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Quoted: The English long bow is an impressive weapon. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: The relative lack of firearms in Great Britain would be a major issue for me. There are only so many useable weapons that would be found in police stations and the MoD. The general public would be back to defending themselves with sharp pointy sticks in no time The English long bow is an impressive weapon. There is a proposed legislation going through the process in the UK at the moment to criminalize the possession of broadhead arrows (something used in a murder a couple of times a decade). Very impressive that they've solved violent crime so completely that it's worth doing stuff like this. |
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Quoted: SE Michigan Multiple automotive factories within 15-20 miles. Home of Trijicon and Eotech are within spitting distance of those factories. Stryker and Borgwarner etc are also clustered. Multiple mirvs will be sent. Selfridge is also with in an hour drive. View Quote Yeah bro, I'm sure that Eotech is a priority target. |
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We’re 29 miles southwest of a potential (not guaranteed) target so food and water would be our main concern. No real threat of fallout.
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Quoted: Naval Station Everett Boeing Everett Bangor JBLM Port of Seattle I've never been under the illusion of survival... View Quote Looked at property near Port Townsend and Sequim…. Naval Magazine Indian Island is awfully close. Seems that a place where they store nuclear weapons for the navy might attract a few bombs. So lots of sunshine due to the rain shadow effect, but with a possibility of canned sunshine…. |
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Quoted: If one were to touch off elsewhere in the world, it would change things, globally, like few can imagine. Beyond the mass murder, the economic repercussions would eventually devastate all. If one were to touch off in the US, we'd never recover in our lifetimes. If multiple hits lit the US, sooner or later, and probably sooner, almost everyone left would wish and pray they had been taken in the initial inferno. Survival doctrine has and will of course be formulated by governments, as it goes against all human nature not to hope and plan. But don't kid yourself. If there is global nuclear war, it will be a coming of hell on earth, and those left will wish they were not. View Quote You are claiming if one bomb went off in the US, "we'd never recover in our lifetimes"? Hiroshima became a pleasant, livable city well within the lifetime of those who experienced the bomb. If there was a large exchange hitting the US, then I agree that many survivors would die painful deaths of starvation months later. However, I disagree that everyone would be in that boat. Some areas that weren't hit by fallout and were farming communities would be in very good condition. They would simply have to learn to manage without any imports of practically anything from outside their region. However, if they knew how to grow wheat, and raise cows, etc, they would just continue with doing that. They would probably need to switch to plowing with draft animals, but I'm sure the Amish can show them that that is not impossible. There would actually be large areas where the infrastructure and people were untouched. Because there will still be large areas that aren't directly nuked or contaminated by fallout. Not easy to predict where those areas will be though, because the random chance of the weather will determine which areas get blanketed with lethal fallout. I'll repeat a tip for those with livestock: Even if your livestock get a lethal dose of prompt radiation, if you preemptively put them inside a barn and prevent them from eating any fallout-contaminated grass, feed, or water, then if you decontaminate the outside of the carcass, the meat will still be perfectly safe to eat. However, if you let them graze on a field contaminated with fallout, (or drink contaminated water) then the meat itself will become contaminated, and won't be safe to eat. However, if you are near a strategic target, military base, major airport, major port, of big city, you are probably screwed, and should either hope to be killed in the initial blast, or take action to relocate to a better location now, before a nuclear war occurs. |
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Someone put together this fake BBC broadcast of a buildup to a nuclear exchange several years ago and it's worth watching, especially to the end, which may be a bit jarring.
