Benazir Bhutto is dead

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Post by Lord of the Abyss »

The Duchess of Zeon wrote:If God as made you invincible, that does change the equation, doesn't it?
Except that they don't act like they really believe it. Otherwise they'd just march into the machine guns and get slaughtered.
The Duchess of Zeon wrote:
wolveraptor wrote:^ Do you have any evidence to support this idea that even the manipulative leaders of these extremists are that insane? Especially given the fact that they have as of yet refused to expose themselves in any way and trust in "Allah's ability to protect them." They obviously don't believe they're invincible.
But they have done so (exposing themselves), and we've actually killed a large number of them. Dozens of extremist leaders have been killed in action by the special forces of organized governments in the past six years. It's only our failure to get the big fish which makes this seem not the case.
And it's the 'big fish', the ones who DON'T get caught because they aren't that stupid who would win any conflict. Because they are the one's who'll survive.
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Post by Jadeite »

The Duchess of Zeon wrote: The Frontier regiments in the old Raj used to be the premier regiments of the Army, and considering the enormous British influence on Pakistan, I would imagine to some extent they still are. The problems of operating in the likes of Waziristan are innumerable.
Pakistani posters on IranDefense give me the impression otherwise. Whenever someone brings up the numerous ambushes that Pakistani troops have been caught in, the reply is usually along the lines of "Yeah, but that's Frontier Corps, so what do you expect? :roll: "
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Post by Darth Wong »

The Duchess of Zeon wrote:
wolveraptor wrote:^ Do you have any evidence to support this idea that even the manipulative leaders of these extremists are that insane? Especially given the fact that they have as of yet refused to expose themselves in any way and trust in "Allah's ability to protect them." They obviously don't believe they're invincible.
But they have done so (exposing themselves), and we've actually killed a large number of them. Dozens of extremist leaders have been killed in action by the special forces of organized governments in the past six years. It's only our failure to get the big fish which makes this seem not the case.

And I provided an example of a non-rational worldview in the original post.
Wait a minute, are we assuming that any extremist leader who has been KIA must have been willingly exposing himself to enemy fire in the hopes that Allah would protect him? Are we therefore assuming that first-world militaries are so woefully incompetent that they should never be able to nail anyone unless that person wants to be nailed?
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Post by Illuminatus Primus »

The Duchess of Zeon wrote:But generally speaking, I don't even think they're particularly suicidal like that. I just believe that they have been raised in a sufficiently blinkered and religious fashion as to genuinely be unable to process the prospect of losing a nuclear war, or to believe it's even possible to do so when God is on your side. Again, even moderate Muslims think God will send angels to chop down the ICBMs coming at Mecca. If God as made you invincible, that does change the equation, doesn't it?
Who was it who said that? Was that on this board?
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Post by Ace Pace »

Illuminatus Primus wrote:
The Duchess of Zeon wrote:But generally speaking, I don't even think they're particularly suicidal like that. I just believe that they have been raised in a sufficiently blinkered and religious fashion as to genuinely be unable to process the prospect of losing a nuclear war, or to believe it's even possible to do so when God is on your side. Again, even moderate Muslims think God will send angels to chop down the ICBMs coming at Mecca. If God as made you invincible, that does change the equation, doesn't it?
Who was it who said that? Was that on this board?
Yes. Saverok, quite a few years ago when he was known as Evilcat3000(I think). I think it shows up on Fundies Say the Darnest things. Since then he's improved. :wink:
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Post by The Duchess of Zeon »

Destructionator XIII wrote:
Illuminatus Primus wrote:A full-scale South Asian exchange has the potential to collapse the world economy but overall give us a lot more room to meet sustainability.
Yup, because wrecked infrastructure helps sustainability such great deal. :roll:

Suppose there was nuclear war in Asia. Suppose it kills off half the world population. Forty years later, the population is right back where it is now, but this time, all the progress they made towards getting out of the dirty industrialization period is in rubble. Time to start all over again.

