Ryan Miller
Active member
Poll of the day
I'd say a couple hundred thousand died, possibly saving many many more. So, maybe pretty safe. Especially if you weren't in either place.Ask Japan how safe it made them lol
And this actually translates to a weird situation where conventional warfare does not ever occur in ways that actually mobilize or antagonize NATO forces, instead targeting fringe nations like Ukraine that don't push their buttons too hard.Now look at it from a modern perspective. You know you are going to die in 1 hour. You can press the button and also kill the person who poisoned you.
On one side you have USA+ NATO+others. On the other side you have Russia.
Russia will ultimately lose a war, and their idea of deterrent is by nuking the other party hard enough to get them to stop. Or simply do it out of spite.
It works until it doesn't. It's a deterrent, just like bows, crossbows, rifles, machine guns, aircraft, and every other superweapon in the past. And then it becomes the norm.
Nowhere in history has man had the ability to have a weapon which can destroy all life on earth 2 times over, until the invention of the Nuclear Bomb. The comparison of a nuclear weapon to past weapons such as a bow, aircraft, etc does not seem to be the same concept.
I don't understand, what are you actually arguing? Are you saying that because Aircraft are better at killing people (Strange statement, as nuclear bombs can also be dropped from planes), ICBMs and nuclear warfare are not more deadly? And what does the cockroach bit have to do with anything other than just arguing over semantics unrelated to the discussion?I'm pretty sure we've got enough ammunition in this world to destroy everything several times over. Aircraft has been more effective at killing more people and infra than nukes too. And when you say "all life" I guess you're not including the cockroaches who can survive the radiation.