They died days or weeks later from the radium-like rays emitted in great numbers at the moment of the explosion.
Oppenheimer
24.9s
Goddamn it. (sighs) (chuckles wryly) You told me I'd be okay. Yeah, well, I didn't have all the facts, did I? Here's a fact. President Eisenhower pinned the Medal of Freedom on my chest last year 'cause I've always done what's right for this country. They don't want me in the Cabinet room? Well, that's... that's fine. Maybe they should just invite Oppenheimer instead. Maybe they will.
Oppenheimer
1.9s
But they died anyway.
Oppenheimer
20.4s
- How'd I do? - MAN: I'll call recess, ten minutes. Maybe a little too well, Robert. That was six years ago. You know, the truly vindictive, patient as saints. Strauss has been perfectly clear that he is neutral. - (glass shatters) - Wake up. It is Strauss. It's always been Strauss, and you know it. Why won't you fight him?
Oppenheimer
2.3s
(somber music fading out)
Oppenheimer
5.3s
A shabby little room, far from the limelight. (speaking indistinctly)
Oppenheimer
7.1s
STRAUSS: A simple bureaucratic procedure. His Q clearance is up for renewal. You send your accusations to the FBI.
Oppenheimer
42.4s
A lowly shoe salesman. Lewis, we can win this thing. I-I think we can get the Senate to grasp that you did your duty, painful though it was. Now, will Hill's testimony back us up? - COUNSEL: Hill will be fine. - I don't really know him, but, uh, he was one of Szilard's boys in Chicago, and they never forgave Robert for not supporting their petition against bombing Japan. This was taken 31 days after the bombing. Virtually everyone in the street, for nearly a mile around, was instantly and seriously burned. (people gasping) The, uh, Japanese spoke of people who wore striped clothing upon whom the skin was burned in stripes.
Oppenheimer
6.5s
Dr. Oppenheimer? (chuckles) - Nice picture. - Oh. President Truman will see you now.
Oppenheimer
7.4s
Setting fire to the atmosphere. Why is Fermi still taking side bets on it? Call it gallows humor.
Oppenheimer
1.6s
It won't.
Oppenheimer
59.6s
The firestorm in Tokyo killed 100,000 people. Mostly civilians. I worry about an America where we do these things and no one protests. Pearl Harbor and three years of brutal conflict in the Pacific bought us a lot of latitude with the American public. STIMSON: Enough to unleash the atomic bomb? FERMI: Uh, the A-bomb might not cause as much damage as the Tokyo bombings. What are we estimating? In a medium-size city, uh, 20 or 30,000 dead. ROBERT: Yes, but, uh, don't underestimate the psychological impact of a... of an atomic explosion. A pillar of fire 10,000 feet tall. Deadly neutron effects for a mile, in all directions, from one single device. Dropped from a barely noticed B-29, the atomic bomb will be a terrible revelation of divine power. If that's true, it would be definitive. World War II would be over. Our boys would come home. Military targets?
Oppenheimer
3s
(faint pensive music playing)
Oppenheimer
24.9s
I told you, he turned the scientists against me one by one, starting with Einstein. I told you about, uh, Einstein. I saw him by the pond. You did, but you know, sir, since nobody really knows what they said to each other that day, is it possible they didn't talk about you at all? Is it possible they spoke about something, uh, more important? REPORTERS: Mr. Strauss! (clamoring)
Oppenheimer
1.6s
We'll see.
Oppenheimer
7.6s
ROBERT: "And now I am become Death. The destroyer of worlds."
Oppenheimer
11.7s
You sat here and let me tell you how it's done, but you've been far ahead all along. Survival in Washington is about knowing how to get things done.