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nstoolman1

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Everything posted by nstoolman1

  1. I tend not to believe anyone who says that Covid-19 antibodies don't last. I got CV-19 0n 12-25-20 and still had antibodies as of 12-22. Per Red Cross donation testing. Have I been exposed to the various strains? Did my antibodies fight off these strains without my knowledge? Don't know, don't care. Not getting the vaccine for it.
  2. I always consider the source of the studies. Who has a dog in the fight? Who benefits from the outcome of the study?
  3. Maybe Trump will borrow some of the footage for his trial too prove he DID NOT say to riot and cause mayhem.
  4. There is a bias here. The author of the article obviously doesn't life Tyson. I would like to hear or see the video or audio he is referring to of him saying this. Some times he uses sarcasm and it would not come through in a repeated article.
  5. You all say this but at this point it sounds like very wishful thinking. Until the Complete DoJ is removed from the equation no evidence or proof is going to be allowed. I am being cynical at this point.
  6. Along with Dec 7, 9 11 we should not forget Aug 6 and 9. Many Allied troops lives were saved by not having to invade the Japanese homeland. https://www.ctbto.org/news-and-events/news/6-and-9-august-1945-hiroshima-and-nagasaki#:~:text=On 6 August 1945%2C at,were confident it would work. 6 AND 9 AUGUST 1945 - HIROSHIMA AND NAGASAKI On 16 July 1945, U.S. scientists working on the Manhattan Project successfully detonated the first-ever nuclear explosion in the ‘Trinity’ test at Alamogordo, New Mexico. With World War II still dragging on in the Pacific, preparations moved forward to use nuclear bombs against Japan. On 6 August 1945, at 08:15, the first bomb was dropped on the centre of Hiroshima. ‘Little Boy’ was a gun-type fission bomb, using a conventional explosive charge to fire one sub-critical mass of uranium into another. This kind of device had never been tested before, but the scientists were confident it would work. And it did. The bomb had an explosive yield of around 13 kilotons. At the moment of detonation, a fireball was generated that raised temperatures to 4,000 degrees Celsius, turning Hiroshima – where many buildings were made of wood and paper - into an inferno. The blast created shock waves faster than the speed of sound. This and the radiation immediately killed everything within one kilometre of the hypocentre. After the blast, those who approached ground zero searching for the missing were exposed to radiation. Black rain, containing large amounts of radioactive fallout, caused widespread contamination. Estimates of casualties vary greatly. A more conservative estimate by the atomic archive lists 66,000 people killed immediately and a total death toll of 135,000, while the U.S.-Japanese Radiation Effects Research Foundation indicates a range of 90,000 to 166,000 deaths within the first four months. Three days later, on the morning of 9 August, a second U.S. aircraft rose from the airbase at Tinian Island in the Pacific Ocean. The nuclear bomb it carried was code-named ‘Fat Man’. It was a more sophisticated plutonium-based implosion-type bomb which had been tested in the Trinity test. The primary target had been the city of Kokura. However due to a thick layer of clouds, the airplane’s crew reverted to the secondary target - Nagasaki. 'Fat Man' yielded 21 kilotons. The bomb detonated at an altitude of approximately 500 metres and had a yield of 21 kilotons. Casualty estimates by the Radiation Effects Research Foundation for immediate deaths range from 60,000 to 80,000. In the weeks that followed the bombings and Japan’s surrender, Hiroshima and Nagasaki became the object of intense studies by U.S. scientists. The Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission was founded to study the effects of radioactive contamination on the victims. Its results, including the extensive film and photo material taken at the time, remained classified for decades. Nagasaki before and after The bombings were officially justified as a necessary evil to end the war and avoid an invasion of Japan, which proponents claimed would have led to a greater loss of life. Critics inside and outside of the United States, however, questioned the morality and necessity of the bombings, arguing that the main reason for Japan’s surrender was the Soviet Union entering the war on the side of the allies and that the diplomatic means were not exhausted. Also the possibility of bombing an unpopulated area as a demonstration has been pointed out. Over 2,000 nuclear tests were carried out after 1945. They aided the proliferation of nuclear weapons and helped to develop weapons orders of magnitude more destructive than the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs. Following decades of public campaigning and arduous multilateral negotiations, the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) was opened for signature in 1996. It bans nuclear tests by anyone, anywhere, and for all time
  7. Move hell, there should be a portable incinerator at that place. Every item brought out should go straight into it and be destroyed. No chance of a spill or contamination.
  8. Lot of people made lots of money also. So, it was a lose, lose, win for some. Cold and ruthless.
  9. The brief training in complex Western battle maneuvers was no match in the face of the formidable Russian defenses and the overwhelming artillery power. You hear from one side the Russians suck, you hear from another side Ukraine sucks. You hear from another side US sucks. If everyone sucks why are they fighting and why are we involved? Send in the Tomahawks and then the Seals. This would be over in a week. Failing that send a hundred rednecks in and tell them everyone tastes like chicken. Be over in a day.
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