Character sheet Name: Jak Faction: Fiends Level: 18
Subject: Actual Fallout Stuff Fri Jul 27, 2018 5:54 pm
So I've been doing some research on nuclear war stuff, including the stuff that most likely directly or indirectly inspired Fallout, and I found this image. A real life GECK (kinda) presented in that same kitschy '50s aesthetic we all know and love! Was wondering if people knew about any other stuff of this nature and felt like posting?
_________________ "It's 106 miles to Arroyo, we've got a full fusion cell, half a pack of RadAway, it's midnight, and I'm wearing a 50 year old Vault 13 jumpsuit. Let's hit it."
DonEsteban
Posts : 239 Join date : 2018-02-07 Age : 32 Location : Germany
The kit was part of an exhibition travelling around America in 1951 and '52 called the Alert America Convoy, getting people used to the idea of the possibilities of nuclear attack. The exhibition mainly consisted of pamphlets explaining what to do in the event of nuclear war, while the kit shown here would be made up of survivalist equipment, stuff for building bunkers, stockpiled food and the like. It was also a big recruitment initiative to get, and I quote "fifteen to twenty million Amerians to volunteer for training in one of the specialised civil defence services that would be required in the event of a nuclear attack." (Guy Oakes, "The Cold War Conception of Nuclear Reality: Mobilising the American Imagination for Nuclear War in the 1950’s" (p.345)
The thing was, people couldn't really conceive of the idea of nuclear war at this point. There were no post-apocalyptic movies, people didn't know what atomic bombs actually did etc. So the government presented nuclear war as an event that the populace could prepare for and ultimately manage. It was depicted as a kind of, more severe Blitz. This was obviously all absurd. It was like the dumb instruction to kids to "duck and cover", but it was important to present to the world, and especially the USSR, an American populace that would remain steadfast and prepared in the face of nuclear attack. If you stripped nuclear war down to consumable basic tasks, like this Nuclear War Survival Kit, you made it appear manageable, therefore preventing mass panic and paranoia when the nuclear war did occur.
Another fun detail I discovered was this instruction for the police in the event of nuclear war, to "shoot[...] down survivors whose self-control had snapped under the stresses of nuclear attack." So if you got noticeably hysterical about the idea of nuclear war killing you, the police would kill you anyway. I don't know why but I found this blackly comic and Fallout-y.
Here's the convoy: https://i.servimg.com/u/f40/19/60/28/14/aatrk310.jpg
_________________ "It's 106 miles to Arroyo, we've got a full fusion cell, half a pack of RadAway, it's midnight, and I'm wearing a 50 year old Vault 13 jumpsuit. Let's hit it."
DonEsteban
Posts : 239 Join date : 2018-02-07 Age : 32 Location : Germany
Thank you good sir for explaining that to me, learned something new today
ahyuser001
Posts : 689 Join date : 2018-01-28
Character sheet Name: Character Faction: Level:
Subject: Re: Actual Fallout Stuff Sat Jul 28, 2018 1:40 pm
Wow this is actually an interesting piece of information. Thank you kindly.
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Will there be enough Dakka?
Visible Earth
Posts : 310 Join date : 2016-10-24
Character sheet Name: Jak Faction: Fiends Level: 18
Subject: Re: Actual Fallout Stuff Sat Jul 28, 2018 4:34 pm
Some more stuff. And for those in the tl;dr crowd, Vault-Tec would've look after you better than the '50s American government.
So throughout the 1950s (1954-61) America performed an annual nuclear war drill throughout several cities called "Operation Alert" where people, both in managerial positions and general employees, were taught what they had to do in the case of nuclear war. It's your typical natural disaster drill stuff: evacuate the city, have police and emergency services maintain order, protect government officials etc.
To prove my point, here's a newsreel presenting the scope of the drill. Times Square was cleared during it, for example, so this was a pretty big operation:
Here's the thing though, the government didn't actually have any plans to protect the American people. To quote Guy Oakes again, (p.347) “Plans to insure the continuity of government were not based on the same principles that governed the civil defence program for the protection of the American people [...] The basic assumption of the national civil defence program was self-protection. Ultimately, every American family was responsible for its own survival. Thus the state was not prepared to spend federal revenues in order to secure the survival of the public.”
