Annie Jacobsen | Nuclear War

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Commonwealth Club World Affairs (CCWA)

Commonwealth Club World Affairs (CCWA)

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 233
@joelok48
@joelok48 7 ай бұрын
Just finished the book. Maybe the most important book of the 21st Century. Unless massive changes are made immediately it is OBVIOUS this scenario will play out. Not if but when. Going to start living each day as if its my last.
@BHill-rz9tg
@BHill-rz9tg 6 ай бұрын
That's how people lived during the last cold war...people are just being reintroduced to it.
@Exanto777
@Exanto777 5 ай бұрын
We thought all of that in my teens, 65 years ago. Things have moved on now. That book is old hat. Nukes would be detonated above earth so as to destroy computers and the electric grid.
@anonymous3174
@anonymous3174 3 ай бұрын
That's the thing. No changes will be made. We are too close.
@Exanto777
@Exanto777 3 ай бұрын
@@anonymous3174 any calculating enemy would detonate the nukes 400km above ground. This would destroy electric grid transformers and computers digital devices. This would make the population virtually defenceless.Then a conventional invasion to follow straightaway to eliminate the population and take possession of the country. The point is that large nukes would be detonated in space to avoid radioactive fallout, ‘clean’.
@rca6576
@rca6576 2 ай бұрын
I think Daniel Ellsberg's work The Doomsday Machine came before this book and covered the same territory as she does. It seems most people don't know about that book these days but, it is every bit as important and terrifying.
@zerocool1344
@zerocool1344 7 ай бұрын
Many of us that grew up in the tail in of the cold war understands and its sad we have return to this.
@patrickbass3542
@patrickbass3542 5 ай бұрын
It never went away...we just forgot about it!
@angusdog22
@angusdog22 6 ай бұрын
I finished the audiobook and immediately started it over again. It’s so surreal, unbelievable and frightening it blows the mind. Another crazy part is to be 3, 4 hours into it and to be only 24 minutes into the scenario and at the end you realize it only took like 72 minutes for the world to end. 🤯🤯🤯
@anonymous3174
@anonymous3174 3 ай бұрын
I just finished it. She's a great narrator. Truly terrifying. The part where the Russian on the phone to the secretary of defense says "your president should have contacted us by now" and hangs up.
@anonymous3174
@anonymous3174 3 ай бұрын
Oh and how Russian detection tech reads 50 ICBMs as hundreds. I was at work and looked up at people going about their day having no idea of this.
@Dennycrane757
@Dennycrane757 7 ай бұрын
Well, that was both incredibly interesting and utterly terrifying at the same time. 😟
@RandomNooby
@RandomNooby 7 ай бұрын
Can't fekin wait... (;
@jamesodin8751
@jamesodin8751 7 ай бұрын
Just got the book!!
@StarwaterCWS
@StarwaterCWS 7 ай бұрын
I am a Cold War sailor and loaded many nuclear weapons onboard aircraft carriers during training drills meant to keep us ready should the President order that task. We did our jobs without question, and we did it with precision. Those days went away under President Clinton where the training stopped and we ‘could neither confirm or deny’ that nuclear weapons were onboard aircraft carriers. I cannot say if that was a good thing or not. I suppose having fewer nukes at the ready are a good thing IF all sides are on par with it. It saddens me that the United States abandoned civil readiness for a nuclear strike. Essentially our politicians have the bunkers and the population does not. That should be a crime. Ironically Russia has massive nuclear fallout shelters for their city dwellers. They run drills and estimates are millions of their civilians could survive a strike. With all of our waste in spending we spend not one dime on fallout shelters.
@greatchalla3799
@greatchalla3799 7 ай бұрын
To think the existing U.S President at any given time has the veto power to make the decision to launch. It’s not just one weapon of mass destruction it’s the entire system and it’s insane numbers of these devices. Consider eminent destruction within an hour.
@jmpattillo
@jmpattillo 7 ай бұрын
They might survive, but they’d starve to death afterwards. The US realized it was a useless distraction. If the strategy is deterrence due to the risk of mutually assured destruction, then preparing the population to “survive” the destruction is kinda pointless.
@jasonstacey8577
@jasonstacey8577 7 ай бұрын
Why shelters nobody will survive 😢
@Exanto777
@Exanto777 7 ай бұрын
No nuke shelter needed. We cannot survive for years in a shelter. In any case that woman is way out of date. An opposing country would want to destroy the people and take over an uncontaminated land. Therefore explode the nuclear bombs about 400km above the country to wipe out all the computers. Then send other military forces in. (Including robots) to kill all the population. After that, the aggressor simply moves in to a new country. A new philosophy. What you did made sense then. Now it makes no sense especially as there are only two types of sea vessels, they are submarines and targets.
