As you may know, I don’t always write ‘I love you baby’. When it comes to a particular subject I want to know everything about it. “It was quite a slog collecting the lyrics. McCluskey, then a gawky 20 year-old peeking out through spirals of curly hair, was at Humphrey’s house, where the duo, who had met in primary school in Meols, wrote much of their early material. The song itself had come together relatively quickly. It’s about what happened – and how it happened.” “The song is not in any way, shape or form a celebration,” McCluskey continues. But one thing you cannot deny is that it was an absolute atrocious thing to do. There are so many questions that hang over the dropping of the bomb. So many contradictions and different points of view as to whether the Japanese would have surrendered because the Russians were about to come into the war… the dropping of the bomb was actually to demonstrate to the Russians what the Americans could do.
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He carried with him a folder of lyrics ideas and had spent time reading up on the subject in Liverpool’s grand old Central Library on William Brown Street. McCluskey had long intended writing about the dawn of the atomic age. The pilot, Paul Tibbets, always felt that he had done the right thing.”
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“And of course, there is no more greater moral dilemma than whether you should drop an atomic bomb that kills 140,000 people in the hope that it might save five million. “I’m not a black and white person: it’s always fascinated me…you are actively encouraged to do things in a time of war that would get you locked up for.
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“I’ve been fascinated – but not in a celebratory way – about the moral dilemmas that occur in warfare. “I’ve always had an ambivalence regarding the dropping of the bomb,” says McCluskey a history nerd and World War 2 buff going back to his adolescence on the Wirral.