Einstein and the b*mb (2024)

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Einstein and the b*mb (2024)

Post by bunniefuu »

[typewriter clacking]

[typewriter clacking]

- [clock ticking]

- [dog barking]

[static]

[man 1] The first atomic b*mb

heralded the dawn of a troubling new era.

[somber music plays]

In a single stroke, the Japanese city

of Hiroshima and some 70,000 men,

women, and children were annihilated.

In the years since, that momentous event

has come under increasing scrutiny.

Was the b*mb

a price worth paying for pea...

[man speaking German]

[b*mb explodes]

[Einstein] The physicists who participated

in forging the most formidable

and dangerous w*apon of all time

are harassed

by an equal feeling of responsibility,

not to say guilt.

[man 2] Dr. Albert Einstein,

one of the world's greatest scientists.

[man 3] A scientific giant who sometimes

generated political controversy,

as well as brilliant equations.

[man 4]

Called the father of the atomic age,

Einstein's great contribution

to human knowledge

was his theory of relativity.

[man 5] The key to the atom secrets was

first given to the world when the genius,

Albert Einstein, defined the relation

between all matter and energy.

[Einstein] E is equal to MC squared.

Had I known

that the Germans would not succeed

in producing an atomic b*mb,

I would not have taken part

in opening that Pandora's box.

[music fades, ends]

[crowd cheering]

[in German] Hail to victory!

[somber music plays]

[typewriter clacking]

[typewriter clacking]

[music continues]

[typewriter clacking]

[typewriter clacking]

[somber music plays]

[man in English]

Order! Motion under the ten-minute rule,

bill to promote and extend

opportunities of citizenship for Jews

resident outside the British Empire.

- Commander Locker-Lampson.

- [Locker-Lampson] Thank you, Mr. Speaker.

I am not personally a Jew,

but I hope

that I do not require to be a Jew

to hate tyranny anywhere in the world.

[crowd chatting indistinctly]

Germany has selected

the cream of her culture

and suppressed it.

She has even turned upon

her most glorious citizen.

Einstein.

[music builds]

The road hog and racketeer of Europe

have plundered his place.

They've even taken away his violin.

Today, Einstein is without a home.

He had to write his name

in a visitor's book in England.

And when he came to write his address,

he put...

"Without any."

[music ends]

Here we are, Professor.

Welcome to Roughton Heath.

[bird caws]

Isn't it wonderful?

Let's get you settled in, eh?

[sheep bleat]

[sighs]

[knocking at door]

I know it's rudimentary

for a man of your importance

but, under your current circumstances...

I believe that a simple

and unassuming life

is best for body and mind.

Couldn't agree more.

What I like best is a tent on a heath,

plain viands, a glass of beer,

and the sweet communion of... friends.

[Locker-Lampson laughs]

For you.

To replace the one the Hun stole from you.

I'll let you unpack in peace.

[crow cawing]

[Einstein]

The present state of affairs in Germany

is a state of psychic distemper

in the masses.

h*tler picked up human flotsam

on the streets and in the taverns

and organized them around himself.

The worst outcrop of herd life,

the m*llitary system, which I abhor.

[man chanting in German]

German fascism

has been particularly violent

in its att*ck upon my Jewish brothers.

BE CAREFUL. JEWS.

I AM THE BIGGEST PIG IN TOWN

Our friends in Germany

need not do anything to protect me.

In fact, such action

would needlessly endanger them.

I cannot tell you yet,

whether I shall make England my home.

[woman] How is he?

As you'd imagine.

Poor fellow's lost everything,

his home, his money.

And now, I hear the Nazis have placed

a price of 20,000 marks on his head.

I really had no idea

that my head was worth all that.

I assure you, Professor.

You're perfectly safe

from the long arm of fascism here.

Uh, may I introduce Barbara Goodall.

Hello, Professor.

[Locker-Lampson] And Margery Howard.

Hello, Professor.

Delighted.

[Locker-Lampson]

These ladies are your bodyguards.

If any unauthorized person comes near,

believe me, Professor...

They will most certainly get

a charge or two of buckshot.

Sorry, Professor,

I know you're not one for bearing arms,

but really we can't be too careful.

Hope you understand?

Marvelous. [claps]

Keep a close eye out, ladies.

I'm relying on you both.

[birds cawing]

[microphone feedback]

[h*tler in German] A precious possession

in this world, however,

is one's own people

and we want to lead

and fight for these people.

And never flag, never tire, never despair.

[Einstein in English] As long as I have

any choice in the matter...

[exhales]

...I shall live only in a country

where civil liberty,

tolerance, and equality

of all citizens before the law prevail.

[men talking indistinctly]

These conditions do not exist

in Germany at the present time.