A grand accomplishment you have there.
Are you on crack? Even at the height of the Cold War only 30% of the world population would have been fatalities in a full-bore nuclear exchange.
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Post by MKSheppard »

The Duchess of Zeon wrote:Are you on crack? Even at the height of the Cold War only 30% of the world population would have been fatalities in a full-bore nuclear exchange.
And another 30-40% would die from the aftereffects of the exchange, like breakdown of societies, diseases, etc etc
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Post by Gandalf »

BBC

Looks like AQ are being blamed.
Bhutto killing blamed on al-Qaeda

Pakistan says it has intelligence that al-Qaeda assassinated opposition politician Benazir Bhutto at an election rally on Thursday.

Citing what it said was an intercepted phone call, the interior ministry said the killing had been ordered by an "al-Qaeda leader", Baitullah Mehsud.

The BBC's security correspondent, Frank Gardner, says it is too early to establish the truth of what happened.

Ms Bhutto has been buried in her family tomb amid scenes of mass grieving.

Video of her last moments before the attack in Rawalpindi was shown at the news conference given in Islamabad by the interior ministry.

According to the ministry, the primary cause of Ms Bhutto's death appears to have been a knock on her head as she tried to duck her attacker, and not bullets or shrapnel. Her party denies this.

Pakistani security forces are on high alert, with at least 31 people killed in protests by Bhutto supporters across the country since the assassination.

Conflicting versions

Baitullah Mehsud is a tribal leader in Pakistan's South Waziristan region.

Pakistani intelligence services intercepted a call from him in which he allegedly congratulated another militant after Ms Bhutto's death, interior ministry spokesman Javed Iqbal Cheema told reporters.

There was, he added, "irrefutable evidence that al-Qaeda, its networks and cohorts were trying to destabilise Pakistan".

There have now been so many conflicting versions coming out of Pakistan of how Benazir Bhutto died and who sent the assassin that it is hard for anyone to build up an accurate picture, our security correspondent says.

Both al-Qaeda and the Taleban are perfectly plausible culprits since they hated everything the secular Ms Bhutto stood for, he adds.

But critics of President Pervez Musharraf are unlikely to be convinced by his government's insistence that it has proof al-Qaeda ordered the murder.

'Pack of lies'

Brig Cheema said Ms Bhutto had smashed her head against a lever of her car's sun roof.

She was, he said, trying to shelter inside the car from the gunman, who set off a bomb after opening fire with a gun.

A surgeon who treated her, Dr Mussadiq Khan, said earlier she may have died from a shrapnel wound while Ms Bhutto's security adviser, Rehman Malik, said she had been shot in the neck and chest.

Farooq Naik, a senior official in Ms Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party, said the government's explanation of her death was a "pack of lies".

"Two bullets hit her, one in the abdomen and one in the head," he told AFP news agency.

Brig Cheema added that all possible security arrangements had been put in place for Ms Bhutto.

Her supporters say the government did not do enough to protect her.

After a previous attempt on her life in October that killed 130 people, Ms Bhutto accused rogue elements of the Pakistani intelligence services of involvement.

Unrest

Ms Bhutto was buried next to her father Zulfikar Ali Bhutto in the family mausoleum near their home village, Garhi Khuda Bakhsh, in Sindh province, as thousands of mourners attended.

Many European and Asian countries have warned their citizens against travelling to Pakistan because of concern that the killing of Benazir Bhutto could provoke more violence.

Rioting and unrest have been reported across the country.

* Six bodies were found among the remains of a factory set on fire in Karachi

* At least one passenger train was set ablaze in Sindh Province and a number of railway stations were reportedly burnt as security forces in the province were ordered to shoot rioters on sight

* In the city of Multan in Punjab province, a mob ransacked seven banks and torched a petrol station

Other cities across Pakistan are at a virtual standstill.