@BHill-rz9tg
@BHill-rz9tg 6 ай бұрын
@@jasonstacey8577 That's silly...if the Russians are ready to survive and the chicoms, then so should Americans. Get over this pathetic view that it's not even worth the effort to survive. That's fatalism and disgusting.
@jonathanstancill7941
@jonathanstancill7941 6 ай бұрын
Annie Jacobson, I read you're book, its fantastic and utterly terrifying. I'm 61 years old and probably more used to the fact that I might be vapourised than most of your younger viewers.As I grew up after the horror of WW2 I thought that that I would live a safe life with sensible leaders in our countries espectially the leaders of those countries that possesed these distgusting weapons. We now live in a world where quite a few a people with their fingers on the button on the 'Football' are either war criminals, luny dictators, luny wannabe dictators (if they are not locked up) or people that have very different values , and sometimes these people have no safe place to retire safely to with their family........they are so hated. So can we have a little distilled bottle of Annie Jacobsen and dispense it to all the 'World Leaders' and in their own biggness and in their own self importance they my actually stop from blowing us all up?
@Exanto777
@Exanto777 3 ай бұрын
@@jonathanstancill7941 the ideas are way out of date.
@JohnGuzik
@JohnGuzik 7 ай бұрын
I've got the book sitting next to me. This video is saving me a lot of time. Probably shouldn't be a blow by blow of the book.
@JosephOlson-ld2td
@JosephOlson-ld2td 7 ай бұрын
Little Boy (Hiroshima) and Fat Man (Nagasaki) were 10 ton, 15 kiloton bombs. By 1950, US Iowa battleships had W-34, 1 kiloton, 16" artillery shells.
@mhgaffney
@mhgaffney 7 ай бұрын
Back in the 1980s the US had a golden opportunity to reign in N Korea - but muffed it. Reagan sent a diplomatic mission to N Korea that came to the brink of success. The N Koreans were in a very bad way. Their people were starving. They offered to give up their nuclear program in return for economic assistance and food shipments. Unfortunately, when the delegation returned home Reagan was immersed in the Contragate crisis - and no one was interested in N Korea.
@patrickbass3542
@patrickbass3542 5 ай бұрын
North Koreans are still starving in droves! Nothing has changed there.
@patrickbarnett8780
@patrickbarnett8780 7 ай бұрын
You would need a bunker 20 miles down that is basically a small self sustained city with various PERSONS familys expertise equipment ect, that will stay there for many many generations in where it should already be in use without going into detail I have advised d.o.d in the issue @ hand .
@sdestaic777
@sdestaic777 7 ай бұрын
Just heard AJ on Irish radio this evening Truly frightening, truly truly frightening. Must get me the book Tuesday when shops open.
@JJ_1115
@JJ_1115 7 ай бұрын
Annie Jacobsen has the most amazing soothing and calming voice ive ever heard. Even if the nukes were raining down if I was listening to her I'd be convinced everything will be ok
@dindermufflin7932
@dindermufflin7932 5 ай бұрын
All part of the plan. Cia using her to keep population from freaking out. Ur drinking the kool-aid.
@SolaceEasy
@SolaceEasy 7 ай бұрын
The Old Spectre rattles chains again. "More money", it moans.
@RandomNooby
@RandomNooby 7 ай бұрын
Nailed it.
@normanmacfarlane6724
@normanmacfarlane6724 7 ай бұрын
The book should be arriving in a couple of days.
@mhgaffney
@mhgaffney 7 ай бұрын
I find it hard to believe Annie's book could be any scarier than Ellsberg's last one, The Doomsday Machine.
@hifi6638
@hifi6638 7 ай бұрын
Yes that book was about our nuclear war plan and was horrifying. This author, and interviewers do not seem to know about it. I have seen three presentations now and it is never mentioned. Key facts: *There was only one plan, and it ordered using ALL our weapons on USSR and China. *Order could be issued by a number of military officers without civilian involvement. * There was NO recall capability. Once the Go Order was given there was no recall possible. * The military hid the exact nature of war plan from civilian oversight. Even the Presidents did not know the nature of the plan. * Military fought the implementation - decades after weapons were in arsenal - of coded locks on weapons. For decades they set code as "00000".
@cknut9252
@cknut9252 5 ай бұрын
It’s not been 8 decades it’s been closer to 6, it’s been that way since after the Cuban missile crisis. I won’t deny it’s been that way since then.
@Zerocool215
@Zerocool215 7 ай бұрын
Scary. God help us
@rd264
@rd264 27 күн бұрын
why should god help us? America made this weapons and used them to terrorize citizens into submission, and aimed them at innocent people.
@Tuscarora21
@Tuscarora21 7 ай бұрын
She is Brilliant and she's warning us
@patrickbarnett8780
@patrickbarnett8780 7 ай бұрын
Her warning is not a resolution
@dindermufflin7932
@dindermufflin7932 5 ай бұрын
Shes not warning us whats about to happen she is *telling us* what is about to happen.