This breeding ground of disease

will soon pose a grave danger

for the rest of the world.

[in German] We have one aim,

and we will follow it fanatically

and ruthlessly to the grave.

[crowd chanting] Hail to victory!

[Einstein in English] To stay in Germany

would have been impossible for me

as a pacifist.

I'm not only a pacifist,

but a militant pacifist.

I am willing to fight for peace.

My great friend has invited me here.

I can live quietly,

working out my mathematical problems.

All I want is peace,

and could I have found

a more peaceful retreat

than here in England?

No one will know where I am.

Indeed not! [chuckles]

Shall we get some pictures?

[upbeat music plays]

[man] The Observer diary,

17th September 1933.

England is not

a very good place to hide in.

Dr. Einstein, who has come here

to escape n*zi persecution,

finds his wooden hut

photographed in the papers

with full indications of locality,

and Cromer Council considers

the question of presenting an address.

Germany, I suppose,

is presumed to be looking the other way.

[music continues]

When did you start thinking about time

and space and all those things, Professor?

[Einstein chuckles]

[chuckles softly]

[metal clanging]

[Einstein] Ah!

As a child of four or five,

my father showed me a compass.

This experience made

a deep and lasting impression on me.

That this needle behaved

in such a determined way.

Something deeply hidden

had to be behind things.

When I was four or five,

I couldn't tie my own shoelaces.

[all laughing]

The most beautiful thing we can experience

is the mysterious.

[crow cawing]

I can still remember

my first childish experiments in thinking

that had a direct bearing

on the theory of relativity.

What if one were to run

after a ray of light?

If one were to run fast enough,

would it no longer move at all?

[music intensifying]

[music builds, ends]

[scoffs]

Of course, such a thing is impossible.

- Your teachers must have loved you.

- [Einstein laughs]

"You'll never amount to anything,

Einstein."

"You're an extremely clever boy,

but you have one great fault."

"You'll never let yourself

be told anything."

"Your mere presence spoils

the respect in the class for me."

[laughing]

The teachers had

the characters of drill sergeants.

Mistrust of every kind of authority grew.

An attitude that has never again left me.

- [waves crashing]

- [seagulls cawing]

It is only men who are free,

who create the inventions

and intellectual works,

which make life worthwhile.

[somber music playing]

Out yonder there was this huge world,

which stands before us

like a great, eternal riddle.

[camera shutter clicking]

I became convinced

that nature could be understood

as a relatively simple

mathematical structure.

A storm broke loose in my mind.

[man]

Einstein's great theory of relativity.

Two towers flash signals at the same time

to a balloonist

and to a man on the ground.

The observer on the ground says

the signals were given from both towers

at the same time.

Light rays from both towers

are the same length.

But the motion of the balloonist means

one signal takes more time to reach him

and he insists that one tower signaled

before the other.

[Einstein] My solution actually had to do

with the concept of time.

[man]

Two observers moving at different speeds

experience time at different rates.

[Einstein]

Time cannot be absolutely defined.

Time is relative.

It stretches and shrinks.

Or, in our Earth language, an hour for us

may be a century on another planet,

and vice versa.

[laughs]

[Einstein] There is no audible ticktock

everywhere in the world.

[bird singing]

[clocks ticking]

Past, present, and future

is only an illusion.

But one more consequence

also occurred to me.

According to the theory of relativity,

there is no essential distinction

between mass and energy.

Energy is put equal to mass

multiplied by

the square of the velocity of light.

So, a very small amount of mass

may be converted

into a very large amount of energy.

[suspenseful music plays]

Kind fate allowed me

to find a couple of nice ideas

after years of feverish labor.

[reporter 1] Mr. Einstein.

[reporters] Einstein! Einstein! Einstein!

[reporter 2] Professor Einstein.

Professor.

Professor.

Professor Einstein.

Times of London.

Um, you have caused a revolution

in science,

and Newtonian ideas are overthrown.

[reporter 3]

New York Times. Our headline today,

"Lights all askew in the heavens!"

"Men of science more or less agog!"

"Einstein's theory triumphs!"

How do you feel?

My faculties have been quite overrated.

[all laugh]

Professor, could you possibly

explain your theory to the man,

or possibly the woman, in the street?

An hour sitting with a pretty girl

on a park bench passes like a minute,

but a minute sitting on a hot stove

seems like an hour.

That's relativity.

[reporters laughing]

Very funny. Very funny indeed.

- [reporters laughing]

- [flashing]

[Einstein] Like the man in the fairy tale

who turned everything into gold,

so with me,

everything is turned

into newspaper clamor.

[music builds]

[inaudible dialogue]

To punish me for my contempt of authority,

fate made me an authority myself.