We're talking Enclave-level disregard for human life here, in the sense that the government had no plan to actually protect its citizens. Government officials were the priority. The existence of Vault-Tec's non-experimental vaults in Fallout makes the Enclave government in Fallout more humane than the government of the '50s. Operation Alert was yet another publicity stunt. One that involved thousands of volunteers and millions of participants, but a well-publicised publicity stunt nonetheless, as it was to show the Soviets that the American people were "prepared" for World War III. I also really need to stress that nuclear war at this time was very much on the table. America's lead on nuclear weapon development over the Soviets made the prospect of using atomic bombs a very real option. To give some perspective, the Doomsday Clock bulletin placed 1953 at two minutes to midnight. The next big spike was in the 1980s when the clock was three minutes to midnight in 1984. https://thebulletin.org/doomsday-clock/past-announcements/ ( https://thebulletin.org/sites/default/files/1953%20Clock%20Statement%201.pdf ) (so aside from, ahem, 2018, 1953 was the closest we ever came to nuclear war).
The problem for the American government was that a nuclear war would actually bring about a paradox in the government's official stance on the Cold War. The point of nuclear war was that America was willing to risk it to protect American freedoms against Soviet totalitarianism. But if a nuclear war came about, those freedoms would have to be rescinded to maintain order. So the system that was supposed to protect American freedoms would result in turning America into a totalitarian state. As President Eisenhower relented in a cabinet meeting, June 1955, "No longer would only the armed services bear the brunt of war. Millions of homeless people would have to be sustained and helped and fed in soup kitchens and, compared with this responsibility, the objective of indemnifying property loss seemed rather insignificant. People will be lucky if their losses are only property — and not their own lives."
And finally, something that probably won't come as much of a surprise to people here, but Operation Alert wouldn't have actually worked. With each drill exercised it became clearer to both the Cabinet and Eisenhower that the operations practised by the drill made too many presuppositions. In that same June 1955 cabinet meeting, Eisenhower said, "All the ordinary processes by which we run this country will simply not work under the circumstances we have assumed here. Our great fundamental problem will be how to mobilise what is left of 165 million people and win a war." For example, how do you send the fire brigade around to put out fires when the roads don't exist, let alone a working fire service?
To end on a fun little Fallout-y bow, Operation Alert, the Alert America Convoy...all of that was to push the idea that the American way of life, specifically of this kind, could be preserved after a nuclear war: http://atlantablackstar.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/white-america-1-e1448033371744.jpg
I'll leave it on that note as I gots stuff to do, but I'd be up for discussing this more if people are interested. And again, feel free to post your own facts and thoughts and whatnot.
EDIT: New Post thing: Hey everyone, meet Miss Miss Atomic Bomb.
In 1952 during Atomic Age fever, Las Vegas decided to combine the two most famous things about the city with a pageant, mixing showgirls and atomic bombs. The showgirl depicted here, Lee A. Merlin was crowned Miss Atomic Bomb in 1957 as the last nuclear pinup showgirl. I guess popular tastes for atomic bomb testings began to dissipate after people became more aware of their environmental and health hazards. Anyway, here are some more thorough details about the pageant: http://www.historybyzim.com/2013/03/miss-atomic-bomb/Honestly finding out stuff like this really gives you an idea of how thorough the Fallout series has been in capturing this period in its aesthetic and history.
It'd be nice if I could flag the fact the fact that I'm making a new post but NEVERMIND!
I've had this tab open the last couple days and wanted to get rid of it, so say hello to your very own FALLOUT SHELTER! No not that kind of Shelter, I mean the one that will actually protect you from radioactive fallout. Whether you'd want to keep living in an irradiated world where the sun is literally hidden by black clouds for months on end is up to you, but nonetheless here it is!
I mentioned pamphlets earlier being distributed by Civil Defence and didn't want to disappoint. There's just something so wonderful about some government guys in the 1950s explaining how to not die in the very real event of nuclear war. Enjoy!
https://www.slideshare.net/JTRourke/mp-15fam1959
_________________ "It's 106 miles to Arroyo, we've got a full fusion cell, half a pack of RadAway, it's midnight, and I'm wearing a 50 year old Vault 13 jumpsuit. Let's hit it."