EssaysForStudent.com - Free Essays, Term Papers & Book Notes
Search

The Ultimate Explosion - Atomic Bomb World War 2

Page 1 of 2

        

        In my opinion, the atomic bomb was the reason the Second World War ended, therefore, it saved many lives. Imagine how many lives would have been lost if the war had continued. Millions of lives had already been lost, and by dropping atomic bombs, less than 130,000 more were lost, and this eventually led to the surrender of Japan and the end of the war. Since then, nuclear weapons have not been used, although they have been used as threats or their use has been considered several times since World War II.

        I don’t think anybody has really used nuclear weapons since then, mostly because we were clever enough to use them first, but now that WW2 is over, no army wants to be attacked like that again, so we all decided not to attack that way either. That was a very huge explosion and it could make a huge impact on any war.

        Speaking of huge explosions, there was a time when dynamite was the most powerful explosive in the world. The human search for the ultimate explosion has seemed to end a few times, but there is always a new explosion to be found. The search has continued and continued and each time the discoveries are even deadlier. The search for a new explosion will never cease until it is too late. The man who discovered gun powder set his hut on fire, and only then did he realize that experiment should never be performed again, and yet it was. Scientists have continued the search for the ultimate explosion, and an atomic bomb was not enough. They continued and discovered the hydrogen bomb. This is why I say that the search will never end until it is too late. Something, like the gun powder incident, could go wrong and cause even more damage than the atomic bomb, and only then will people decide to stop the searching for the ultimate explosion, until someone picks up the search again.

Download as (for upgraded members)  txt (1.8 Kb)   pdf (46.4 Kb)   docx (8.4 Kb)  
Continue for 1 more page »