#61240 - 03/03/06 03:16 PM
Re: It Can't Happen Here
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Veteran
Registered: 07/01/04
Posts: 1506
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I have that movie. I think it is a pretty accurate portrayal of what a nuclear exchange would have been like between the Soviets and Americans. It was made in the early 80's and as such is colored by the politics of the time.
Fallout shelters ceased to be a viable option sometime during the 1960's, when the American and Soviet arsenals got so large that any nuclear exchange between the two would make large-scale survival impossible. I believe the same would be the case today. The Americans and Russians still maintain large enough stockpiles to obliterate most decent sized population centers. The last I had heard, the Chinese maintain somewhere between 30-50 functioning nukes. Whether or not they are sophisticated enough to be effectively delivered here is another matter. Either way, I think the possibility of any sort of nuclear exchange between the three countries is remote in the extreme, for obvious reasons. And I don't think any of the so-called "rogue states" (Iran, North Korea, etc.) would risk the catastrophic nuclear response that a similar attack upon us would prompt. That leaves us to deal with terrorists and their more limited capabilities.
Unlike many, I don't think terrorists are going to be necessarily limited to a "dirty bomb." That means possibly first having to deal with the initial blast and fireball. As silly as it may sound, I think maybe we need to go back to the '50's and dust off the old "duck and cover" technique. It certaintly makes a lot more sense now when dealing with an isolated nuclear detonation than it did with total nuclear war. After that, it becomes a matter of getting out of the fallout area.
Some will live who are not prepared at all, while some who have the most carefully planned equipment checklists and escape routes will die. That is just the nature of a surprise attack. But I'm thinking that if you are not killed outright, you stand a pretty good chance of making it with some preparation and maybe a little luck.
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#61241 - 03/03/06 03:24 PM
Re: It Can't Happen Here
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Veteran
Registered: 12/10/01
Posts: 1272
Loc: Upper Mississippi River Valley...
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Haven't watched the movie, but I agree with your assements about the current state of affairs.
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#61242 - 03/03/06 06:23 PM
Re: It Can't Happen Here
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INTERCEPTOR
Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 07/15/02
Posts: 3760
Loc: TX
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You can get an idea of what to expect(!) from the webpage below: Google Maps Nuke Zone This is a Google Maps hack which allows you to map out the zones of destruction from a nuclear detonation. You can adjust the yield of the bomb and place the center anywhere you'd like. Using this I was happy to discover our house/school/workplace are all far enough away from the port of Houston to escape everything but the fallout from even a giant bomb. I figured the port of Houston would be the most likely spot for Houston to be hit via a smuggled Iranian/North Korean bomb. Overall, the zone of destruction from an atomic bomb is suprisingly small. <img src="/images/graemlins/crazy.gif" alt="" /> -Mark
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#61243 - 03/03/06 06:55 PM
Re: It Can't Happen Here
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journeyman
Registered: 08/29/05
Posts: 93
Loc: Lower Fla. Keys
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Interesting you mention that movie. I hadn't thought of it for years when I spotted it on ebay. I'm bidding it, along with The Postman and Red Dawn.
_________________________
Scott
"Tryin' to reason with hurricane season"
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#61244 - 03/03/06 09:27 PM
Re: It Can't Happen Here
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Stranger
Registered: 09/08/05
Posts: 18
Loc: NYC
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The blast radius is small, but don't let that lull you into thinking you're fine if you're not near it; a major component of the damage done by a nuke would be the fact that it ignites all flammable (and much considered not flammable at relatively low temperatures) materials. Even a 5kt nominal yield weapon going off in lower Manhattan would set fires as far away as Brooklyn, Queens and Jersey City. Reference: http://www.thebulletin.org/article.php?art_ofn=jf04eden
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#61247 - 03/04/06 08:39 PM
Re: It Can't Happen Here
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Cranky Geek
Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 09/08/05
Posts: 4642
Loc: Vermont
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That estimate fails to take into account the bulk of the structures in the way. However, you might be getting the big, spark plug sized fall out at that distance.
_________________________
-IronRaven
When a man dare not speak without malice for fear of giving insult, that is when truth starts to die. Truth is the truest freedom.
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#61248 - 03/05/06 07:13 PM
Re: It Can't Happen Here
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Member
Registered: 03/09/05
Posts: 109
Loc: Chicago
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I checked out a similar site awhile back. I live on the north side of Chicago. If a bomb went off near Wrigley Field, I'd be toast. If one went off downtown--which seems much more likely--it would just be fire and chaos. Though evacuating would be ideal, I really don't think Chicago's prepared for anything of that scale. If the prevailing winds were typical, the fallout would end up in Lake Michigan. I'd shelter in place for a few days, defending the evac vehicle then make my way out of the city. I'm getting prepared to do it on foot, but with a wife and child and one on the way, the prospect of doing that is...daunting, to say the least.
That's an interesting movie, BTW. Probably not as likely a scenario as the smaller yield, personally delivered nuke, but who knows what the world will look like in 10, 20 years.
Edited by anotherinkling (03/05/06 09:44 PM)
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