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These Are Still Nuclear Times
Historian Henry Richard Maar III for Nuclear Times: “The entwined history of arms control and peace activism should remind us—we can stop and turn the clock back.”
Nuclear Times is the magazine for nuclear disarmament. Coming in print in 2026.
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Historian Henry Richard Maar III for Nuclear Times: “The entwined history of arms control and peace activism should remind us—we can stop and turn the clock back.”
Art
Nuclear Times is launching Art for Disarmament. A new series celebrating the myriad contributions of artists and the arts to nuclear disarmament.
The Nuclear Age at 80
Greg Mitchell shows that “F**ing Up” civilians was the grotesque point of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki.
The Nuclear Age at 80
Stephen Herzog makes the case for the NPT. “I believe that for the sake of humanity’s future, the tragedies of the atomic bombings must remain a stark and unmistakable warning, not a precedent.”
The Nuclear Age at 80
Masako Toki argues that Japan must reject deterrence and embrace the moral clarity of the hibakusha.
The Nuclear Age at 80
For nearly a decade, the survivors of the A-bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were discriminated against, ignored, barred from speaking out or seeking damages. From the ashes, they rose to fight for disarmament and demand “No More Hibakusha.”
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Peace advocate Margaret Engel argues that while Gen Z faces paralyzing existential dread over nuclear annihilation and climate crisis, revitalizing the Nuclear Times can make disarmament feel urgent and personal through authentic storytelling that reaches beyond traditional activist circles.
The world is closer to nuclear war than any time since the Cuban Missile Crisis. We are relaunching the Nuclear Times in order to end them.