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I've been a subscriber of Gerald Calente's Trends Journal since 1989. I used it as a resource for a college term paper and thought it was a good publication so I subscribed. I made some money of of the information in it over the years so Gerald in my book is reputable.
Michael Moore is reputable in alot of people's book too
On Sept. 27, 1991, Bush announced a raft of unilateral initiatives to limit and reduce the U.S. tactical nuclear weapons arsenal.[2] Specifically, he pledged to:
•withdraw to the United States all ground-launched short-range weapons deployed overseas and destroy them along with existing U.S. stockpiles of the same weapons; and
•cease deployment of tactical nuclear weapons on surface ships, attack submarines, and land-based naval aircraft during “normal circumstances.” Implicitly, the United States reserved the right to redeploy these arms in a crisis.
Where did it say anything about tactical nukes and the Army?
In fact, your link says that most US tac-nukes were destroyed by 2003 and that the only ones left are USAF gravity bombs...
Almost all US Army nukes (artillery shells and mines) were withdrawn from service in the early 1990s IIRC...
where did i say anything about the army, i mentioned tactical battlefield nuclear weapons, but you are correct that bush did get rid of the artillary type.
other than the obvious, why would anyone want to get rid of such a kick ass weapon.
check these bad boys out.
where did i say anything about the army, i mentioned tactical battlefield nuclear weapons, but you are correct that bush did get rid of the artillary type.
why would anyone want to get rid of such a kick ass weapon.
check these bad boys out.
where did i say anything about the army, i <object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/khyZI3RK2lE&hl=en&fs=1&"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/khyZI3RK2lE&hl=en&fs=1&" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object>
Those are cool. But who would want to be that close to the explosion?
CEO's when they are at the end of their rope and have no real sollutions always merge with another company. This usually distracts the investors from the real problems and rallys the stock short-term.
Politicians when they have no real sollutions start wars as a distraction. The resulting emergency becomes the new focus and they can use it as a rallying point for sacrifice and hardship.
Nothing new.
The system has been failing for a long-time and now they are desperate to hold onto their power and will do anything. It's a failed system desperately scratching to stay afloat and the greed makes them willing to do anything. Man. Have we fallen hard.
Fallen from where? Name me a period of time in our country when everything was "just right" economically and socially.
i love how you edit peoples posts in quotes to try and seem intelligent.
It's not really "editing." More like deconstructing...
And I'm glad you love it. Incidently, while I may not be that intelligent, I did work in a program that was indirectly connected to nuclear weapons. Just admit you're owned and move on, and STFU...
Those are cool. But who would want to be that close to the explosion?
I think there was a study in which the infantrymen (draftees) that were ordered to advance into a ground level zero impact area just post nuclear detonation came out with extraordinarily high rates of cancer by their 60s...
I would imagine that they did.
Heck there was a city south east of a Nevada test area where the whole town practicaly died of cancer. They were not only down wind, but the radiation got in the water as well.
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