MovieChat Forums > The Day After (1983) Discussion > Nuclear weapons are actually wonderful

Nuclear weapons are actually wonderful


As long as this never happens, of course. They're the ultimate peacekeepers. The last World War ended as the nuclear age dawned. Since then, Russia and the United States have developed a nuclear arsenal capable of ending mankind. But as long as that never happens, nuclear weapons are doing their job. War is not an option between our countries. Otherwise, a lot of us would be getting our draft cards for World War 6.

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MAD (Mutually Assured Destruction) only works and did work as a peacekeeping force so long as the other side was sane and did not have a deathwish.

Do you think it will still work when the greatest state sponsor of terrorism in the world... Iran, gets the Nuke and one winds up in the hands of those screaming Allahu Akbar as they proudly blow themselves up?


I joined the Navy to see the world, only to discover the world is 2/3 water!

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This is always a depressing line of thought for me, especially since I seem to view this whole matter differently.

History teaches many lessons and one of them is that you cannot stop the spread of technology. From the Hittites who couldn't keep a monopoly on swords and spears made out of this new metal called iron, to the British who couldn't keep the processes and machinery of the infant Industrial Revolution to themselves, it's been tried and it's never successful.

When I was born the United States was the only nation that had the atom bomb. A year later the Soviets had it. Within a few years Britain and France joined the club. Maybe that could have been predicted back at the beginning. These were all major powers on the world stage. But who would have thought that within our lifetime, before we even grew particularly old that countries like India, Pakistan, North Korea would have nuclear weapons. It would hardly have seemed credible.

This Summer will mark the 71st anniversary of the Trinity detonation. Seventy-one years. Not so long. Considerably less than 100 years. So if we've come this far in 71 years where will we be 100 years from now?

What I think, what has long been my depressing assumption, is that 100 years from now any country that wants nuclear weapons will have them. And they won't have to build them themselves. They'll just buy them on the international market the same way they buy tanks and fighter jets today.

Depressing thought. Doesn't that greatly increase the likelihood of their being used? Yes, and I assume they will be used. It's just a matter of time.

And then what? My personal belief is that yes, they will be devastating weapons. Yes, they'll kill a lot of people. But the world will go on. For they won't turn out to be the earth shattering, civilization ending weapons as has long been feared.

***
It's easier to be an individual than a god.

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Oh, boy... Do you know how many times (yes, x1, x2 and so on) the "acceptable" radiation levels have increased since the (rapid) build-up of nuclear power plants and in the wake of that (insane) decades-long nuclear testing which had been conducted... Diseases, like cancer, are running wild - worldwide. Lets not even speculate if bacteria and viruses are mutating due to that very same thing. And so on...

If we're to have ANY kind of a nuclear war - as weapons today are no longer classified in kilotons, but in megatons - there will be very little life which will keep on living on planet Earth, never mind humankind.

Carbon based biology, which is what we are, cannot and will not survive radiation poisoning which results in cellular degradation and death. What else is there to talk about.

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Your information is based on hippie anti-nuke propaganda bullsh!t... not facts.

And there are very VERY few megaton weaons. The vast majority, nearly 93% of all nukes are kiloton weapons, not megaton.

The most common warhead comprising most all of the US inventory is a 475Kt weapon.


I joined the Navy to see the world, only to discover the world is 2/3 water!

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Very good, thanks!..:) I'm not sure why -exactly- I had posted without making a remark about what you said; maybe just to draw attention, heh. xD

Fact of the matter is (?!), those few megaton weapons - such as ICBMs - not to mention any "secret" hydrogen (and other!) weapons, they are x-times (meaning exponentially) stronger than the general nuclear arsenal(s); my point being that, upon deployment of just one of those multi-payload missiles... For example, you can kiss Europe good-buy. And then Asia, Africa... And Australia - and USA and Canada: how many ICBMs (out of dozens, hundreds, thousands?) would it take to turn the (vast!!) Sahara desert sand into glass?? :DD

I suppose that I wanted to convey the message: no matter WHAT hole one would crawl into and no matter HOW long they were able to stay "down there" - there would, most certainly, be nothing to come back to.

