Towards the end of World War II, World War II was not only the end of a long and hard-fought battle, but also the beginning of a hypersensitive and vibrant stage that moved culture at all levels. The post-war phase, as it has come to be known, shaped the world we live in; the era itself was created by both the war that drove it and the dominant forces that surrounded it. When the energy of fundamentally different ideas, Socialism and Equality, collapsed with the advances of science as well as the instinct of the nuclear bomb, a dangerous situation resulted that created an atmosphere of fear throughout the world and particularly within of the American walls. The Cold War developed one after another between the United States and the Soviets, it was manifesting itself instantly in the ordinary life of the masses within their borders. Terror, however, was not an outcome that immediately followed the end of the war. The United States had experienced a long period of economic growth during the war, and the war's development within the US economy had been supported with great force for more than ten years. Living in America has perhaps been better than it has ever been in recent years. The middle class had grown, the unemployment rate was at its lowest levels in history, and the “American Dream” was becoming a reality for many families. Positive economic conditions, the United States had become the most dominant country in the world; more essentially, America was the first and only country to develop the atomic bomb. This same era in which the political forces of communism and democracy clashed head-on. The United States was obviously on one side, while the Soviet Union and the Soviet bloc declared themselves directly on the other side. The defeat of the Germans, while a success for both parties, left... at the center of the card... a moment infused into American culture. The relationship between the danger of socialism and the danger of nuclear war. Without the bomb, communism posed no material danger to America; this is emphasized by the fact that the true height of the Cold War in the 1950s occurred only after the Soviet Union had developed the H-Bomb and built a supply of nuclear weapons. However, if it were not for the deep rift that separated the “socialists” of the East from the “investors” of the West, the bomb itself would not have posed the same threat, and therefore would not have caused the same level of panic. The Cold War years and, consequently, the environment of terror symbolized the mixing of conflicting social beliefs with weapons so powerful that their use was akin to self-destruction; Historically, it was the greatest strategy game ever played.
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