Skip to main content

Collin Peterson votes for more nukes

Thursday night Rep. Collin Peterson voted with Republicans to give Donald Trump $65 million more for nuclear bombs. Although most Democrats voted for an ammendment by California Representative Barbara Lee to not fund the new nuclear weapons program, Peterson voted against the Lee amendment.

The Lee ammendment was an attempt to stop the United State from building an arsenal of so called “usable” nuclear bombs which are often called mini-nukes. These so-called mini-nukes are a number of times more powerful than the bomb the U.S. dropped on Hiroshima Japan on August 6, 1945. That bomb, which was not only small but considered inefficient, killed between 70,000 and 80,000 people immediately. It wounded another 70,000, many of whom were terribly burned and died later.

Hiroshima Japan after a "small" and "usable" nuclear bomb
was dropped on the city in 1945
Thanks to Wikipedia
The bombs Congressman Peterson and his Republican colleagues voted for are not only larger but more “efficient” than the Hiroshima bomb. That is to say they will kill far more people. 

They are not small. They not mini. They are not “usable”. They are an atrocity and an affront to civilization.

Starting a bomb building program at a time when the United States claims to be seeking to eliminate nuclear bombs from Korea and Iran is the height of hypocrisy. How can we, the only country to ever use a nuclear bomb, expect them to disaem?

"Spending $65 million on a low-yield nuclear weapon – with unprecedented submarine-launch capability – heightens the risk of nuclear war," Barbara Lee said after her mmendment failed. "We should be de-escalating tensions with our allies, not provoking a new nuclear arms race.”

Lee wanted the money for the bomb program to be spent on halting the spread of nuclear weapons around the world.

"Given the instability in the world and in this White House, provoking nuclear brinksmanship is beyond reckless. Congress should be building peace and diplomacy, not inviting a miscalculation with nuclear consequences,” Lee told the on-line news source Common Dreams.

70,000 people were injured when the small nuclear
bomb was dropped on Hiroshima. Many were burned
and died later from complications or radiation sickness.
Photo from Wikipedia
Please call Collin Peterson at 202-225-2165 and tell him you are horrified at his reckless vote.


You can read more about this at (via tiny url) Common Dreams https://tinyurl.com/y8pzvkjq

Comments

  1. Peterson thinks he has a get out of primary free card by pandering to his big corporate donors and the ignorance of his district. So far it is hard to argue with his success at representing the corporations who are not centered in our district; but the winds may change on his quisling like nature or his arm gets tired from holding his finger in the air to check the direction of that wind. He is such a tool.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

70 years of regenerative and organic research

This was published in The Land earlier this year. - Tim By Tim King The Land Correspondent Kutztown, PA, Rodale Institute, which is headquartered on its seventy year old 333 acre research and education farm near here, has opened its Organic Crop Consulting Services based at its Rodale Institute Midwest Organic Center near Marion Iowa. The Land talked to Dr. Andrew Smith, Rodale’s Chief Scientist and Chief Operating Officer, about Rodale’s expanded services in Iowa and about organic and regenerative agriculture in general. Smith is a former organic farmer and Peace Corps volunteer. The Land: Can you tell me about the Rodale Institute? Smith: We are a nonprofit research and education institution, in operation since 1947, headquartered on our farm near Kutztown Pennsylvania. We also operate six other sites in Pennsylvania, Iowa, Georgia, and California. Rodale Institute aims to grow the regenerative organic movement through research, farmer training, and consumer education. On our si...

Senator Gazelka: Prepare for End Times

Review by John King “Marketplace Ministers are part of how the Lord will reach the peoples of the earth in these last days.” Author Paul Gazelka wrote this astonishing sentence near the conclusion of his 2003 book, Marketplace Ministers , but it is a good place to start here because it so neatly encapsulates the message of the book which is that business people, by spreading the Gospel, are in a unique position to prepare us, for the end of the world.   Gazelka, an insurance salesman in Baxter, Minnesota, devotes chapters one through four to the story of his religious calling and how he came to adopt the “marketplace” as his personal ministry.  He goes to some length, relying in part on the “Fivefold Path” from Ephesians to convince the reader that the marketplace is a legitimate pulpit to spread the Word.  The remainder of the book, using personal anecdotes and biblical passages, he explains how a marketplace ministry would function and what its usefulness w...

Let us all walk in the foot steps of John Lewis

By John King In Selma, Alabama, on Sunday, March 7, 1965, John Lewis, standing in the lead of a long line of marchers, looked down from the crest of The Edmund Pettus Bridge at the line of police armed with clubs, whips and truncheons and said, “I am going to die here.” Lewis intended to lead the marchers from Selma to the capital Montgomery, to demand access to voting for Black people in Alabama. Sheriff Jim Clark lowered his gas mask and led the deputies, some on horseback and some on foot, into the line of marchers. Under swinging clubs and hooves trampling, Lewis was the first to go down. Women and children were not spared. Choking and blinded by tear gas, they were struck by clubs and truncheons wrapped with barbed wire. Lewis, with a fractured skull and a severe concussion, almost did die. The nearby Good Samaritan Hospital did not have enough beds to care for the injured marchers. A nation watched in horror as news footage of that bloody day appeared on T...