People live under the illusion that the world is a big place... Just one "push of a button" and it would all be gone. Guaranteed, heh. ;-/

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Fact of the matter is (?!), - not to mention any "secret" hydrogen (and other!) weapons, they are x-times (meaning exponentially) stronger than the general nuclear arsenal(s); my point being that, upon deployment of just one of those multi-payload missiles... For example, you can kiss Europe good-buy. And then Asia, Africa... And Australia - and USA and Canada: how many ICBMs (out of dozens, hundreds, thousands?) would it take to turn the (vast!!) Sahara desert sand into glass?? :DD


Again with the overblown and exaggerated Hippie anti-nuke crap from the 60's era.
Not to mention you are now throwing in modern era Conspiracy nutjob crap on top of it.

those few megaton weapons - such as ICBMs

Being an ICBM does not make one a Megaton sized weapon.
Actually the few Megaton sized weapons we have are freefall gravity bombs dropped from planes.

Minuteman III ICBM are armed with either W78 or W87 warheads.
W78: 350 kiloton yield.

W87: Originally 300 kiloton yield, they have been upgraded to 475 kiloton yield. The W87 was originally on the Peacekeeper Missiles but have been retrofitted to the Minuteman III

Trident II SLBM are armed with either W76 or W88 warheads
W76: 100 kiloton yield

W88: 475 kilotons.


Non-ballistic missile delivery warheads include the B61 and B83 freefall bombs, and the W80 used on cruise missiles.

B61: Variable yield depending on settings from 0.3 kilotons to 350 kilotons.

B83: 1.2 Megatons.

W80: the W80 warhead for cruise missiles like Tomahawk is essentially a modified B61 with a "dial-a-yield" between 5 kilotons and 150 kilotons.


Those are everything as far as types that we have in inventory. Older systems have been decommissioned. ONLY ONE, the B83 is a megaton class weapon and that just 1.2 megatons. The B83 is also only a small fraction of our force with only a handful in inventory.

not to mention any "secret" hydrogen (and other!) weapons

Conspiracy retarded crap.

Hydrogen bombs and Nuclear bombs are not two different things you idiot.
H-bombs and A-bombs are both types of nuclear bombs.

A-bombs (Atomic bombs): are Nuclear bombs that use fission to split atoms to create the nuclear explosion. Our very earliest weapons such as those dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki are fission weapons or Atomic weapons. Pure fission only weapons such as atomic bombs are physics limited to a max size of only about a few tens of kilotons or less.

H-Bombs(Hydrogen bombs) Also known as Thermonuclear bombs: Are hybrid fission/fusion weapons, not pure fusion. There is no such thing a a purely fusion nuclear weapon. Fusion is the fusing together of two atoms rather than splitting an atom apart like in fission. The size of a Hydrogen bombs explosive yield is not limited like a purely fission weapon is and all Nuclear devices of a few hundred kilotons right up to megaton weapons are ALL Hydrogen bombs.

Every weapon listed above is a Hydrogen bomb, a thermonuclear weapon.
We no long have Atomic weapons.

The only place for fission reactions is in the initiator stage of the Thermonuclear weapon. The fusion weapon requires a fission detonation to act as a sparkplug to initiate the fusion process. this is why all Thermonuclear devices are fission/fusion hybrids and there is no pure fusion device.

my point being that, upon deployment of just one of those multi-payload missiles... For example, you can kiss Europe good-buy.


My point being that you don't know WTF you are talking about and are ignorant on the matter of which you speak.

those "multipayload missiles" as you call them are limited to 8 warheads. The proper term is MIRV by-the-way. (Multiple Independently targeted Reentry Vehicles)

8 warheads of 475 kilotons would carve the heart out of 8 cities in Europe, but would not even remotely come close to destroying all of Europe. I am not saying such a thing would not be a horrific nightmare, It would. But not the scale of which you in your ignorance would think.

I suppose that I wanted to convey the message: no matter WHAT hole one would crawl into and no matter HOW long they were able to stay "down there" - there would, most certainly, be nothing to come back to.

Just.. stop already. Your ignorance is embarrassing. The only thing that you have managed to convey is that you have absolutely no clue as to the subject you are holding forth your opinion on and that your opinion is based of beliefs that are absolutely false.


People live under the illusion that the world is a big place... Just one "push of a button" and it would all be gone. Guaranteed, heh. ;-/


I know exactly how big this world is and yes, it is small. and I know this for two demonstrable reasons.

