CeLLar-DooR
OG
My understandin' is these incidents aren't too uncommon and poor storage is almost always the cause
bruh we might need to make a thread on this. A nuclear bomb literally renders areas unlivable for like 2 centuries. Like what purpose in war does that serve? Say we blow up Russia how we gonna be able to reap the benefits of it? Shit crazy
yeah my immediate assumption was ammonium nitrate.
List of ammonium nitrate disasters - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
McVeigh used it in Oklahoma City. Serious shit.
He used 2 tons
This was 2750 tons
I'd guess you'd have to prepare it a certain way. But what I'm not about to do is google it.
Yea, the shit here was only positioned for storage, not strategically placed for maximum destruction.
I'd guess you'd have to prepare it a certain way. But what I'm not about to do is google it.
This thread made me stop and think abut something. Oklahoma has been through some shit. Black Wall Street. Timothy McVeigh. The Tornadoes. They have had their share of some tragedy for sure.
Don’t forget the Trail of Tears
Lmao
you wanna talk crazy?
Bro the official U.S nuclear plan was to nuke the city of Moscow alone 179+ times
deadass
Strategic Air Command Declassifies Nuclear Target List from 1950s
Declassified Strategic Air Command (SAC) Nuclear Target List from 1950s Includes Contingency Plans to Strike Major Cities in Soviet Bloc and Chinansarchive2.gwu.edu
The American nuclear-war plan, known as the Single Integrated Operational Plan (siop), provided for only one kind of response to an attack: full-scale nuclear war. It was assumed that tens of millions of people would die. There were no post-attack plans. For forty years, this was the American nuclear option. No doubt, the Soviets’ was identical.
Henry Kissinger called the siop a “horror strategy.” Even Nixon was appalled by it. Schlosser says that when General George Butler became the head of the Strategic Air Command, in 1991, and read the siop he was stunned. “This was the single most absurd and irresponsible document I had ever reviewed in my life,” he told Schlosser. “I came to fully appreciate the truth. . . . We escaped the Cold War without a nuclear holocaust by some combination of skill, luck, and divine intervention, and I suspect the latter in greatest proportion.”
Nukes of Hazard
“On most days, the probability of a nuclear explosion happening by accident was far greater than the probability that someone would deliberately start a war.”www.newyorker.com
saw this while scrolling thru twitter... anyone have any additional information on this?