It turned out that the inertia of a system

necessarily depends on its energy content,

and this led straight to the notion

that inert mass is simply latent energy.

Mass and energy are both different

manifestations of the same thing.

So, a small amount of mass

may be converted

into a very large amount of energy.

Sorry, Professor,

but are you saying it could be possible

to, well, somehow release that energy?

[chuckles] Science in its present state

makes it appear almost impossible

that we should ever succeed in so doing.

It would be like, uh,

sh**ting birds in the dark

in a country

where there are very few birds.

Still, energy released on that scale

sounds... rather worrying.

Concern for man himself and his fate

must always be the chief objective,

in order that the creations of our minds

should be a blessing

and not a curse to mankind.

[loud bang]

[car engine revs]

[Locker-Lampson] Stand down, ladies!

I'm expecting someone. Friend, not foe.

[sighs]

I think you'll very much enjoy meeting

this gentleman, Professor.

[horn honking]

Been spending some more time

chatting with the professor, Margery?

- Oh, listening mainly.

- [Locker-Lampson chuckles]

He's been explaining the finer points

of his theory of relativity to us.

And?

And I'm quite certain

that he understands it.

[upbeat music playing]

[laughing]

[man] Epstein.

No, no. Einstein.

Professor, this is Jacob Epstein.

The sculptor.

Oh! [laughs]

Professor, I'm very interested

in your head.

[jazz music playing]

I understand you're none too popular

in Germany, Professor.

[Einstein grunts]

I read recently that 100 n*zi professors

have condemned your theories as incorrect.

Were I wrong, one professor

would have been quite enough. [chuckles]

[Jacob laughs]

I thought I was a physicist.

[music fades]

I did not bother being a non-Aryan

until h*tler made me conscious of it.

[somber music playing]

[typewriter clacking]

[typewriter clacking]

[typewriter clacking]

[man speaking German]

[in English] Only those of German blood,

whatever their creed,

may be members of the Nation.

All non-German immigration

must be prevented.

No Jew may be a member of the Nation.

Leaders of the party promise

to work ruthlessly,

if need be, to sacrifice their very life

to translate this program into action.

[somber music continues]

[man coughs]

[indistinct chatter]

At present, every coachman

and every waiter is debating

whether relativity theory is correct.

Here is yet another application

of the principle of relativity

for the delectation of the reader.

Today, you are described in Germany

as a "German savant,"

and in England as a "Swiss Jew."

[both laugh]

Should it ever be my fate

to be represented as a bte noire,

I should, on the contrary,

become a "Swiss Jew" for the Germans

and the "German savant" for the English.

[Einstein laughs]

"This event has been organized

by the 'Working Society

of German Scientists

for the Preservation of Pure Science.'"

Their conviction is determined

by the political party

to which they belong.

"First speaker, Paul Weyland."

[applause ends]

Our theme this evening,

to protect the German people

from being misled

by highly acclaimed scientists,

who set

the scientifically-interested world

in disarray with half-baked opinions.

He doesn't seem to be an expert at all.

Doctor? Engineer? Politician?

[Weyland] We present observations

on Einstein's theory of relativity

and the manner of its introduction.

[person coughing]

Rarely in science

has a postulated scientific system

been promoted as extravagantly

as the general principle of relativity,

which at a closer glance,

is revealed

to be severely lacking in proof.

Einstein engages in a businesslike

booming of his theory and his name.

In short,

Einstein's theory of relativity

is nothing less than scientific Dadaism.

[audience gasps]

[audience cheering, applauding]

It is the product

of an intellectually-confused time,

and plagiarized to boot.

It is, in fact, a hoax

promoted by the clique

of his academic supporters.

All of this is

a consequence of the intellectual

and moral decay of German society,

which is being exploited and promoted

by a certain press.

[audience cheering, applauding]

[tense music playing]

[typewriter clacking]

[Einstein] My answer to the

Anti-Relativity Theory Company Limited.

I have reason to believe

that motives

other than the striving for truth

are at the bottom of this enterprise.

Were I a German nationalist,

whether bearing a swastika or not,

rather than a Jew

of liberal international bent...

I am neither a German citizen

nor do I believe in a Jewish faith.

[music ends]

But I am a Jew,

and I am glad

to belong to the Jewish people.

[Jacob coughing]

[Jacob inhales] Professor,

do you think you might put out your pipe?

I would rather view the individual

in a fog and semi-darkness

than in the light.

[hesitates] It's just I can barely see you

through the smoke.

[Einstein inhales deeply]

[exhales]

[suspenseful music playing]

[Locker-Lampson] Gentlemen. Shall we?