1) I have literally been completely around the planet in one direction until I ended up where I started.
Deployed from San Diego by Missile Cruiser to Hawaii, Tahiti, Fiji, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Persian Gulf, and from the Persian Gulf I was medivaced by air to Saudia Arabia, Egypt, Germany, and thence to Washington DC, San Antonio and eventually back to San Diego where I started. Once you have traveled around the world and completely circumnavigated it, you know how small our planet is.

2) I ride a Bicycle to keep in shape. A 30 minute bicycle ride marked on Google Earth and zoomed out to see the entire planet, can still be seen as a segmented line, not a discrete point. thus giving scale as to how small or world is.

And NO!...
there is no one push of a button. For a country (especially one such as the United States) the act of launching a nuclear attack is an entire chain of events that must take place exactly with cooperation and agreement at several levels before any launch happens.
There is no button for the President to push.
The button is a metaphor.


Please....
Educate yourself.
It's embarrassing.







I joined the Navy to see the world, only to discover the world is 2/3 water!

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Ahem:

At the time of the first nuclear detonation in 1945 the world population was approximately 2.2 billion.

Today after all these weapons tests and power plant operations the world population is approximately 7.4 billion.

As for the survival of other kinds of fauna I notice that when I go shopping at my local malls I routinely see rows of people on the grassy margins offering puppies and kittens to any takers. Talk about raining cats and dogs. There's no end to it. And for flora my garden flourishes although I fight a constant battle with weeds that also thrive.

***
It's easier to be an individual than a god.

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Puppies, LOL!! 🐶 🐱

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As horrific as that would be... that would 'only' be one nuke and 'only' be a major disaster.

MAD (as you know) is the destruction of all mankind.

Big difference.

SpiltPersonality

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As horrific as that would be... that would 'only' be one nuke and 'only' be a major disaster.

MAD (as you know) is the destruction of all mankind.

Big difference.


Not necessarily. MAD likely will but not a guarantee result in worldwide destruction, But that isn't what MAD is.

Mutually Assured Destruction is Whatever you launch at us, We will do right back equally.
If they flip 1 bomb at us, we'll flip one bomb right back. That is not necessarily the "Destruction of all mankind".

The reason you equate it to all of mankind's destruction, is because just about any scenario between the Major powers namely US and USSR... would escalate into a full nuclear exchange.

But against a rogue state doing the unthinkable, like Iran... No other Major power would step in and escalate against the US, Not even Russia. Iran will "get what it deserves" in the eyes of the world.
No escalation.






I joined the Navy to see the world, only to discover the world is 2/3 water!

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I can see where you're coming from but my understanding of MAD wasn't equal for equal, but total annihilation of each other being guarantees.

So in the cold war era, the exchange portrayed in 'By Dawns Early Light' wasn't MAD as both 'held back' from going all out. It would still be pretty effed up, but there would be government, there would still be a country to recover. An all out war that it seems 'The Day After' portrays seems a little more like a MAD scenario. It ends too early to be sure, but you can see government failing, and the USA ceasing to exist - so having suffered 'destructiion'.

I can't see ant terrorist state being able to arrange so many nukes that the USA would be destroyed. I guess that's what I assumed you meant. The complete destruction of the USA. Indeed, with only one or two low tech nukes (that's all they would get to play with), they would only be able to get a 'Pearl Harbor-esque' result of uniting the American people. Their target would probably be Israel ANYWAY... and I COULD see a nuclear threat destroying Israel as a country.

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Actually, I've heard other explanations for the phrase;
At the time MAD was coined, there was a discussion-panel explaining MAD this way: There are so many nukes on each side that even if the soviets managed to fire their missiles -without a nuclear response from the us, the reprocautions of this attack would be famine and radiation in Russia (and elsewhere), because of the fires and pollution originating from the US.

Doesn't matter if it's the right definition though, but still thought provoking.

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I don't think there's any doubt atomic weapons prevented a Warsaw Pact/ NATO confrontation. And Israeli nukes have probably kept another major Mideast war (directed at them) from breaking out, to this point. India and Pakistan have not fought, despite the mutual enmity.

Going fwd, it remains to be seen. As bizarre as NK is, the leadership does not have a death wish. But if the Iranian mullahs really do buy into the 12th Mahdi prophecies? Then will get interesting in a hurry if and when they get a bomb. But that treaty is supposed to prevent such an occurrence, right?

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But if the Iranian mullahs really do buy into the 12th Mahdi prophecies? Then will get interesting in a hurry if and when they get a bomb. But that treaty is supposed to prevent such an occurrence, right?


