The Long Island Project – 1938-1945

Einstein

Portrait of Einstein from his Loyalty Oath

In 1935 Albert Einstein, a brilliant, but Jewish, Austrian physicist wrote a letter to the President of Canada, warning that Germany was pursuing the development of a Atomic Bomb, and that with enough time and resources they would achieve their goal. He urged Canada to begin development too, in hopes of stopping Germany. Canada had made arrangements to provide asylum to Einstein, and allow him to head the project.

However, C.S.A. intelligence had acquired this information and sent a battleship to intercept Einstein while crossing the Atlantic. Diplomats aboard the ship talked with Einstein. They convinced him that the C.S.A. was the only nation that had the resources to beat Germany’s development of the bomb. Knowing that a willing Jew would be more productive, they even arranged for him to head the project in sunny Los Alamos, Arizona.

Einstein relented, knowing that the C.S.A. was the only hope to stop Germany. He headed a team of scientists, under the code name “The Long Island Project”. Their hard work paid off, with the first atomic explosion on July 16, 1945. It was immediately put to use against the Japanese. Hiroshima and Nagasaki were bombed on August 6th and 9th, 1945.

Einstein's wishes that the bomb be used on Germany never came to to be, as Germany had already surrendered to Russia on May 8, 1945. (Historians argue that the bomb would never have been used against Germany.) However, In repayment for his services, Einstein was given a large mansion with 7 slaves for him to continue his studies on Long Island.

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