BBC Nuclear Attack Broadcast |
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View Quote What a stupid map. If the Russians are slinging 500 warheads at us, why would they nuke cities instead of strategic and tactical targets? City busting doesn't stop retaliation, nuking nuke delivery vehicles does. |
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Quoted: SE Michigan Multiple automotive factories within 15-20 miles. Home of Trijicon and Eotech are within spitting distance of those factories. Stryker and Borgwarner etc are also clustered. Multiple mirvs will be sent. Selfridge is also with in an hour drive. View Quote lol not sure if sarcastic |
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The most efficient hit is to have an air burst. They are also less "dirty" than one
on the ground. |
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Quoted: I love these threads. I get to read everyone's proud responses that their locale is a prime bomb target. View Quote Nope. Not even in a fall out zone. The majority of the people who die will die in the first couple of years due to famine. On the map (pictured above), the black dots represent targets in 2,000 warhead scenarios and the purple triangles represent targets in 500 scenarios. The red asterisks and squares represent state capitals and cities, respectively. According to the map, the states with densely-clustered regions are those along the east coast, as well as California, Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, and Wyoming. Major potential targets for an attack are active nuclear power plants, of which the U.S. has about 90. Some of these plants are located in Alabama, Arizona, Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Tennessee. Cities with critical infrastructure and dense populations show up as prime targets, including New York, Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Washington, DC. Irwin Redlener, a public health expert at Columbia University, has named these six cities as the most likely targets in the event of a nuclear attack. Link |
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Quoted: What a stupid map. If the Russians are slinging 500 warheads at us, why would they nuke cities instead of strategic and tactical targets? City busting doesn't stop retaliation, nuking nuke delivery vehicles does. View Quote The 2000-warhead attack is an estimate of a Russian first strike. The 500-warhead attack is an estimate of a Russian retaliatory strike after a US first strike, limiting the Russian arsenal, especially their more accurate land-based missiles. So ignore the 500-warhead icons. |
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Quoted: What a stupid map. If the Russians are slinging 500 warheads at us, why would they nuke cities instead of strategic and tactical targets? City busting doesn't stop retaliation, nuking nuke delivery vehicles does. View Quote Yeah its a weird take on it. Yes, lets not hit the missile fields.... |
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Quoted: Looked at property near Port Townsend and Sequim . Naval Magazine Indian Island is awfully close. Seems that a place where they store nuclear weapons for the navy might attract a few bombs. So lots of sunshine due to the rain shadow effect, but with a possibility of canned sunshine . View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Naval Station Everett Boeing Everett Bangor JBLM Port of Seattle I've never been under the illusion of survival... Looked at property near Port Townsend and Sequim . Naval Magazine Indian Island is awfully close. Seems that a place where they store nuclear weapons for the navy might attract a few bombs. So lots of sunshine due to the rain shadow effect, but with a possibility of canned sunshine . Having said that, I lived in Seattle for 10 years in the 1980's; until today, I never heard of Indian Island Naval Magazine before. |
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Quoted: What a stupid map. If the Russians are slinging 500 warheads at us, why would they nuke cities instead of strategic and tactical targets? City busting doesn't stop retaliation, nuking nuke delivery vehicles does. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: What a stupid map. If the Russians are slinging 500 warheads at us, why would they nuke cities instead of strategic and tactical targets? City busting doesn't stop retaliation, nuking nuke delivery vehicles does. |
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Quoted: Yeah its a weird take on it. Yes, lets not hit the missile fields.... View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: What a stupid map. If the Russians are slinging 500 warheads at us, why would they nuke cities instead of strategic and tactical targets? City busting doesn't stop retaliation, nuking nuke delivery vehicles does. Yeah its a weird take on it. Yes, lets not hit the missile fields.... Maybe they figure the silos would already be empty. |
