Dimension X 1951 06 03 35 Thelastobjective
# Dimension X: The Last Objective
As the needle drops and that iconic theremin wails across your speaker, you're transported to a future Earth where the war never ended—it merely changed form. In "The Last Objective," a hardened military commander receives orders to destroy the last functioning research facility on a hostile alien world, unaware that the installation harbors humanity's only hope for peace. What unfolds is a tense psychological drama where duty collides with conscience, where the listener must grapple alongside the protagonist with impossible choices that blur the line between victory and annihilation. The crackling radio transmissions, the mechanical hum of distant spacecraft, and the trembling voice of a scientist pleading for mercy create an atmosphere of suffocating dread—this is science fiction stripped of wonder, replaced instead with the cold calculus of survival.
*Dimension X* arrived in 1950 as NBC's answer to a nation hungry for tomorrow's terrors, broadcasting stories that reflected postwar anxieties about atomic weapons, space exploration, and the dehumanizing machinery of modern warfare. By 1951, the show had become a cultural touchstone, attracting some of radio's finest dramatic talents and writers who understood that science fiction could illuminate present-day moral questions better than any sermon. "The Last Objective" represents the series at its finest—intelligent, adult, and unafraid to leave listeners unsettled long after the final fade-out.
If you've never experienced the golden age of science fiction radio, or if you're a devoted fan seeking out rare episodes, this June broadcast demands your attention. Tune in and discover why millions of listeners huddled around their radios, enraptured and uneasy, as *Dimension X* asked: what price is victory when the cost is your humanity?