[inhales]

[exhales]

Someone to see you, Professor.

Walter Adams.

I think you should listen

to what he has to say.

[sighs]

[Walter] Uh, Professor, I'm here

in my role as secretary

of the Academic Assistance Council.

We formed earlier this year

with the explicit intention

of helping displaced academics

who might need to flee Germany

in light of the, um...

current appalling circumstances

for Jews there.

I have been promoted

to an evil monster in Germany,

and all my money

has been taken away from me.

Yes, I'm so sorry.

Professor, we're organizing an event

in support of academic refugees

and, uh... well, we wonder

whether you would agree to speak?

Mr. Adams,

if I were to appear in public

as a prosecutor of the German government,

it would have terrifying consequences

for the German Jews.

Yes, perhaps.

But the circumstances

are already terrifying for them

even without your intervention.

Professor, you are

the most renowned physicist of the age.

Your voice would echo around the world

and help to reveal the scale

of the Jewish academic purge in Germany.

I assure you,

it will only be a modest meeting

where a small number

of well-known people will speak.

Would you at least consider it?

[somber music playing]

[tense music playing]

[man] Few Germans were alert to the thr*at

that h*tler and the Nazis posed.

A failed coup attempt

did little to dispel their image

as a tin pot army of political no-hopers.

Yet, in the wake of World w*r I,

h*tler courted

the many disillusioned team of soldiers

to swell the party's ranks

and set him on the road to power.

[Einstein]

Humanity is suffering in Germany.

The present wave of nationalism

is a severe sickness.

[seagulls cawing]

It takes but the slightest provocation,

or at times no provocation at all,

to be transformed into chauvinism.

[g*n fires]

[crowd clamoring]

[music ends]

[typewriter clacking]

[typewriter clacking]

[typewriter clacking]

My feelings for Rathenau

were ones of thanks

for the hope and consolation he gave me

during Europe's presently bleak situation.

[ominous music playing]

He was the first victim

of n*zi propaganda.

[car horn honking]

[reporter] Professor,

just a few questions.

Professor, there are rumors

you are not returning to Germany.

In view of the attitude that large numbers

of educated Germans have towards Jews,

I have been warned against making

any kind of public appearances in Germany.

For I am supposedly

among the group of people

being targeted by nationalist assassins.

But you deny you are fleeing Germany?

I am going to Japan because that means

12 weeks of peace on the open sea.

[engine whirring]

I am glad to just disappear

for six months.

The voyage is wonderful,

even though Japan is quite exhausting.

Here, I have already given 13 lectures

and been photographed

for the 10,000th time.

No living person deserves

this sort of reception.

[children laughing]

An enthralling walk along the coast.

In the afternoon,

a tour to the peak of the mountain.

[music ends]

[clock ticking]

[inhales]

[radio feedback]

[announcer 1]

In Berlin and throughout Germany,

people are suffering from hunger,

an absence

of the bare necessities of life.

Unemployment and mounting inflation

are bringing the country

to the edge of ruin.

Money means almost nothing.

300 billion marks

for a half-pound of apples,

and the mark's value continues to fall

lower and lower.

The middle class is wiped out.

The Reichsbank works overtime

printing more and more paper money

that buys less and less.

The n*zi ranks now begin to swell,

aimless, jobless young men

fed on promises of power and gold.

[announcer 2]

The Berlin adherents of the n*zi party

spent yesterday at Nuremberg

and formed part of a body of 12,000,

mostly Bavarians,

who paraded before the famous h*tler.

[chanting in German]

[foghorn blares]

[announcer 3] The globe-trotting

Professor Einstein arrives back

in New York

to be met by a mob of reporters.

The greatest scientist of Germany

in the greatest city of the world.

I'm delighted.

The reporters asked

exquisitely inane questions,

to which I replied with cheap jokes.

[reporter] What do you think

of prohibition, Professor?

[in German]

I don't drink, so I couldn't care less.

[all laugh]

[crowd clamoring]

[announcer 1 in English]

Germany and election day,

Herr h*tler stuns the world

as his vote soars.

Now, 6 million of his countrymen

back the Nazis,

making them

the second-largest party in the Reichstag.

Is there no stopping

the self-styled Fhrer's onward march?

[shouting in German]

[announcer 2]

Professor Einstein suddenly became grave

and almost vehement when asked about

the n*zi party's recent election success.

"I do not enjoy

Mr. h*tler's acquaintance," he said.

"h*tler is living

on the empty stomach of Germany."

"As soon as economic conditions

in Germany improve,

he will cease to be important."

Beyond this statement,

Dr. Einstein would not discuss politics.

[in German]

The struggle between the people

and the hatred amongst them

is being nurtured

by very specific interested parties.