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Quoted: I gotta chuckle when they always compare modern nukes to the Little Boy. Even the device at Trinity had a higher yield than Little Boy. Little Boy was a pretty small device, relative to nearly every other device used in atmospheric testing. If they nuke Chicago, which will likely happen, I'd probably be ok from the initial blast if it's in the 1-10 megaton range. A Tsar Bomba sized device (which is extremely unlikely) would be a very gnasty day though. I'd get cooked from the heat out here. Now, if they also nuke Elgin (which I have no idea the likelihood of that) then I'm fucked. If they hit Byron nuclear plant, I'm in the direct path of the fallout. And there are a few plants to the south of me that might be a problem too. So yeah, it still doesn't look good for me. View Quote You're not sure they'd nuke Elgin if they attack? Buddy, you'd glow more than an ATF agent. Attached File |
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View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: I love these threads. I get to read everyone's proud responses that their locale is a prime bomb target. FEMA's best (unclassified) guess about 10 years ago. https://i.imgur.com/sR878wi.jpeg FEMA never released that. It's simply some journo's (probably lousy) take on scenarios he, himself, came up with. He did use FEMA, et al, documentation of critical this, essential that, but that's the extent of it. The map is fan fiction. |
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Quoted: FEMA never released that. It's simply some journo's (probably lousy) take on scenarios he, himself, came up with. He did use FEMA, et al, documentation of critical this, essential that, but that's the extent of it. The map is fan fiction. View Quote Didn't say they made the map. I said it was their best guess, based on the sources consulted by the author (lower left), but I'll acknowledge I don't know what specific sources were used. But this is a pretty interesting up-to-date guide, sourced directly from FEMA: Planning Guidance for Response to a Nuclear Detonation (pdf) Also, Scientific American published a pretty grim article last year on the radiation hazard over time from an attack on our US silos. Spoiler alert, pretty much everyone in Montana and the Midwest would be fucked... with populations south and east only slightly better off. |
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I’m near Mt Weather and one of the secret squirrel Cold War AT&T facilities. If blowing up AT&T doesn’t get us immediately, and that’s iffy, the fallout from multiple ground bursts on Mount Weather will get us in a few days.
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Quoted: Didn't say they made the map. I said it was their best guess, based on the sources consulted by the author (lower left), but I'll acknowledge I don't know what specific sources were used. But this is a pretty interesting up-to-date guide, sourced directly from FEMA: Planning Guidance for Response to a Nuclear Detonation (pdf) View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: FEMA never released that. It's simply some journo's (probably lousy) take on scenarios he, himself, came up with. He did use FEMA, et al, documentation of critical this, essential that, but that's the extent of it. The map is fan fiction. Didn't say they made the map. I said it was their best guess, based on the sources consulted by the author (lower left), but I'll acknowledge I don't know what specific sources were used. But this is a pretty interesting up-to-date guide, sourced directly from FEMA: Planning Guidance for Response to a Nuclear Detonation (pdf) The map is designed to scare the maximum number of Americans possible along with the lies that everyone will just be vaporized. The targets not identified on the map as 500 or even 2000 device targets are laughable and discredit the entire thing. |
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Quoted: . The other question is of course how many of the 1700 or so "active" missiles/warheads actually work? Half? 25%? Given the state of Russia who really knows. View Quote Having worked with quite a few missile and warhead techs who then went in to IT after the service, and some of the stories they had servicing the things, I honestly have to wonder how many of the US land based icbms are going to fly, and if they do fly, are they going to arm and detonate? Pencil whipping isn't just Russian thing. |
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Quoted: The map is designed to scare the maximum number of Americans possible along with the lies that everyone will just be vaporized. The targets not identified on the map as 500 or even 2000 device targets are laughable and discredit the entire thing. View Quote As noted above, the author's 500-target scenario is not intended to represent the targets Russia would choose for a limited first strike. They represent what Russia would likely target in retaliation, after a US first strike wiped out much of Russia's ground-based targets, including their more accurate silo-based missiles. Thus, the 2000 target icons are really the more interesting ones. Are they 100% accurate? Of course, not. Any such estimate is a best guess, including our IC's best estimates. Suffice to say, if you live in DC or Minot, you probably don't need to worry about the day after. |
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The other fun thing to consider at this point is how many ABM systems/capability the US has in light of the recent unpleasantness on israel where they shot down a bunch of IRBM.
