SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : View from the Center and Left -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Alex MG who wrote (497666)8/27/2022 6:32:21 PM
From: Wharf Rat  Respond to of 542043
 
I was a freshman at Cal. I foolishly had made plans about getting home on the Peninsula, cuz SF and the Bay Bridge would be gone. I was gonna break the window of a bike shop a few blocks from where I was living, bike down to San Jose, and then back up the Peninsula. I didn't have a plan to deal with radiation, tho.



To: Alex MG who wrote (497666)8/27/2022 8:08:48 PM
From: Elroy Jetson3 Recommendations

Recommended By
cosmicforce
koan
ralfph

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 542043
 
I was in First Grade, age 7, and I remember the Cuban Missile Crisis specifically because we weren't allowed to watch TV - although I noticed the TV was still hot when I got home from school.

My Mom was trying really hard to tell my sister and I that everything was absolutely normal, which it would have been if she wasn't saying that, and my Dad was distraught and called his brother in law who was the CEO of a defense contractor. Everything my Uncle told him made my Dad more upset and he left the phone wiping his eyes.

Less than a month later my Aunt and Uncle and cousins joined us for Thanksgiving.

My Dad asked my Uncle Dick, "Are we were safe in Orinda (northern California) if Russian nuclear weapons hit Alameda and Concord?" Dick tool out his slide rule and after considering the terrain, the distance and other factors matter of factly announced, "It would depend on the weather - You'll be alright on a clear day but the town will be incinerated if it the weather is overcast - "Blast reflection," he noted. "There's no escaping blast reflection."

My Dad was disconsolate. Dick reassured him, "Don't worry, Chuck this isn't the sort of thing you'd want to survive - and this is very unlikely to happen. It's in no one's best interest."

That made sense to me, but my Dad and Mom had to go to their bedroom for 20 minutes.

I liked Uncle Dick. He was always very sensible. I was the cynical child, disdainful of our "duck and cover" trips to the school hallway while the teachers closed the curtains, aluminized silver facing the outdoors "to reflect the blast wave".

"Why are they closing the curtains," I asked, "Our whole school would be burned up in seconds? Those curtains won't work!" Some girls cried as the teacher glared at me, and told me to cover my head with my hands as we sat with our backs to the wall.
.

At the beginning of Second Grade on November 22 I had just checked a kickball out of the ball locker. A teacher walked out and canceled recess. — I was not happy.

When we filed back in some "kids in the know" were crying and the teacher told us someone had shot the President In Texas. I raised my hand and asked, "Can we could go back to recess now?"

"No," she said somberly, "School is closing early today and those who walk to school can go home now."

I guess that was almost as good as recess. I walked home to my Mom and my little sister and Mom wanted to know why I was home early. "They closed school early today because of the President:, I said. "Oh that," she replied, "Why would they send you home early for that?" "I dunno," I said. "Well, why don't you take your sister and go play in the backyard?"

Once outside, I could see my Mom turning on the TV. No TV before dinner though. But I heard my Dad turn on the TV again after we went to bed.

Grown-ups sure had a lot of strange things going on before I was 8 and they didn't want us to know much about it.



To: Alex MG who wrote (497666)8/27/2022 9:26:58 PM
From: koan  Respond to of 542043
 
I was 22 and in college and remember it well.

It was the most scared I have ever been!!

What if Russia did not blink and stop, was on everyone's mind.

Really fucking scary!!

<

Being born in 1961 I have no memories of the Cuban missile crisis.