The documents said a nuclear conflict would result in the loss of three-quarters of tea stocks.
On a more serious (but unsurprising) note one paper from April 1955 said: "The advent of thermonuclear weapons... has presented us with a new and much more difficult set of food defence problems." The aim was to be "completely ready to maintain supplies of food to the people of these islands, sufficient in volume to keep them in good heart and health from the onset of a thermonuclear attack on this country". "It has become increasingly clear that the severity of the attack which the enemy could launch would produce a catastrophe in the face of which past measures would be fatally deficient," the document added.
Or to put it more sincerely and crudely “If the Bomb drops, we’re screwed......”
7 comments:
Well, as long as the water is not polluted.
Recently I found a newspaper article from the 50s. Same topic. 'Experts' seriously swaggering about 'what happens, if ...'
It reads like a satire.
Ah, come on, Jams, let's have a tea.
How typically British to mention tea ;-)
Very true Cherie!
On the other hand I'm sure the plutonium will adda bit of a tang Sean!
Well, life wouldn't be worth living anyway if I couldn't have my cup of tea.
The living would envy the dead Liz!
"Screwed" is a generic term, but "tealess" is a precise one and should instill terror in the reader's mind ;-)
Snoopy life would just nt be worth living without a nice cuppa!
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