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Quoted: As noted above, the author's 500-target scenario is not intended to represent the targets Russia would choose for a limited first strike. They represent what Russia would likely target in retaliation, after a US first strike wiped out much of Russia's ground-based targets, including their more accurate silo-based missiles. Thus, the 2000 target icons are really the more interesting ones. Are they 100% accurate? Of course, not. Any such estimate is a best guess, including our IC's best estimates. Suffice to say, if you live in DC or Minot, you probably don't need to worry about the day after. View Quote Well given russia has like 1700 warheads on "active duty" and say 25% work. What are their actual priority targets. |
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Quoted: As noted above, the author's 500-target scenario is not intended to represent the targets Russia would choose for a limited first strike. They represent what Russia would likely target in retaliation, after a US first strike wiped out much of Russia's ground-based targets, including their more accurate silo-based missiles. Thus, the 2000 target icons are really the more interesting ones. Are they 100% accurate? Of course, not. Any such estimate is a best guess, including our IC's best estimates. Suffice to say, if you live in DC or Minot, you probably don't need to worry about the day after. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: The map is designed to scare the maximum number of Americans possible along with the lies that everyone will just be vaporized. The targets not identified on the map as 500 or even 2000 device targets are laughable and discredit the entire thing. As noted above, the author's 500-target scenario is not intended to represent the targets Russia would choose for a limited first strike. They represent what Russia would likely target in retaliation, after a US first strike wiped out much of Russia's ground-based targets, including their more accurate silo-based missiles. Thus, the 2000 target icons are really the more interesting ones. Are they 100% accurate? Of course, not. Any such estimate is a best guess, including our IC's best estimates. Suffice to say, if you live in DC or Minot, you probably don't need to worry about the day after. They wouldn't target Whiteman or Pantex or Fort Sill or Sheppard or Fort Leonard Wood or Minot or Hawaii or Alaska or ... in a retaliatory attack? Come on. |
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Quoted: Didn't say they made the map. I said it was their best guess, based on the sources consulted by the author (lower left), but I'll acknowledge I don't know what specific sources were used. But this is a pretty interesting up-to-date guide, sourced directly from FEMA: Planning Guidance for Response to a Nuclear Detonation (pdf) Also, Scientific American published a pretty grim article last year on the radiation hazard over time from an attack on our US silos. Spoiler alert, pretty much everyone in Montana and the Midwest would be fucked... with populations south and east only slightly better off. View Quote thanks. watching the video from said article now: What Would a Nuclear Strike Inside the U.S. Look Like? |
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Quoted: Didn't say they made the map. I said it was their best guess, based on the sources consulted by the author (lower left), but I'll acknowledge I don't know what specific sources were used. But this is a pretty interesting up-to-date guide, sourced directly from FEMA: Planning Guidance for Response to a Nuclear Detonation (pdf) Also, Scientific American published a pretty grim article last year on the radiation hazard over time from an attack on our US silos. Spoiler alert, pretty much everyone in Montana and the Midwest would be fucked... with populations south and east only slightly better off. View Quote It would be terrible. Soviet doctrine was to use 2 to 3 warheads per US silo to ensure they were destroyed, I doubt that has changed. Thesecare all ground bursts, hundreds and hundreds of them blasting debris in the air. We would be completely fucked here in ND. Remember the smoke from the Candian wild fires? Image the same thing with radioactive fallout, it would choke the sky's all the way to the east coast. |
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I'm about fifty Km from Barksdale AFB. Not much to worry about after they land.
