The nuclear war happened so fast, and destroyed so much, that nobody knows, nobody ever knew, whether it was the Russians, the Israelis, President Moncrieff, or Elon Musk who launched the first missiles. And while people may still argue about it, it doesn't matter. The world's irrevocably doomed.
The President's Red Phone
The Moscow-Washington hotline which existed during the mid-20th-century Cold War was a teletype-based affair, not a telephone, but that didn't stop the imagined concept of a red emergency phone in the White House catching on in popular culture. One example of this is the Red Phone's starring role in the 1964 film Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb; indeed, the film's Spanish title is ¿Teléfono rojo?, volamos hacia Moscú, which means “Red Telephone? We're Flying to Moscow.”
The iconic “Red Phone” image continues to grip the public imagination today, appearing regularly in fiction, art, and even Presidential campaign ads.
Acrylic on canvas, 5x7″. From my series of paintings of historical telephones.
⭐⭐ This image can be purchased on deviantart.com It will come without a watermark and will be full size. Thanks for checking out my Ai assisted work, I hope you enjoy it. I also do oil painting and digital drawing ⭐⭐
https://www.deviantart.com/secondspast12/gallery
From now on it is not dying we must fear, but living.
Arundhati Roy, The End of Imagination