Schools, businesses and transport are all closed, and people are reluctant to step out during the three days of national mourning declared by Mr Musharraf.

In another development, a bomb attack on an election meeting of the pro-Musharraf Pakistan Muslim League in Swat, north-western Pakistan, killed at least nine people including a candidate on Friday.

Election questions

A spokesman for the President Musharraf has said it is too early to decide whether the parliamentary election on 8 January should be postponed.

Mohammad Mian Soomro, the caretaker prime minister, urged all political parties to talk to the government, so that a decision could be reached by consensus.

The election is meant to pave the way for a return to democratic rule, suspended in October 1999 when the then Gen Musharraf seized power through a coup.

But opposition parties are now against the election taking the place and it is hard to see how they it would be a true test of the democratic process, the BBC's Karishma Vaswani reports.

Ms Bhutto returned from eight years of self-imposed exile in October, following an amnesty agreed with President Musharraf.

Speaking in Washington, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice called for the democratic process in Pakistan to continue, without commenting on the January election date.

"The way to honour [Benazir Bhutto's] memory is to continue the democratic process in Pakistan so that the democracy that she so hoped for can emerge," she said.
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Post by The Duchess of Zeon »

Darth Wong wrote: Wait a minute, are we assuming that any extremist leader who has been KIA must have been willingly exposing himself to enemy fire in the hopes that Allah would protect him? Are we therefore assuming that first-world militaries are so woefully incompetent that they should never be able to nail anyone unless that person wants to be nailed?
I can't precisely say. There's been some radical Islamist leaders killed on the front lines in Palestine, in Iraqi, in Yemen, and many in Afghanistan. Bin Laden himself is not some coward hiding from America. He did see some actual combat against the Soviets in the 1980s.

The point, however, is that highly intelligent and capable of individuals who are raised in religious society are just as capable of insane, suicidal acts as those who are ignorant and less educated. A good example are the generally highly erudite Buddhist monks, who in previous Japanese history mummified themselves. By force of will, while still alive, they abstained from food and instead ingested preservative chemicals and so on until they died, having protected their bodies from rot. You can go to Japan and see them in Buddhist shrines.

In short, in religion, things like that Hindu priest killing himself and saying he will be revived is not uncommon, Mike. Really, I think the problem is that we just don't take seriously what the likes of Osama bin Laden say. He's a highly intelligent individual who has achieved the incredible feat of taking on the United States and fighting us more or less to a bloody draw over six years. Why do we assume he is incapable of, or disinterested in, dying for his cause? He is not fundamentally irrational; he is simply irrational because his own rationality is based entirely around the worldview of the Islamic religion, and therefore he is only irrational because his worldview is objectively false. Why is it assumed that he's lying about his own desire for martyrdom? Since his own worldview is internally consistent, couldn't he genuinely desire that and at the same time recognize that he could better serve Allah by staying alive and commanding others?

Why do we refuse to take the words of these people at face value? It seems to me this is exactly the same thing that goes on when people make excuses about the death threats that conservative Christians make: "You're going to burn in agony in Hell forever!" Why isn't that a death threat under the law? Because they didn't really mean it? Because there's no way to prove it will actually happen? But then again you can be arrested for threatening someone even when there's no proof you actually were preparing to carry out the threat.

It seems to me that, particularly among rational individuals, there is a hesitation to accept the full and horrible consequences of religion. It can, has, and likely will again produce societies which are fundamentally irrational from top to bottom, where nominally intelligent and rational people will come up with utterly insane things, and do utterly insane things, because their entire worldview has been grounded on a complete fantasy.