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Quoted: I gotta chuckle when they always compare modern nukes to the Little Boy. Even the device at Trinity had a higher yield than Little Boy. Little Boy was a pretty small device, relative to nearly every other device used in atmospheric testing. If they nuke Chicago, which will likely happen, I'd probably be ok from the initial blast if it's in the 1-10 megaton range. A Tsar Bomba sized device (which is extremely unlikely) would be a very gnasty day though. I'd get cooked from the heat out here. Now, if they also nuke Elgin (which I have no idea the likelihood of that) then I'm fucked. If they hit Byron nuclear plant, I'm in the direct path of the fallout. And there are a few plants to the south of me that might be a problem too. So yeah, it still doesn't look good for me. View Quote Also being in Elgin, I'm thinking Ohare airport would probably be targeted and we might be fucked anyway. |
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Quoted: They wouldn't target Whiteman or Pantex or Fort Sill or Sheppard or Fort Leonard Wood or Minot or Hawaii or Alaska or ... in a retaliatory attack? Come on. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: The map is designed to scare the maximum number of Americans possible along with the lies that everyone will just be vaporized. The targets not identified on the map as 500 or even 2000 device targets are laughable and discredit the entire thing. As noted above, the author's 500-target scenario is not intended to represent the targets Russia would choose for a limited first strike. They represent what Russia would likely target in retaliation, after a US first strike wiped out much of Russia's ground-based targets, including their more accurate silo-based missiles. Thus, the 2000 target icons are really the more interesting ones. Are they 100% accurate? Of course, not. Any such estimate is a best guess, including our IC's best estimates. Suffice to say, if you live in DC or Minot, you probably don't need to worry about the day after. They wouldn't target Whiteman or Pantex or Fort Sill or Sheppard or Fort Leonard Wood or Minot or Hawaii or Alaska or ... in a retaliatory attack? Come on. That's the real issue with the map. In a true global exchange, Russia or China will be also targeting Pearl, Guam, bases in Germany, bases in Alaska, Diego Garcia, etc etc etc. Offhand there's probably at least 20-30 strategic targets OCONUS that would absolutely be targeted in either a first or a second strike. |
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Well I live within spitting distance of Tinker AFB...I figure I, hopefully, won't even know it happened.
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Lots of theories on nuke war.
Some say it'll be limited, some say it'll be Armageddon. Some say there are nukes without radiation and then there are those with radiation. Some say nukes are outdated as a competent cyber attack is far cheaper and will achieve the same results over a longer period of time with less infrastructure damage. Think EMP or actual cyber attack. Some say the threat is already in our midst in the media and schools and the population is already turning on it's own citizenry and all the global élite have to do is wait it out. The plan is working. All I know is I have to feed my family, keep a roof and not die. Everything else is out of my control. |
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Quoted: Didn't say they made the map. I said it was their best guess, based on the sources consulted by the author (lower left), but I'll acknowledge I don't know what specific sources were used. But this is a pretty interesting up-to-date guide, sourced directly from FEMA: Planning Guidance for Response to a Nuclear Detonation (pdf) Also, Scientific American published a pretty grim article last year on the radiation hazard over time from an attack on our US silos. Spoiler alert, pretty much everyone in Montana and the Midwest would be fucked... with populations south and east only slightly better off. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: FEMA never released that. It's simply some journo's (probably lousy) take on scenarios he, himself, came up with. He did use FEMA, et al, documentation of critical this, essential that, but that's the extent of it. The map is fan fiction. Didn't say they made the map. I said it was their best guess, based on the sources consulted by the author (lower left), but I'll acknowledge I don't know what specific sources were used. But this is a pretty interesting up-to-date guide, sourced directly from FEMA: Planning Guidance for Response to a Nuclear Detonation (pdf) Also, Scientific American published a pretty grim article last year on the radiation hazard over time from an attack on our US silos. Spoiler alert, pretty much everyone in Montana and the Midwest would be fucked... with populations south and east only slightly better off. While the simulations may be true, the real point of the SA article is to drive public opinion against renewing and maintaining the land-based leg of the triad. The ultimate goal, if we strip away all the layers of camouflage and obfuscation, is to convince the American