It is a small,

rootless, international clique

that is turning people against each other.

They are the only ones who can really

be regarded as international elements

because they conduct

their business everywhere.

[foghorn honking]

[all] Einstein!

[crowd cheering]

[Einstein in English]

Mere words do not get pacifists anywhere.

They must initiate action.

[upbeat music playing]

Deeds are needed.

Even if only 2% of those

supposed to perform m*llitary service

should declare themselves

w*r resisters and assert,

"We are not going to fight,"

the governments would be powerless.

[announcer 1] More than one million Jews

throughout the United States

will join protest meetings today

against the persecution of Jews

in Germany by the h*tler government.

- [crowd cheering]

- [soldiers marching]

[announcer 2]

Brownshirts are marching in triumph,

for Adolf h*tler rules Germany at last.

Great crowds assembled

when the announcement came

that h*tler had accepted command.

What now,

for 50 million Germans

give allegiance to the h*tler flag,

the famous swastika.

[in German]

On this evening, I call on our people

every hour

of every day

to think only of Germany, the Reich,

and our German nation,

our German people.

Hail to victory!

[woman laughing]

[announcer 3 in English] In Pasadena,

Mr. and Mrs. Albert Einstein

bid friends farewell.

The professor has spent

the best part of a decade

darting between his homeland

and the rest of the world.

But the Germany

he's returning to this time

is a far cry from the one he left.

Now, Herr h*tler reigns supreme.

[announcer 4]

Germany was a land of devilry by night.

That in which you did not believe

must be destroyed.

And in the burning,

liberty, tolerance, and gentleness

vanished from the land.

[in German] German men and women.

The age of an exaggerated

Jewish intellectualism

has now come to an end.

[announcer 5 in English] The Einsteins'

transatlantic voyage is rudely interrupted

with the news that

their summer home has been raided.

[Einstein]

My summer home has often in the past

been honored by the presence of guests.

They were always welcome.

No one had any reason to break in.

These acts are the result

of a rabid mob of the n*zi militia.

I think it is quite possible

that the political circus at home

will go on for some time,

and that I will not return.

[announcer 6] What is the real attitude

of the new German dictator?

Is it h*tler's plan

to continue to maintain Germany

under his National Socialist rule,

or does he plan to restore

a semblance of the former monarchy

with himself

as the power behind the throne?

Whatever h*tler's plans may be,

it is certain

that in his scheme of things,

no one but himself will be allowed

to play the principal role.

[radio feedback]

[Barbara] There is Professor's picture.

"Was greatly honored by the Jewish press

and the unsuspecting German people."

[tense music playing]

[Barbara] "Showed his gratitude

by lying atrocity propaganda

against Adolf h*tler."

And below that, it says...

It says...

It says...

"Not yet hanged."

[birds chirping]

When I was young,

all I wanted from life

was to sit quietly in a corner somewhere,

doing my work

without the public paying attention to me.

Now look what has become of me.

I'm so very sorry, Professor.

I cannot understand the passive response

of the whole civilized world

to this modern barbarism.

Doesn't the world see

that h*tler is aiming for w*r?

It would seem not.

This must be difficult for you.

I mean, as a committed pacifist.

Yes, but I have little need to tell you

that I am an unconditional anti-fascist.

The entire German population

is being poisoned with nationalism

and drilled for w*r.

I loathe all armies.

And any kind of v*olence.

Yet, I am firmly convinced

that in the present state of the world,

organized force can be opposed

only by organized force.

There is no other way.

No other way.

[scoffs]

[seagulls cawing]

The world is in greater peril from those

who tolerate or encourage evil

than from those who actually commit it.

Silence would have made me

feel guilty of complicity.

[Locker-Lampson]

Einstein will speak. Stop.

Forget the "modest meeting."

You want to raise money

to help the German Jews, don't you?

Stop.

Leave the venue to me. Stop.

[tense music playing]

I've already booked a bigger hall.

You have?

The biggest.

Locker-Lampson. Stop.

To Walter Adams. Urgent delivery.

[announcer] October 2nd, 1933.

Daily Mail editorial. London.

There is due to take place

at the Albert Hall a mass meeting,

nominally to appeal for funds

on behalf of the exiles from Germany.

Actually, it will everywhere be regarded

as a demonstration

against the h*tler regime.

And n*zi policy.

[crowd cheering]

We have every sympathy

with the German Jews as such,

but their treatment will not be improved...

GERMANS, DON'T BUY IN JEWISH SHOPS

...by Albert Hall denunciations of Nazis.

We venture to put it to Dr. Einstein

that he would be wise

to stop this injudicious agitation

in this country against the n*zi regime.