Hell, I might be wrong, but certainly it should seem obvious that nuclear weapons in the possession of such people would be the most terrifying thing possible.
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Post by Tiriol »

The Duchess of Zeon wrote:
Darth Wong wrote: Wait a minute, are we assuming that any extremist leader who has been KIA must have been willingly exposing himself to enemy fire in the hopes that Allah would protect him? Are we therefore assuming that first-world militaries are so woefully incompetent that they should never be able to nail anyone unless that person wants to be nailed?
I can't precisely say. There's been some radical Islamist leaders killed on the front lines in Palestine, in Iraqi, in Yemen, and many in Afghanistan. Bin Laden himself is not some coward hiding from America. He did see some actual combat against the Soviets in the 1980s.

The point, however, is that highly intelligent and capable of individuals who are raised in religious society are just as capable of insane, suicidal acts as those who are ignorant and less educated. A good example are the generally highly erudite Buddhist monks, who in previous Japanese history mummified themselves. By force of will, while still alive, they abstained from food and instead ingested preservative chemicals and so on until they died, having protected their bodies from rot. You can go to Japan and see them in Buddhist shrines.

In short, in religion, things like that Hindu priest killing himself and saying he will be revived is not uncommon, Mike. Really, I think the problem is that we just don't take seriously what the likes of Osama bin Laden say. He's a highly intelligent individual who has achieved the incredible feat of taking on the United States and fighting us more or less to a bloody draw over six years. Why do we assume he is incapable of, or disinterested in, dying for his cause? He is not fundamentally irrational; he is simply irrational because his own rationality is based entirely around the worldview of the Islamic religion, and therefore he is only irrational because his worldview is objectively false. Why is it assumed that he's lying about his own desire for martyrdom? Since his own worldview is internally consistent, couldn't he genuinely desire that and at the same time recognize that he could better serve Allah by staying alive and commanding others?

Why do we refuse to take the words of these people at face value? It seems to me this is exactly the same thing that goes on when people make excuses about the death threats that conservative Christians make: "You're going to burn in agony in Hell forever!" Why isn't that a death threat under the law? Because they didn't really mean it? Because there's no way to prove it will actually happen? But then again you can be arrested for threatening someone even when there's no proof you actually were preparing to carry out the threat.

It seems to me that, particularly among rational individuals, there is a hesitation to accept the full and horrible consequences of religion. It can, has, and likely will again produce societies which are fundamentally irrational from top to bottom, where nominally intelligent and rational people will come up with utterly insane things, and do utterly insane things, because their entire worldview has been grounded on a complete fantasy.

Hell, I might be wrong, but certainly it should seem obvious that nuclear weapons in the possession of such people would be the most terrifying thing possible.
That Christian statement isn't a death threat - it doesn't threaten to kill anyone. It is, however, far more worse if you believe in existence of Hell. It is an eternity of torment and agony, to be forever forsaken by God and His glory.

However your logic still has holes. As has been pointed out, anyone who rises to a position of leadership and can hold on to it will also have more selfish and amibtious tendencies than an average person. They might be strongly motivated by religion; indeed, they could very well be fanatics. But they are also fond of power and it is a commodity not easily parted with - and death has a habit of removing that power. That some leaders have been killed in frontlines is by no measure an indication that they are religious lunatics seeking destruction and devastation of everything: if the group that is being led is small, the leader often has to take direct action along with his subordinates. And many cultures have seen (and still see) frontline leadership as a sign of courage and actual leadership skills. And that someone has been killed by special operations forces isn't by any stretch sign of religious irrationality and desire for suicidal glory. It just means that those attackers were cunning enough, bold enough and quick enough to get close to their target and not bombing the entire area to the ground where their target might be.

And it has also been pointed out that Islamists do not want to turn the world (or their own country, for that matter) into nuclear wasteland. They wish to re-create the Caliphate which is rather hard if their lands are turned into glass. I've read far more reports about CHRISTIAN extremists waiting for the end of the world and even wishing for it than about Muslims wishing for the same. They are not COBRA army with cartoonish villainy and desire for either destruction of the world/it's conquest (in which order, nobody knows). The American fundamentalism's fixation on the Rapture and the apocalypse is actually far more worrying than Islamist extremists' fixation on re-living the glory of the Caliphate. And yet I don't see anyone arguing that Bush and company would be willing to jump for any chance to personally lead the US forces into combat and seeking glorious self-sacrifice in the name of the Savior.