government via public opinion, to divest from a nuclear deterrence arsenal, and thus to be rendered defenseless against other hostile peer nations. Who would benefit from such a scenario? What would occur next if we did such a fucking retarded thing? The answers are obvious to anyone with a shred of strategic policymaking awareness. Consider that almost no one is bringing up China's frantic expansion of their ICBM silo fields. Nor that we know next to nothing of how many warheads they actually have deployed right now, except enough to know that all of the Pentagon's public-facing estimates are gross lies undercounting China's actual capability by a factor of 5 or more. Why would China be massively expanding their strategic nuclear arsenal while our government denies its happening, and our media sources try to convince the public we need to get rid of our nukes? Under what scenarios do these facts make sense? |
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Quoted: I gotta chuckle when they always compare modern nukes to the Little Boy. Even the device at Trinity had a higher yield than Little Boy. Little Boy was a pretty small device, relative to nearly every other device used in atmospheric testing. If they nuke Chicago, which will likely happen, I'd probably be ok from the initial blast if it's in the 1-10 megaton range. A Tsar Bomba sized device (which is extremely unlikely) would be a very gnasty day though. I'd get cooked from the heat out here. Now, if they also nuke Elgin (which I have no idea the likelihood of that) then I'm fucked. If they hit Byron nuclear plant, I'm in the direct path of the fallout. And there are a few plants to the south of me that might be a problem too. So yeah, it still doesn't look good for me. View Quote Is there a coupon? Or can we pay extra or something to guarantee the Chicago thing? |
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Quoted: It would be terrible. Soviet doctrine was to use 2 to 3 warheads per US silo to ensure they were destroyed, I doubt that has changed. Thesecare all ground bursts, hundreds and hundreds of them blasting debris in the air. We would be completely fucked here in ND. Remember the smoke from the Candian wild fires? Image the same thing with radioactive fallout, it would choke the sky's all the way to the east coast. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Didn't say they made the map. I said it was their best guess, based on the sources consulted by the author (lower left), but I'll acknowledge I don't know what specific sources were used. But this is a pretty interesting up-to-date guide, sourced directly from FEMA: Planning Guidance for Response to a Nuclear Detonation (pdf) Also, Scientific American published a pretty grim article last year on the radiation hazard over time from an attack on our US silos. Spoiler alert, pretty much everyone in Montana and the Midwest would be fucked... with populations south and east only slightly better off. It would be terrible. Soviet doctrine was to use 2 to 3 warheads per US silo to ensure they were destroyed, I doubt that has changed. Thesecare all ground bursts, hundreds and hundreds of them blasting debris in the air. We would be completely fucked here in ND. Remember the smoke from the Candian wild fires? Image the same thing with radioactive fallout, it would choke the sky's all the way to the east coast. Keep in mind that those wildfires burned for days and weeks on end. An attack with ground bursts would most definitely create very large amounts of fallout but it wouldn't continue to be generated beyond the discrete events like wildfires. The areas to be most affected could be predicted based on seasonal average wind patterns but would be completely dependent on the wind and weather conditions during and for the few days post event. |
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Quoted: Someone put together this fake BBC broadcast of a buildup to a nuclear exchange several years ago and it's worth watching, especially to the end, which may be a bit jarring. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cAZZR_Jki0 View Quote The end put it all into perspective! |
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Quoted: Someone put together this fake BBC broadcast of a buildup to a nuclear exchange several years ago and it's worth watching, especially to the end, which may be a bit jarring. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cAZZR_Jki0 View Quote That would have been "war of the worlds" level accurate 20 years ago. But now the prattling and nonsense and misinformation as well as political bias and finger pointing by the media would have obscured any useful information which would have made any broadcast useless. |
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Here in WV, it feels so remote and far from any serious threat, but looking at a map, you see DC is not THAT far away in the realm of thermonuclear devices.
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View Quote Here's the full civil defense video they show clips and sound bites from in Threads.... Protect & Survive - 1970's UK Public infommercials On Nuclear War Preparation |
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