Joan Baez, Graham Nash, Sean Ono Lennon, Allison Russell, Auli’i Cravalho and Josh Gad are all dozens of prominent figures in the film, television, music, music and related industries who have signed open letters about warnings signed on Wednesday (Wednesday, August 6). The New York Times and type.
In the title “No more Hiroshima, No more Nagasaki: Future Cultural Leaders Without Nuclear Weapons,” the letter begins with: “Eighty years ago, atomic bombs destroyed Hiroshima and Nagasaki, killing thousands, killing hundreds of thousands, and changing the risk of nuclear weapons. In nuclear-weaponed areas, even if Exceed nuclear weapon.
“The only treaty that limits the number of nuclear weapons in the world will expire in six months. Emerging technologies and AI pose new unknown risks to already complex systems. On the premise of absurdity, we will be trapped in a ridiculous and dangerous new weapons race, and the annihilation that threatens to threaten keeps us safe. But ending the community is not a creative community.
The letter includes using their voice, platform, leadership and storytelling expertise to draw attention to the dangers posed by nuclear weapons and help people imagine a future without them.
Other actors and creatives who signed the letter include Rosanna Arquette, Lawrence Bender, Kathryn Bigelow, Yvette Nicole Brown, James Cameron, Alan Cumming, Michael Douglas, Walton Goggins, Topher Grace, Clark Gregg, Harry Hamlin, Matthew Modine, Julianne Moore, Olivia Munn, Lisa Rinna, Martin Sheen, George Takei, Emma Thompson and Lily Tomlin.
Many of these people have been anti-nuclear activists for decades. Nash performs and helps organize No nuclear weapons: The Muse of the Nuclear-free Future at Madison Square Garden 1979. Douglas produced and starred in Chinese Syndromea nuclear-themed thriller released in the same year.
The statement was endorsed by Governors Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and was endorsed by Ernest J. Moniz, former U.S. Secretary of Energy and Chief Executive Officer and Chief Chairman of the Nuclear Threat Initiative (NTI). Monitz highlighted the growing nuclear risks today, noting: “The possibility of re-using nuclear weapons in accidents or intentional ways is rising. We can attack towards disasters, or we can come together behind different paths to eliminate the nuclear threat.”
Follow Me