Pelranius wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:DKeith2011 wrote:Because the bad guys have now spent a huge amount of time, money, effort and resources to build something that is guaranteed to not work. And in the process have probably left a trail of evidence as clear as day to anyone paying attention as they did so.
And how is this a bad thing?
I still don't see the problem here. If the bad guys waste money and time trying to build an idiot bomb design from an idiot bomb designer, and the idiot don't work, that's a good thing... for us!
The bad guys might start acting like they possess an actual nuclear weapon, since they could conceivably be stupid enough to be fooled by the marketing talk. It might not be so bad if it was a terrorist group braying on about possessing a nuke if all they had was a best a dud, but Outer Loonyistan believing the same thing could result in at the very least extremely heightened regional tension.
I agree here. Still, all else being equal, I'll take a Ryder truck going boom over a fizzle most days of the week. Better not to tempt them. A dysfunctional nuke would do enough damage as long as
something went right, but for the most part it wouldn't be worth the bastards' time and money.
Chamale wrote:darksoul wrote:I for one believe firmly that the 9/11 was an inside job.
OK, commence dogpiling. I'll start by pointing out that every 9/11 conspiracy theory would require the complicity of thousands of ordinary Americans. In this entire sample, surely some of them would bravely reveal the conspiracy, or show convincing evidence after the attacks that they were an inside job. Even if you're cynical enough to assume that thousands of random people could be bribed into silence, the budget required for these bribes would be very noticeable. If the government uses threats and intimidation, this wouldn't be enough to keep some people from writing a convincing tell-all book. Again, a book with actual evidence, not the loony stuff raised by the conspiracy theorists.
As for the evidence itself, conspiracy theories range widely on precisely
what evidence "proves" there was a conspiracy. I'd rather not write a long post to rebut a dozen different views, so if you could give us a good description of the evidence that convinced you 9/11 was an inside job, I'd be happy to come up with whatever counterexamples exist. I should probably take it somewhere else, though, because it's not related to the story at all.
Yeah, there's nothing to prove this that I've seen...or, frankly, even circumstantial evidence suggesting it. There was bumbling, yes, but that's the most I've seen any legitimate suggestion of. And bumbling bureaucrats do not a war crime make.
Stuart wrote:Friday 16th? It'll be up by then. Probably. Unless something terrible happens.
If Stuart wants to torment us further by pushing away the conclusion to the battle, I'm sure the very fact of Michael's fight stretching on for 2 more chapters would qualify. Not terrible in terms of story, of course, but terrible in terms of suspense. I already feel like Tantalus trying to read a book. The whole story has been approaching this conclusion, and I've been wanting to see Yahweh's head on a pike for months, but still I wait. It'll have been at least 3 weeks since Chapter 73 for us to finally learn how the battle turns out. I'm sure the conclusion will be worth the wait.
Well, the way I see this is that the story has a quality read as a serial that it will never have as a dead tree. I actually wish I could experience more stories as serials (sorry, gave up on TV a long time ago with
very few exceptions); it adds something intangible to the experience (the theorizing and postulating that you'll never really get between chapters of reading a novel).