
    • Rather than seeing the bomb as the weapon to end all wars, the U.S. military seemed to treat it as its trump card.
    • The era of mutual assured destruction, when a nuclear attack would be certain to annihilate both superpowers, had begun.

What's going on when the Virgin Mary appears and statues weep? The answers aren't just about science or the supernatural

Retrieved on: 
Friday, April 21, 2023

Claims of appearances of the Virgin Mary and weeping statues have been common in Catholicism.

Key Points: 
  • Claims of appearances of the Virgin Mary and weeping statues have been common in Catholicism.
  • And now they’re going to get a closer look – but on a worldwide scale.

Marian apparitions

    • Catholics believe Mary is the mother of Jesus Christ, and the mother of God, who still makes her presence known.
    • And the Catholic Church has officially recognized a number of sites where Mary has reportedly appeared around the globe.
    • Crowds drawn by the children’s prophecy that Mary would reappear and perform a miracle reported seeing the sun “dance in the sky.” The most recent Marian apparition that a Catholic bishop has declared “worthy of belief” was in Buenos Aires province, Argentina, in 2016.

Mary’s tears

    • A well-known example is the Madonna of Syracuse, Sicily – a plaster statue that seemed to shed tears.
    • Investigators appointed by the church said the liquid was chemically similar to human tears.
    • Mary’s tears have special significance for Catholics.

The possibility of fraud

    • Perhaps because they address controversial issues, the standards were only made public in 2012 – nearly 35 years after they were first implemented.
    • The bishop, or a committee appointed by him, evaluates the alleged supernatural phenomenon.
    • Positive aspects include reports of physical healings and religious conversions, or a general deepening of faith among Catholics.
    • Although belief in the messages endures among a small number of Catholics, the local bishop deemed the apparitions not credible.

Searching for meaning

    • The Pontificia Academia Mariana Internationalis seems to be searching for proof of supernatural signs, which certainly draw intellectual curiosity and media attention.
    • In spite of her physical condition, pilgrims who came to see her believed that she was praying for them.
    • In my writings about the case of Santo, I was definitely tempted to focus on talk of the supernatural.

New Approach to Safe Patient Limits on Beacon Hill by MNA Nurses and Healthcare Professionals Joins Legislation to Tackle Longstanding & Untenable Staffing Conditions Exacerbated by the COVID-19 Pandemic

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, January 19, 2023

BOSTON, Jan. 19, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- The more than 25,000 nurses and healthcare professionals of the Massachusetts Nurses Association have joined with allies in the Massachusetts House and Senate to file new legislation that would enact safe patient limits for all hospital units through a process led by the Department of Public Health.

Key Points: 
  • "…fewer nurses likely increase the probability that patients do not feel cared for with an adequate amount of time or attention.
  • That legislation would have funded independent research studies on nurse staffing, the supply of nurses, and measures of care quality.
  • In addition to the new safe patient limits law, the MNA is filing with its legislative sponsors nearly 20 other bills.
  • Founded in 1903, the Massachusetts Nurses Association is the largest union of registered nurses in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

Mystery Writers of America Announces Barbara Neely Grant Recipients

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, February 22, 2022

NEW YORK, Feb. 22, 2022 /PRNewswire/ --Mystery Writers of America is proud to announce the first two recipients of the Barbara Neely Grants, Jonathan Brown and Necole Ryse.

Key Points: 
  • NEW YORK, Feb. 22, 2022 /PRNewswire/ --Mystery Writers of America is proud to announce the first two recipients of the Barbara Neely Grants, Jonathan Brown and Necole Ryse.
  • Barbara Neely was the author of the "Blanche" series, one of the first crime fiction series to feature a Black woman as the protagonist.
  • Mystery Writers of America named her a Grand Master in November of 2019 to recognize her enormous contributions to the genre as well as her impact on the crime fiction community.
  • Austin Camacho, Christopher Chambers, and Faye Snowden served as judges for the first annual Barbara Neely Grants.