And if someone glorifies martyrdom but still thinks that God wants him to remain alive to better serve Him, he isn't likely going to blow himself up along with much of his country and neighboring ones out of spite unless cornered.
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Post by Sarevok »

Please, let's leave classifying people as insane to mental health professionals.

I think one needs to realise the difference in mentality between the 16 year old girl Hezbollah sent as their first suicide bomber and leaders like Nasrallah who stalled an Israeli invasion. In the brutal world of backstabbing, scheming politics only the smart can reach the top.
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Post by Gil Hamilton »

The Duchess of Zeon wrote: Are you on crack? Even at the height of the Cold War only 30% of the world population would have been fatalities in a full-bore nuclear exchange.
Even so, it would still be a disaster on an unimaginable scale for the after effects, I think. Even if only 20 million people died in the exchange, total, I recall an article during the last spat between India and Pakistan that pointed out there aren't enough hospital beds in ALL OF ASIA to deal with the wounded from such an event. It would seem to me that the ones that got incinerated by the bombs completely would be somewhat lucky, given the breakdown that would follow. It could easily wreck the South Asian subcontinent.
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Post by Adrian Laguna »

Destructionator XIII wrote:Yup, because wrecked infrastructure helps sustainability such great deal. :roll:

Suppose there was nuclear war in Asia. Suppose it kills off half the world population. Forty years later, the population is right back where it is now, but this time, all the progress they made towards getting out of the dirty industrialization period is in rubble. Time to start all over again.
If there is a nuclear war in Asia then infrastructure in Europe and the Americas is not affected. The loss of several million people in a localized nuclear conflict helps sustainability in those areas not affected by said conflict. As for the population ballooning back to where it was, that is impossible without building the infrastructure back-up.
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Post by The Yosemite Bear »

You know, I'm beginning to think "Ms. Sunshine" would be a better nickname for Marina. I mean everytime I see her post in the last couple of months it depresses me. this thread has me looking for rope or razors...
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Post by The Duchess of Zeon »

Tiriol wrote: That Christian statement isn't a death threat - it doesn't threaten to kill anyone. It is, however, far more worse if you believe in existence of Hell. It is an eternity of torment and agony, to be forever forsaken by God and His glory.

However your logic still has holes. As has been pointed out, anyone who rises to a position of leadership and can hold on to it will also have more selfish and amibtious tendencies than an average person. They might be strongly motivated by religion; indeed, they could very well be fanatics. But they are also fond of power and it is a commodity not easily parted with - and death has a habit of removing that power. That some leaders have been killed in frontlines is by no measure an indication that they are religious lunatics seeking destruction and devastation of everything: if the group that is being led is small, the leader often has to take direct action along with his subordinates. And many cultures have seen (and still see) frontline leadership as a sign of courage and actual leadership skills. And that someone has been killed by special operations forces isn't by any stretch sign of religious irrationality and desire for suicidal glory. It just means that those attackers were cunning enough, bold enough and quick enough to get close to their target and not bombing the entire area to the ground where their target might be.

And it has also been pointed out that Islamists do not want to turn the world (or their own country, for that matter) into nuclear wasteland. They wish to re-create the Caliphate which is rather hard if their lands are turned into glass. I've read far more reports about CHRISTIAN extremists waiting for the end of the world and even wishing for it than about Muslims wishing for the same. They are not COBRA army with cartoonish villainy and desire for either destruction of the world/it's conquest (in which order, nobody knows). The American fundamentalism's fixation on the Rapture and the apocalypse is actually far more worrying than Islamist extremists' fixation on re-living the glory of the Caliphate. And yet I don't see anyone arguing that Bush and company would be willing to jump for any chance to personally lead the US forces into combat and seeking glorious self-sacrifice in the name of the Savior.

