Albert Einstein The Menace Of Mass Destruction Hot Full Speech __exclusive__ — Free Access

: The establishment of a supra-national judicial and executive body empowered to decide questions of international security.

Later thinkers, from Bertrand Russell to Carl Sagan, echoed Einstein’s themes. Russell, co-author of the Russell-Einstein Manifesto (1955, written just before Einstein’s death), extended the argument to include thermonuclear weapons. Sagan’s concept of “nuclear winter” provided scientific grounding for Einstein’s intuition that even a “limited” nuclear war could threaten all of humanity. : The establishment of a supra-national judicial and

Einstein proposed a "supranational judicial and executive body" to manage international safety, rather than relying on national arms. The Need for Abolition: Searching for leads us

Einstein's primary solution was the creation of a "supra-national judicial and executive body" (a world government) to manage global security and replace "mutual fear and distrust" with loyal cooperation. The Need for Abolition: from Bertrand Russell to Carl Sagan

Searching for leads us to a rare recording (available on academic archives like AtomicHeritage.org and the Einstein Papers Project). You can hear his voice—thick German accent, weary, slow, almost trembling.

The “menace of mass destruction” became a — often in ways Einstein would find disturbing.

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