If You Love This Planet, Dr. Helen Caldicott

Best of 2008/2009: Carole Gallagher on the victims of U.S. nuclear testing

 

Carole Gallagher (Photo: W. Hooke)

Carole Gallagher (Photo: W. Hooke)

If You Love This Planet continues to replay some of our most popular programs from 2008 and 2009, as well as offering some new episodes. In mid-March
2010, we will start a whole new season of programs.
Here is Dr. Caldicott’s September 7, 2009 interview with Carole Gallagher, author of American Ground Zero: the Secret Nuclear War (MIT Press, 1993). Gallagher’s book documents the effects of nuclear testing in Nevada on those living downwind, the test site workers themselves, and atomic veterans who were exposed to the bombs at very close range. The U.S. government program to expose soldiers to the bomb was an experiment to see what a man could withstand emotionally and physically on the “nuclear battlefield,” should a full-scale nuclear war occur, or during more limited nuclear exchanges. After living in Utah for seven years to work on the book, Gallagher returned to New York in 1990 because she was being harassed by locals, even receiving death threats. Gallagher is also a successful artist/photographer, and has exhibited in museums and galleries nationally and internationally. In 1983, Gallagher began documenting the effects of nuclear testing in Nevada on Utahans, and on U.S. veterans made to walk over Ground Zero shortly after each bomb was exploded. Dr. Caldicott says she was “flabbergasted” to read the shocking personal stories and see the accompanying photos in American Ground Zero, and urges all listeners to buy the book.

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