And if someone glorifies martyrdom but still thinks that God wants him to remain alive to better serve Him, he isn't likely going to blow himself up along with much of his country and neighboring ones out of spite unless cornered.

The whole point of what I was saying was that according to their fucked-up worldview, it may well not be suicidal to nuke US overseas military bases.
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Post by The Duchess of Zeon »

Gil Hamilton wrote:
The Duchess of Zeon wrote: Are you on crack? Even at the height of the Cold War only 30% of the world population would have been fatalities in a full-bore nuclear exchange.
Even so, it would still be a disaster on an unimaginable scale for the after effects, I think. Even if only 20 million people died in the exchange, total, I recall an article during the last spat between India and Pakistan that pointed out there aren't enough hospital beds in ALL OF ASIA to deal with the wounded from such an event. It would seem to me that the ones that got incinerated by the bombs completely would be somewhat lucky, given the breakdown that would follow. It could easily wreck the South Asian subcontinent.
Oh, there's no question of that. Also, a large number of hospitals will be destroyed in the attacks. Most of the people injured will simply die untreated in any nuclear conflict, even in the United States, where it's been estimated that a small nuclear device being set off in a city would create a situation in which only about 30 - 35% of the seriously wounded would actually be treated, and the rest would die over the next week or so. And that's in America, with only one city hit. The same is true of hitting a city with chemical weapons or a bio-warfare attack like Anthrax. If that ever happens in America, you WILL be watching on cable news as tens of thousands of people who could have been saved die from want of the available resources to treat what is otherwise a survivable injury or infection.
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The Yosemite Bear wrote:You know, I'm beginning to think "Ms. Sunshine" would be a better nickname for Marina. I mean everytime I see her post in the last couple of months it depresses me. this thread has me looking for rope or razors...
Why, you have a large extended family in India? :P . Or is there something unpleasant to you in these discussions of casualties exceeding WW2 by far for some reason, or the fact that it might be argued to be a lesser evil.

A note to those mentioning that the leaders rising to the top will necessarily be smarter and less religious/insane/suicidal - That assumes a strong, centralized command. The scenario of the country splitting up into tribal warlords or by "religious parishes/demonitions" (Sorry for the inelegant analogy) each now a fully religious community, complete with cradle to grave religious education, and the next generation having power over the nukes is what terrifies me almost as much.

If it's now, or in 30 years, Fundamentalist whackjobs who have a different world view than secular people having nukes is a horrifying idea.
Still, it'll thin out the population at least :roll: :) .
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Post by The Yosemite Bear »

no, more like the global climate changes resulting from such an exchange, mass casualties, and fallout...

besides I've already lost a cousin in Afganistan...
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Post by Adrian Laguna »

The Yosemite Bear wrote:You know, I'm beginning to think "Ms. Sunshine" would be a better nickname for Marina. I mean everytime I see her post in the last couple of months it depresses me. this thread has me looking for rope or razors...
:lol: It's also gets further irony given how she manages to state it in a pretty matter of fact manner, totally avoiding the "WE'RE SO FUCKED!" vibe that other posters sometimes give off. So she is something of a Ms. Sunshine.
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Post by The Yosemite Bear »

yeah, I am picturing her wearing a black hood, and calmly talking about the inevitable deaths of thousdands, like it's making breakfast.
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Post by Darth Wong »

The Duchess of Zeon wrote:The whole point of what I was saying was that according to their fucked-up worldview, it may well not be suicidal to nuke US overseas military bases.
This kind of speculation would be a lot more compelling if you had concrete evidence of Islamic leaders standing up in front of enemy machine-guns and saying "fire away, Allah will protect me". It seems to me that even the militant nutjobs understand that there are certain practical issues to war, and until I see some compelling evidence to the contrary, I see no reason to change this assessment.