[music intensifies]

[music ends]

[exhales]

[exhales]

[mumbling unintelligibly]

The first thing is my gratitude

as a man...

as a good European...

as a Jew.

[shaky breathing]

[exhales]

[exhales]

[exhales]

[knocking at door, opens]

[Locker-Lampson]

I've just spoken to Mr. Adams.

Every ticket has been sold.

Ten thousand people.

[scoffs]

You've got the speech prepared?

[sighs]

Proud of you.

The car's ready. Ready when you are.

[exhales]

Ladies and gentlemen, Professor Einstein.

[audience applauding]

"I am glad you have given me

the opportunity...

an opportunity..."

"I am glad you have given me

the opportunity...

...of expressing to you here

my deep sense of gratitude as a man,

as a good European,

and as a Jew."

"It cannot be my task

to sit in judgment

over the conduct of a nation

which for many years

counted me among its citizens."

"It is perhaps futile

even to try to evaluate

its policies at a time

when it is so necessary to act."

"The crucial questions today are

how can we save mankind

and its cultural heritage?"

"How can we guard Europe

from further disaster?"

"Discontent breeds hatred."

"And hatred leads to acts of v*olence,

revolution,

and even w*r."

"Thus, we see how distress

and evil beget new distress and evil."

"If we are to resist

the powers that thr*aten

intellectual and individual freedom,

we must be very conscious of the fact

that freedom itself is at stake."

"We must realize

how much we owe to that freedom

which our forefathers won

through bitter struggle."

"Without such freedom,

there would have been no Shakespeare,

no Goethe,

no Newton,

no Faraday,

no Pasteur,

and no Lister."

Should we merely lament the fact

that we live in a time of tension,

danger, and want?

I think not.

Only when subjected

to peril and social upheaval,

do nations feel induced

to adopt progressive measures.

One can only hope that the present crisis

will lead to a better world.

One can only hope

that the present crisis

will lead to a better world.

[audience applauding]

[car engine starts]

[dramatic music playing]

[typewriter clacking]

[typewriter clacking]

The Institute will be located in Princeton

and will begin in the fall of 1933,

the School of Mathematics

headed by Professor Einstein.

[somber music playing]

[Einstein] I found Princeton lovely.

A wondrous little spot.

[Flexner] I consider that we are

extraordinarily fortunate

in being able to begin

with a man like Professor Einstein,

who is one

of the ranking scientists of all time.

[Einstein]

Into this small university town,

the chaotic voices of human strife

barely penetrate.

I am almost ashamed

to be living in such a place

whilst all the rest struggle and suffer.

[crowd cheering]

[announcer 1] h*tler continues to arm,

while suppressing the rights of all

whose ideas do not agree with his.

Jews, Catholics, liberals, Protestants,

and women who, under his regime,

have been reduced to medieval sl*very,

all stand aghast

as the thr*at of w*r again appears.

[Einstein] When asked why

I have given up my position in Germany,

I made this statement.

As long as I have any choice,

I will only stay in a country

where political liberty,

toleration, and equality is the rule.

I do feel that in America,

the most valuable thing in life

is possible.

The development of the individual

and his creative power.

[glass shatters]

[announcer 2]

The night of the broken glass.

Two hundred synagogues

and 7,500 shops are put to the torch.

Ninety Jews are m*rder*d,

hundreds injured,

thousands demeaned and spat upon.

BE CAREFUL, JEWS

26,000 Jewish men are arrested

and sent to concentration camps.

The visible destruction

matches the v*olence

that has been done

Germany's 250,000 remaining Jews.

[h*tler in German]

And never flag, never tire, never despair...

[announcer 2 in English]

Desperate and destitute,

they are pushed to the edge of existence.

[h*tler in German]

Long live the German people...

[announcer 2 in English]

Germany has turned down

a dark and sinister path

from which there is no return.

[crowd chanting, cheering in German]

[announcer 3]

Scientists at George Washington University

heard a report of startling significance.

Word has just come through from Germany

that uranium atom,

under neutron bombardment,

actually splits into two parts.

[announcer 3] To the scientists,

this dramatic news

brought a great sense of urgency.

[Einstein] A very small amount of mass

may be converted

into a very large amount of energy.

[announcer 4] m*llitary intelligence fear

that h*tler may have already taken

the first steps toward an atomic b*mb.

Energy released on that scale

sounds... rather worrying.

Science in its present state

makes it appear almost impossible

that we should ever succeed in so doing.

[sinister music playing]

[announcer 5] Conscious of the disaster,

which would inevitably follow

if n*zi Germany should be the first

to succeed in releasing atomic energy,

Dr. Einstein decided to write

a personal letter to the president

and stressed the urgent need for action

by the US government.

