BY DAVID KRIEGER, OPINION
CONTRIBUTOR — 03/05/19 04:00 PM EST
THE VIEWS EXPRESSED BY
CONTRIBUTORS ARE THEIR OWN AND NOT THE VIEW OF THE HILL
The most stunning and frightening truth about the
nuclear age is this: Nuclear weapons are capable of destroying civilization and
most complex life on the planet, yet next to nothing is being done about it.
Humanity is flirting with extinction and is experiencing the “frog’s malaise.”
It is as though the human species has been placed into a pot of tepid water —
metaphorically with regard to nuclear dangers and literally with regard to
climate change — and appears to be calmly treading water while the temperature
rises toward the boiling point. In this piece, I focus on the metaphorical pot
of heating water, heading toward a boil, representing the increasing nuclear
dangers confronting all humanity.
Disconcertingly, there is virtually no political will
on the part of nations in possession of nuclear arsenals to alter this
dangerous situation; and, despite legal obligations to negotiate in good faith
for an end to the nuclear arms race and for nuclear disarmament, there is no
major effort among the nuclear-armed and umbrella countries to achieve nuclear
zero. While the non-nuclear-armed countries have negotiated a Treaty on the
Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) and are working to bring this treaty into
force, those countries that possess the weapons and those sheltering under
their nuclear umbrella have not supported the new treaty.
All nine nuclear-armed countries boycotted
international negotiations on banning and eliminating nuclear weapons. In
addition, each of these countries is in the process of modernizing its nuclear
arsenal, thereby wasting valuable resources on weapons that must never be used,
and doing so while basic human needs for billions of people globally go unmet
and unattended. Despite this unjust and deplorable situation, most of the 7
billion people on the planet are complacent about nuclear weapons. This only
adds fuel to the fire under the frogs.
In the nuclear age, humanity is challenged as never
before. Our technology, and particularly our nuclear weapons, can destroy us
and all that we hold dear. But before we can respond to the profound dangers,
we must first awaken to these dangers. Complacency is rooted in apathy,
conformity, ignorance and denial — a recipe for disaster. If we want to prevail
over our technologies, we must move from apathy to empathy; from conformity to
critical thinking; from ignorance to wisdom; and from denial to recognition of
the danger. But how are we to do this?
The key is education — education that promotes
engagement; education that forces individuals and nations to face the truth
about the dangers of the nuclear age. We need education that leads to action
that will allow humanity to get out of the metaphorical pot of heating water
before it is too late.
Education can take many forms, but it must begin with
solid analysis of current dangers and critiques of the lack of progress in
stemming the dangers of the nuclear age. We need education that is rooted in
the common good. We need education that provides a platform for the voices of
the survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. We need education that makes clear the
instability and dangerous nature of nuclear deterrence. We need education that
challenges the extreme hubris of leaders who believe the global nuclear status
quo can survive indefinitely in the face of human fallibility and
malevolence.
We need education that can break through the bonds of
nuclear insanity and move the world to action. We need the public to speak out
and demand far more of their leaders if we are to leap from the pot of heating
water, avert disaster and reach the safe haven of nuclear zero.
David Krieger is a founder of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, and has served as its president since 1982. He is
the author and editor of many books on nuclear dangers, including “ZERO: The
Case for Nuclear Weapons Abolition.”
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