Even the famous dumb-shit line about angels shooting down nuclear missiles to protect Mecca is not enough to justify this kind of speculation. For one thing, I suspect these Muslims are quite aware that they are living in Pakistan, not Mecca. For another, it's one thing to spout this kind of stupid bullshit; it's another to trust your life to it. Christians say a lot of stupid shit about God "extending special protection to America", yet when push comes to shove, even the most rabid fundie seems to understand that the American armed forces need guns, not just Bibles.

One of the reasons for the effectiveness of enemy asymmetrical warfare tactics is the enemy's recognition of their own limitations, and development of a way to continue warfare despite those limitations. This flies in the face of the notion that they will just boldly stumble forward under the assumption that Allah will bring them victory.
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Post by The Grim Squeaker »

The Yosemite Bear wrote:no, more like the global climate changes resulting from such an exchange,
Minor changes at most, it could only help slow global warming (By an iota), while providing lovely sunsets. Setting of tones of nukes to slow global warming has been raised a sa serious proposition, and nuclear winter is a brain-bug. (Alass for Sagan's single weakness).
mass casualties,
"Reduce the excess population!" /Awaits the ghosts of Nuclear past, present and future
and fallout...
You live far enough away for it not ot bother you, especially since these are mainly land-based nations.
besides I've already lost a cousin in Afganistan...
my condolences for your loss.
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Post by Broomstick »

The Duchess of Zeon wrote:The same is true of hitting a city with chemical weapons or a bio-warfare attack like Anthrax. If that ever happens in America, you WILL be watching on cable news as tens of thousands of people who could have been saved die from want of the available resources to treat what is otherwise a survivable injury or infection.
Right, I remember the tens of thousands of people dying during the last anthrax attack/distribution - oh, wait, it didn't happen like that.

I'm not saying you couldn't have mass casualties on a scale of millions, but the anthrax letters, which did distribute anthrax to a lot of people beyond just those addressed, resulted in very few deaths compared to people exposed.

In many ways, we're discussing middle-to-worse case scenarios. Of course, planning in these instances shouldn't be done using best case, but the gap between theory/speculation and reality is still there.
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Post by Gil Hamilton »

The Duchess of Zeon wrote: Oh, there's no question of that. Also, a large number of hospitals will be destroyed in the attacks. Most of the people injured will simply die untreated in any nuclear conflict, even in the United States, where it's been estimated that a small nuclear device being set off in a city would create a situation in which only about 30 - 35% of the seriously wounded would actually be treated, and the rest would die over the next week or so. And that's in America, with only one city hit. The same is true of hitting a city with chemical weapons or a bio-warfare attack like Anthrax. If that ever happens in America, you WILL be watching on cable news as tens of thousands of people who could have been saved die from want of the available resources to treat what is otherwise a survivable injury or infection.
This is where I think they'd get a major source of their megadeaths, given the marginal nature of alot of the Indian and Pakistani population and the lack of resources to deal with the calamity.

Plus, I don't think there are enough devises in play here to smash India up good AND annilhilate its army, is there? After the bombs are done dropping, it seems to me that we could still see India lead a million man march across the Pakistani border with murder and mayhem on their mind. I don't know if it would merely be the world's shortest deadliest war.
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Post by The Duchess of Zeon »

Gil Hamilton wrote: This is where I think they'd get a major source of their megadeaths, given the marginal nature of alot of the Indian and Pakistani population and the lack of resources to deal with the calamity.

Plus, I don't think there are enough devises in play here to smash India up good AND annilhilate its army, is there? After the bombs are done dropping, it seems to me that we could still see India lead a million man march across the Pakistani border with murder and mayhem on their mind. I don't know if it would merely be the world's shortest deadliest war.
You're correct. The Indians could take a gut-punch from the full Pakistani arsenal and keep on marching.
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