[Einstein] Sir,

some recent work,

which has been communicated to me,

leads me to expect

that the element uranium

may be turned into a new

and important source of energy.

This new phenomena would also lead

to the construction of bombs,

extremely powerful bombs of a new type.

In view of this situation,

you may think it desirable

to speed up the experimental work,

which is at present being carried on.

Yours, very truly, A. Einstein.

[breathes deeply]

[tense music playing]

Organized force can be opposed

only by organized force.

[thunder cracking]

[announcer 1]

n*zi troops have invaded Poland

by land and by air in undeclared w*r.

[announcer 2] h*tler's w*r machine

sweeps through Europe,

conquering the old enemy France.

[Churchill] We shall break up and derange

every effort which h*tler makes.

We shall strive to resist him

by land and sea.

He will find no peace, no rest, no parley.

[h*tler in German]

Mr. Churchill may be convinced

that Great Britain will win.

I doubt not for a second

that Germany will be the victor.

[crowd cheers]

[announcer 3] With the fall of Belgium,

her stockpiles

of the nuclear material uranium

are seized by the Nazis.

[announcer 4] Pearl Harbor,

our great Pacific outpost

in the Hawaiian islands,

is ruthlessly bombed

as Japan's perfidious declaration of w*r.

[Roosevelt]

No matter how long it may take us,

the American people

in their righteous might

will win through to absolute victory.

[crowd applauding, cheering]

[typewriter clacking]

E is equal MC squared.

The basic formula that unlocked

the secrets of the atom.

[typewriter clacking]

[typewriter clacking]

[g*ns f*ring]

[Einstein] It is important

that we be vividly aware

of the mass murders

which the Germans have committed

against the civilian populations

of the occupied countries.

The Germans are intent everywhere

on exterminating those which represent

a nation's independent spirit.

[announcer 5] In Norway,

Allied Forces deliver a devastating blow

to the n*zi nuclear program.

A series of raids

on a hydroelectric power plant

cuts off their source

to vital chemical supplies.

[announcer 6] D-Day. Over 150,000 troops,

carried by more than 5,000 vessels.

The largest amphibious invasion

in history.

The tide of the w*r is turning on Germany.

[g*ns f*ring]

[announcer 7] Allied Forces recover

a cache of secret n*zi files

that show that their atomic w*apon program

has failed.

[somber music playing]

[announcer 8] As the Allies advance

deeper into the European mainland,

the true horror

of h*tler's plan is revealed.

[announcer 9] Pictorial evidence

of the almost unprecedented crimes

perpetrated by the Nazis

at the Buchenwald concentration camp.

[announcer 10]

These bones were men, women, and children

sent to be exterminated.

[Einstein] The crime of the Germans

is truly the most abominable ever

to be recorded in the history

of so-called civilized nations.

[announcer 11] In the official report,

the Buchenwald Camp is termed

an extermination factory.

[crowd cheering]

[Einstein] They elected h*tler

after he made

his shameful intentions clear

beyond the possibility

of misunderstanding.

[in German] Hail to victory!

- [crowd chanting]

- [somber music playing]

[Einstein in English]

Since they massacred my Jewish brethren,

I will have nothing further to do

with Germans.

[f*ring]

[announcer 1] April 1945.

The Soviet Army launches

its final as*ault on h*tler's forces,

encircling Berlin

and closing in on the Fhrer's bunker.

[f*ring]

[f*ring]

Hopelessly defeated,

h*tler takes his own life

with a single g*nsh*t to the head.

- [g*n fires]

- [somber music playing]

[announcer 2] The w*r in Europe is won,

but US-led forces continue

their search for a decisive end

to the w*r with Japan.

- [man] Five, four, three, two, one.

- [speaking German]

[announcer]

After years of scientific endeavor,

the Manhattan Project

has delivered an atomic b*mb.

[somber music continues]

Alamogordo in the New Mexico desert.

The first atomic test.

It's a terrifying prelude

to the onslaught that awaits

the unsuspecting citizens of Hiroshima.

[pilot] Height approximately 32,000 feet.

Course, 265 degrees magnetic.

Air speed, 250 knots.

Am approaching target area.

Cloud cover less than three-tens

at all altitudes.

Immediate target area clear.

[pilot speaking indistinctly]

- [pilot speaks indistinctly]

- [tense music playing]

[children laughing]

[film rolling]

[melancholic music playing]

[Truman] A short time ago,

an American airplane

dropped one b*mb on Hiroshima.

What has been done

is the greatest achievement

of organized science in history.

[clock ticking]

[melancholic music continues]

[announcer] The first atomic b*mb heralded

the dawn of a troubling new era.

