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QAA Podcast

Trickle Down Episode 7: How To Be Afraid (Part 1) Sample

QAA Podcast

Julian Feeld, Travis View & Jake Rockatansky

News

4.54.4K Ratings

🗓️ 9 June 2022

⏱️ 10 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In the early fifties, the United government had to reckon with the escalating nuclear arms race. The cold war meant that ascendant rival superpowers were amassing the tools of apocalypse. Internal committees and think tanks decided that they had to avoid the American people becoming terrified, paralyzed, and panicked about the bomb. The solution? Make people afraid. Citizens should fear the bomb. But they shouldn’t lose their heads. Fear is manageable. Panic is not. The Federal Civil Defense Administration organized messaging and educational campaigns to show how people could defeat potential nuclear destruction with can do American spirit. Officials hoped to fine tune nuclear anxiety, so it never lapsed into apathy or terror. This is a 10-part series brought to you by the QAA podcast. To get access to all upcoming episodes of Trickle Down as well as a new premium QAA episode every week, go sign up for $5 a month at patreon.com/qanonanonymous Written by Travis View. Theme by Nick Sena (https://nicksenamusic.com). Additional music by Pontus Berghe and Nick Sena. Editing by Corey Klotz. REFERENCES: Chernus, Ira (2002) Eisenhower’s Atoms For Peace Gladdis, John Lewis (2005) The Cold War: A New History Masco, Jospeh (2014) The Theater of Operations: National Security Affect from the Cold War to the War on Terror Oakes, Guy (1994) The Imaginary War: Civil Defense and American Cold War Culture Osgood, Kenneth (2006) Total Cold War: Eisenhower's Secret Propaganda Battle at Home and Abroad Starck, Kathleen (2010) Between Fear and Freedom: Cultural Representations of the Cold War Alert America!, Google Arts & Culture https://artsandculture.google.com/story/alert-america-u-s-national-archives/awVBMrc3sxGJLg?hl=en

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

The 1950s, the JC Penning Department's store was a consumer's paradise.

0:12.9

From the endless sales floor, when could acquire clothes, furniture, musical instruments, toys,

0:18.4

and even rifles.

0:19.4

But among the selection of home goods, shoppers might also find a collection of intentionally

0:24.6

damaged JC Penning mannequins.

0:26.9

They had recently survived a blast from the atomic bomb.

0:30.8

After they were blasted at the Nevada Test Site, the government's laboratory for nuclear

0:34.5

weapons, they went on a tour from the store to the store.

0:37.9

They were charged and their clothing was tattered.

0:40.0

And they were accompanied by a sign encouraging the shoppers to see themselves and the lifeless

0:44.4

plastic.

0:45.6

These mannequins could have been live people.

0:47.8

In fact, they could have been you.

0:49.8

Unlike the rest of the mannequins in the store, they were not on display in order to

0:53.4

sell fashion.

0:57.4

Instead, they sold an important message that was crafted by early Cold War policy makers.

0:59.8

Namely, the Soviets could strike at any time.

1:02.4

The bomb was something to fear.

1:04.2

But as evidenced by the fact that the mannequins were damaged but not destroyed, the bomb was

1:08.4

survivable.

1:09.4

So there's no reason to lose your mind when contemplating the awesome power of the

1:13.2

aim bomb.

...

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