The Truth About Oppenheimer

Watch part one of Patrick Macfarlane’s docuseries “The Truth About Oppenheimer,” which covers how Manhattan Project scientists secretly injected American citizens with lethal doses of plutonium.

Description:

Christopher Nolan’s new film Oppenheimer appears to humanize J. Robert Oppenheimer as an eclectic genius who was haunted by the profound consequences of the weapon he created.

However, another story lurks beneath Oppenheimer. A secret story. One that saw Manhattan Project scientists conducting clandestine medical experiments on unwitting and innocent American citizens.

The true story is that, while the United States led the prosecution of Nazi war criminals, Manhattan Project scientists secretly injected American citizens with lethal doses of plutonium without the subjects’ knowledge or consent.

If the Manhattan Project was meant to protect America, why would its scientists be injecting American civilians with radioactive material?

Christopher Nolan describes “Oppenheimer” as “a horror film,” stating that the film will leave viewer contemplating dark and unsettling questions. The information in “The Truth About Oppenheimer” will leave you disgusted.

10 thoughts on “The Truth About Oppenheimer”

  1. American Scientists were injecting American Citizens with plutonium. There are a lot of deep dark secrets about the US and many of its allies that most people including people appearing on Jeopardy would never know.
    We have been told scientists in Nazi Germany did all kinds of inhumane experiments on people. Many people say scientists are being cruel for experimenting on animals. So-called democracies criticize authoritarian nations for human rights violations when they also commit human rights violations. I once read a letter to an advice columnist saying scientist should do experiments on murderers instead of animals.

      1. “Why not world peace.”

        Because a small group of people profit immensely from warfare, while the destruction wrought by warfare impoverishes the vast majority of us.

        The incentives are so built into the system that it may not be possible to change it at this point. Any challenge to it is quickly dispensed with through lobbying, propaganda and censorship.

  2. Analysis of the aftermath of the test of the bomb hanging by the cable on Trinity estimates the radioactive ash from the explosion may have traveled to the air over 46 states in the U.S. Naturally, government estimates come in on the low side.

    1. 46 states is highly unlikely, more likely is that Texas, LA, AR, MS, AL, GA and FL would be affected, but 46 defies our jet stream and West to East winds which are pretty consistent. OK, TN, and Carolinas would be other likely states; 46 is just a fantastic number

  3. Historical relatism, as explained and practiced by the Progressive era’s “preeminent” historian Charles A. Beard (this site’s hero is Mr. Bourne so ‘ol Chuckie is a apt one to share about it) is to assemble “facts” to tell a story (ignore those facts that might even be more verifiable if those won’t
    further the story you want to tell) about a historical event so society will view the story a certain way and even “act” after forming that view.
    Sure, Oppenheimer might have liked puppies or however he’s “humanized” but this movie in the theaters for the masses (Oppenheimer or Barbie? nope; Britbox on the 4k for me;-) is attempt to tell the story to get the public to view him a certain way and perhaps act on those views in the future.
    We will get them to love the bomb….lol.
    Beard was antiwar to the point of being a isolationist during WW1 ( he was considered the top historian of the US prior to WW1 then Wilson went after him like he did Bourne but even more so) so I’d imagine he would not be happy with this application of historical relatism to make a evil person less so.

  4. Jan 12, 2023 Nuclear War is the Ultimate Crime Against Humanity

    Explosive power is only one way to describe the difference between conventional and nuclear weapons. The nuclear weapon is like a piece of the Sun. When it explodes, the surface of the fireball it creates is hotter than the surface of the Sun, so anyone close to it is going to be vaporized, and it will ignite fires over large distances.

    https://youtu.be/Jn4STJEGP3Y

    Jun 28, 2023 How would a nuclear war between Russia and the US affect you personally?

    What would happen if a nuclear war were to be sparked between Russia and the United States today? Who would survive?

    https://youtu.be/-xthzy1PxTA

    1. “the fireball it creates is hotter than the surface of the Sun…”

      Quite an understatement. The surface of the sun is only at about 5,772 degrees K, or about 10,422 degrees F. The fusion reactions in thermonuclear explosions are at the very least tens of millions of degrees F, and are actually hotter than the interior of the sun. And yes, at that temperature they could vaporize nearby objects.

Comments are closed.