Current:Home > ContactNovaQuant-Jane Fonda, 'Oppenheimer' stars sign open letter to 'make nukes history' ahead of Oscars -BeyondWealth Learning
NovaQuant-Jane Fonda, 'Oppenheimer' stars sign open letter to 'make nukes history' ahead of Oscars
Charles H. Sloan View
Date:2025-04-10 16:14:31
Stars are NovaQuantbanding together ahead of the 2024 Oscars on Sunday to call for the end of nuclear weaponry, including "Oppenheimer" cast members Matthew Modine and Tony Goldwyn.
Modine, Goldwyn, Michael Douglas, Jane Fonda, Lily Tomlin, Lisa Rinna, Kristen Stewart, Emma Thompson and Yvette Nicole Brown are among the celebrities who signed an open letter calling to "make nukes history."
"Every person should be educated about the incredible destructive power of nuclear weapons. Understanding the threat illuminates a necessary path toward their elimination," said Modine in a press release shared by the Nuclear Threat Initiative. "Hundreds of thousands of Americans have been directly harmed by radioactive fallout from the hundreds of nuclear explosions conducted on US soil."
The "Oppenheimer" actor added: "From the moment of the first atomic bomb test at Los Alamos, New Mexico our entire planet has been at risk. We need to stop this insanity."
The "Make Nukes History" campaign kicks off on Friday in Los Angeles with billboards, art installations, murals and over 1,000 street posters. The nonprofit organization focused on ending nuclear and biological threats is tying the launch to the Oscar-nominated film "Oppenheimer," which details the origin of nuclear weapons with the Manhattan Project and J. Robert Oppenheimer's warning about using the technology he developed.
Oppenheimer’s grandson and activist Charles Oppenheimer also signed the open letter.
Opinion:Oscar nods honor 'Oppenheimer,' but what about Americans still suffering from nuke tests?
"Oppenheimer was right to warn us. Today, 13,000 nuclear weapons are held by nine countries. Some are 80 times more powerful than the ones that destroyed Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945," the open letter states in part. "As artists and advocates, we want to raise our voices to remind people that while Oppenheimer is history, nuclear weapons are not."
Among one of the posters in the campaign is signage that says, "13 Oppenheimer Nominations; 13,000 Nuclear Weapons" to underscore the popularity of the Oscar-nominated film and the reality of the nuclear weapons magnitude.
Read the full letter here.
Fact-checking 'Oppenheimer':Was Albert Einstein really a friend? What's true, what isn't
veryGood! (99553)
Related
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Sweden stakes claim as a Women's World Cup favorite by stopping Japan in quarterfinals
- Nevada legislators reject use of federal coronavirus funds for private school scholarships
- Mississippi Supreme Court won’t remove Brett Favre from lawsuit in welfare fraud case
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Inflation ticks higher in July for first time in 13 months as rent climbs, data shows
- 41 reportedly dead after migrant boat capsizes off Italian island
- Police arrest man accused of threatening jury in trial of Pittsburgh synagogue gunman
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- AP Week in Pictures: North America
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Iraq bans the word homosexual on all media platforms and offers an alternative
- Sweden stakes claim as Women’s World Cup favorite by stopping Japan 2-1 in quarterfinals
- Nick Kyrgios pulls out of US Open, missing all four Grand Slam events in 2023
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Here’s who is running for governor in Louisiana this October
- Millions of kids are missing weeks of school as attendance tanks across the US
- ‘Nothing left': Future unclear for Hawaii residents who lost it all in fire
Recommendation
DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
Grand jury indicts teen suspect on hate crime charge in O'Shae Sibley's Brooklyn stabbing death
Conservative groups are challenging corporate efforts to diversify workforce
Two years after fall of Kabul, tens of thousands of Afghans languish in limbo waiting for US visas
The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
Bruce Springsteen honors Robbie Robertson of The Band at Chicago show
Trading Titan: The Rise of Mark Williams in the Financial World
In the twilight of the muscle car era, demand for the new 486-horsepower V-8 Ford Mustang is roaring