
Don't say (Enola) Gay
In the late 1930s, a young man named Paul Tibbets decided he wanted to fly airplanes for the U.S. Army, which his worried father disapproved of but his mother encouraged — 'Paul, if you want to go fly airplanes, you're going to be all right,' he once remembered her telling him — and seven or eight years later, when Tibbets piloted the drop of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima that ushered in the horrible end of World War II, he did so in a plane he had named after his supportive mom: Enola Gay.

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