If you are referring to the nuclear non-proliferation treaty... Iran is not a signatory.

If you are referring to the treaty between US and Iran brokered by Dumb and Dumber (AKA Obama and Kerry).....

ROFLMAO!!!!!!!!!
Yeah.. sure... keep believing that.



I joined the Navy to see the world, only to discover the world is 2/3 water!

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If you are referring to the treaty between US and Iran brokered by Dumb and Dumber (AKA Obama and Kerry).....

Better for them to work it out with peaceful means than to send in troops as Dumbya and his pal Prick Cheney would have done.

And Iran was never trying to make a nuclear bomb.
Just more lies for an excuse to go to war for their oil and other resources.

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And Iran was never trying to make a nuclear bomb.


Sigh.... It must be nice to be that gullible and stupid.


I joined the Navy to see the world, only to discover the world is 2/3 water!

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You would be the king of knowing all about that.

Still think the US military never once killed any innocent civilians in wars on countries they invaded?

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You would be the king of knowing all about that.

Not once have I ever made a statement that shows that I am stupid or gullible.

Still think the US military never once killed any innocent civilians in wars on countries they invaded?

What do you mean by still think? I never thought that nor have I ever claimed that.
That is a false accusation on your part in a BS attempt to make me look bad.


See... that is the difference between you and I.
My negative comments about you are supported by your very own statements.
You on the other hand have to falsify and make crap up about me or use strawmans against me to try and tarnish me.


I joined the Navy to see the world, only to discover the world is 2/3 water!

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Iran IS a signatory to the NPT.

Iran is NOT a major threat to the U.S. It will not get a nuclear weapon in the foreseeable future, if ever. And even if they did somehow get a nuke, it would almost certainly be as a deterrence.

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Iran IS a signatory to the NPT.


Which means exactly NOTHING, as Iran is in full non-compliance with the treaty and is working full bore to gain nukes.

Iran is NOT a major threat to the U.S.


At the moment? No.
But Iran IS a threat to the world in regards to the Hormuz Strait and it's ability to interfere with the free trade of oil.

And all bets are off if Iran gains nuclear capability. Iran has repeatedly claimed it's ultimate goal is the complete anihilation of Israel and the United States. Couple that with the FACT the Iran sponsors several terrorist groups to include giving them major weapons systems like anti-ship missiles.

It will not get a nuclear weapon in the foreseeable future, if ever.

Yeah... because wishful thinking is such a good policy to prevent their gaining nukes.



And even if they did somehow get a nuke, it would almost certainly be as a deterrence.


Again... They officially sponsor terrorists, and their official motto is "DEATH TO THE USA"!

How about from now on, leave this level of discussion to adults.


I joined the Navy to see the world, only to discover the world is 2/3 water!

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The closest we came to MADness was, approximately, 1982.

This was the period of "The Evil Empire" speeches by Ronald Reagan. The USSR leadership became convinced that the purpose of this was to stoke up the West to accept a first strike - and their only solution was to get there first.

The situation was defused by a defector from the USSR at the time, who managed to persuade his de-briefers of the seriousness of the situation. This directly lead to a change of tone from the Reagan, and eventually allowed Reykjavik Summit in 1986 (along with Gorbachev's policy of glasnost - although that could be a consequence).

So a virtually unknown defector saved the world?

MAD worked so long as you thought the other side was sane. If you begin to believe otherwise, then you are all in trouble.

Understanding the motives and mindset of the other side is much more valuable.

Sorry I don't have details to back up this "story" - I was told it from a pretty reliable source in the early 90s.

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Actually no. That is not the closest we came.
Black Saturday is.

In a threeway unanimous decision.... ONE MAN dissented. ONE MAn and ONE VOTE stopped nuclear war.
Vasili Arkhipov


I joined the Navy to see the world, only to discover the world is 2/3 water!

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True

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Nuclear weapons are actually wonderful


Yes, isn't it wonderful that millions of people for 40 years lived under the terror of being vaporized at any moment, some believing that they wouldn't even live to see their 40s. They worked wonders!

---
IMDB, flagging ppl for bull💩 since 1995. 

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True, but in many ways they prevented a WWIII from happening.

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I can't deny that this is highly debatable. How many died in Stalingrad? How many at the Normandy beaches? How many in Berlin? World War 2 was the last World War, and nuclear weapons are the main factor in that.

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I would call them the icing on the cake.
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