In a single stroke,

the Japanese city of Hiroshima

and some 70,000 men, women, and children

were annihilated.

In the years since,

that momentous event

has come under increasing scrutiny.

Was the b*mb a price

worth paying for peace?

[typewriter clacking]

[melancholic music continues]

[Hara] My dear Professor.

At present,

the Japanese people are keenly conscious

of their own responsibility

for the last w*r.

And are showing

sincere repentance for their crime.

[tense music playing]

Recently, years since

the termination of the w*r,

the Japanese people

have come for the first time

face-to-face with the annihilating effects

of an atomic b*mb.

[gulps, inhales]

And now, we ask you, Professor Einstein,

why science,

whose primary aim is but to serve

the welfare and happiness of mankind,

should have been instrumental

in producing such horrible results?

[gasps]

I do not consider myself the father

of the release of atomic energy.

My part in it was quite indirect.

In view of the fact

that you played an important role

in the production of the atomic bombs?

My sole contribution was that in 1905,

I established the relationship

between mass and energy.

I believed only that atomic energy

was theoretically possible.

I did not, in fact,

foresee that atomic energy

would be released in my time.

[sighs]

[typewriter clacking]

[typewriter clacking]

[typewriter clacking]

[hesitates]

I made one great mistake in my life.

When I signed that letter

to President Roosevelt.

The likelihood that the Germans

were working on the same problem

with every prospect of success

forced me to take this step.

[b*mb explodes]

[melancholic music playing]

[Einstein] Had I known

that the Germans would not succeed

in producing an atomic b*mb,

I would not have taken part

in opening that Pandora's box.

I never would have lifted a finger.

[exhales]

Before the raid on Hiroshima,

leading physicists

urged the w*r Department

not to use the b*mb

against defenseless women and children.

[tense music playing]

Had we shown other nations

the test expl*si*n of New Mexico,

we could have used it

to make proposals for world order.

To end w*r.

The physicists who participated in forging

the most formidable

and dangerous w*apon of all time

are harassed

by an equal feeling of responsibility,

not to say guilt.

[crowd cheering]

We delivered this w*apon into the hands

of the Americans and the British people

as trustees of the whole mankind,

as fighters for peace and liberty.

But so far,

we fail to see any guarantee of peace

or the freedoms

that were promised to the nations.

[melancholic music playing]

The situation calls

for a courageous effort.

For a radical change in our whole attitude

in the entire political concept.

Otherwise,

human civilization will be doomed.

The w*r is won.

The peace is not.

[film rolling]

[announcer 1]

President Truman's dramatic announcement

that Russia has created

an atomic expl*si*n

sends reporters racing

for Flushing Meadow,

where Russia's Vyshinsky

arrives to address the United Nations.

Mr. Vyshinsky, have you got any statement...

- Please, excuse me.

- Does Russia have the atomic b*mb?

[b*mb exploding]

[announcer 2] A cr*ck, a blast.

The release of deadly radioactive rain.

And in a matter of seconds,

downtown New York would be a massive ruin.

[typewriter clacking]

Our country is at w*r.

A w*r declared against us

by the rulers of international communism.

[announcer 3] This constitutes

the greatest crisis

in the history of America.

[announcer 4] There are signs

that the Kremlin is already intensifying

its use of another w*apon.

Communist propaganda.

We are in the midst

of a continuing struggle

for the minds of men.

[sighs]

The German calamity

of years ago repeats itself.

People act fierce without resistance

and align themselves

with the forces of evil.

How long should we tolerate politicians

hungry for power or trying to gain

political advantage in such a way?

[tense music playing]

It is strange that science,

which in the old days seemed harmless,

should have evolved into a nightmare

that causes everyone to tremble.

- [b*mb exploding]

- [clock ticking]

One thing I have learned in a long life

is that all our science

measured against reality is childlike.

And yet,

it is the most precious thing we have.

Science is not,

and never will be, a closed book.

Every important advance

brings new questions.

But the years

of anxious searching in the dark

and the final emergence into the light,

only those who have experienced it

can understand.

We must not condemn man

because his conquest

of the forces of nature

are being exploited

for destructive purposes.

Rather, the fate of mankind

hinges entirely upon

man's moral development.

[music ends]

[exhales, inhales]

[melancholic music playing]

[typewriter clacking]

[clock ticking]

[typewriter clacking]

[indistinct chatter]

[Einstein] Dear posterity,

if you have not become more just

or peaceful and generally more rational

than we are or were,

then may the devil take you.

I am, or was,

your Albert Einstein.

[film rolling, stops]

[instrumental music playing]

[instrumental music intensifies]

[instrumental music ends]
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