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wins this battle of wills precisely because of what he is, a pragmatist used to dealing in harsh worldly realities. He's comfortable with his place in the moral layout, and unlike Oppenheimer, who along with his colleagues begins to feel that blindly exercising their talents was a mistake, he's prepared to do whatever is bill heavey necessary to get what he wants.To a great bill heavey extent, Groves assumed a greater authority than was rightfully his. But if he is a monster, he's an astoundingly sympathetic one, mostly bill heavey because he is so vividly human. That men, not governments, shape history is, from the filmmakers' perspective, an offering of hope for the future. What "Fat Man and Little Boy" tells us is potent and essential. It tells us if history is dominated by individual action, then individual action has meaning -- in history everything is for keeps. © Copyright 1999 The Washington Post Company Back to the top .mmsmall { color: red; font-size:12px; font-weight: bold; position: absolute; top: 18px; } search: FAT MAN Herman Kahn and the nuclear age.
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