Aware of his detachment, Hoover's train of thought exemplifies DeLillo's own acceptance of Nuclear War.
On the other hand, there is little foresight amongst the world powers in Dr. Strangelove. While DeLillo was consumed by "longing on the large scale"(DeLillo 11) and the cohesion dying with all mankind elicited, Kubrick successfully dehumanized Nuclear War by focusing on a small group of individuals whose comical eccentricities were too brazen to believe. The characters were either portrayed as having the reasoning capacity of a small child or that of a lunatic. General Turgidson, the President of the United States and the Russian Prime Minister were certainly "silly things" wrestling and bickering in the war room. The gleam in Turgidson's eye when he exclaimed, "Gee, I wish we had a doomsday machine!" was brighter than a young lad's on Christmas morning. General Jack Ripper and Dr. Strangelove represent the other breed of power in the movie. As indicated by their clever names, both men were driven to insanity by their obsessions; and it was because of their insanity that total annihilation prevailed. Kubrick's caricatures showcase the ludicrousness that he saw in Nuclear War.
DeLillo seriously depicted the spirit, and strong sense of good and evil of competing baseball teams and then contrasted this with the heinous "Triumph of Death", to imply that Nuclear War, although unfortunate was the acceptable outcome of competing nations. "The faces around him," at the deciding game of the 1951 World Series were, "open and hopeful"(DeLillo 11). The competition was intense, overflowing with the enthusiastic support of fans young and old rooting for their team. The celebration was fanatic, complete with litter confetti and boisterous cacophony, its effluvium spilled onto the field in the form of excited fans. "He speaks in your voice, American," and it was this that that "makes history"(DeLillo 11).