@joannevandyke5112
@joannevandyke5112 7 ай бұрын
Thank you for this introduction to Annie and her newest book...thoughts and prayers...
@michaelceriello4332
@michaelceriello4332 4 ай бұрын
Found this video after getting the book, which I read in one day. A month later I'm still thinking about it, and terrified for my kids. 5/5 star book but not helping me sleep at night. Fwiw, I'm a Political Science professor who studied the Cold War.
@donaldflett1504
@donaldflett1504 7 ай бұрын
Great discussion on the MOST important topic. I am a 76 year old American and I have lived with this situation, at least in the background, my whole life. In fact, I still remember air raid drills for nuclear attack back in grammar school in the 1950's, where, under direction of the nuns, we walked calmly into the corridor, crouched down against the wall, closed our eyes and covered our heads. It seems to me that the ONLY real solution is TOTAL nuclear disarmament. An important first step was when Ukraine gave up nuclear weapons in 1994 in exchange for American protection under the Budapest Memorandum. A step backwards is America not really protecting Ukraine now. Ironically for fear of escallation to nuclear exchange. In my opinion, this makes future voluntary nucear disarmament more problematic. A first step back in the right direction is a robust American defense of Ukraine, even to the extent of sending American troops with the needed weapons. Again, great discussion. Thank you.
@JesterEric
@JesterEric 7 ай бұрын
The USA never agreed to protect Ukraine. It did make the pledge not to itself use economic or military coercion. This pledge was broken when USA and EU imposed economic sanctions against Belarus in 2018
@alarmactionukalarmactionuk893
@alarmactionukalarmactionuk893 7 ай бұрын
Those nuclear missiles belonged to Russia in the aftermath of the break up of the Soviet Union. Nato installed its own chosen leadership in Ukraine after the military coup of 2014, so in a sense the US has already honoured its pledge.
@georgespiese7388
@georgespiese7388 7 ай бұрын
I love her work and look to getting a copy.
@supersoniq3506
@supersoniq3506 4 ай бұрын
Regarding scientists that were so focused on if they could build the bomb without asking if they should build it. Consider other similar scenarios right now. The work being conducted at CERN, work being done at bio labs (developing super viruses), and work being done on AI. Are any of these people asking the question if this work should be pursued, knowing that a potential for each is the destruction of mankind? It doesn't appear so. And governments are either funding it, pushing for it, and in no case trying to stop it.
@ThatUFOShowUFOBusters
@ThatUFOShowUFOBusters 7 ай бұрын
Hello people much ❤️ from Sydney Australia 🇦🇺
@ronrestaino8182
@ronrestaino8182 Ай бұрын
Shocking book.
@cyberlizardcouk
@cyberlizardcouk 7 ай бұрын
i think the scenario is plausible as Korea never signed a surrender at the end of the Korean War, there was only an unfinished episode of utter violence, ended with an armistice. From North Korea's point of view, they are still at war.
@ivanquinones310
@ivanquinones310 3 ай бұрын
Excellent explained!!
@Trad_chad1122
@Trad_chad1122 7 ай бұрын
Just got my copy delivered today! Can't wait to read!
@jfraser9011
@jfraser9011 7 ай бұрын
This book is probably the most important book that will be written this century. May we all pause and listen.
@elitetrader5468
@elitetrader5468 6 ай бұрын
It should be required reading in high schools.
@charles2675
@charles2675 6 ай бұрын
SOONER THEN LATER. Thanks to all the talk WANTING it to happen..
@mixemyth
@mixemyth 2 ай бұрын
I just finished this book a couple days ago and I'm having a very hard time with what I'm now aware of. I thought we were safe from old clunker diesel-electric subs but apparently their invisible if they creep along our coast, so much for Tom Clancy. I'm horrified that my own country made a plan for a pre-emptive nuclear strike on the USSR and that their retaliatory strike would be acceptable, and I'm terrified of the likelihood of a North Korean SUPER-EMP satellite that flies over us regularly and nothing is being done about that. That SUPER-EMP used alone would be the end of our country, the continental United States would be completely destroyed.
@scottweaverphotovideo
@scottweaverphotovideo 7 ай бұрын
Did you guys ever see Dr Strangelove? Kubrick covered all of this in 1963. I'm more interested in what could solve this disaster in waiting.
@mercy3219
@mercy3219 7 ай бұрын
Tom Lehrer had it right back in the 60s when we still had B&W TV: "🎶So long, Mom, I'm off to drop the bomb, so don't wait up for me... 🎵You can see me, on your TV... 🎵I'll look for you when the war is over -- and hour and a half from now🎶 The entire song parody's the worry of WWIII portrayed with the innocence of the 60s and without the ICBMs that can travel to the other side of the world in 30 minutes. kzbin.info/www/bejne/r6PFp2dmerOIldEsi=BqPi-9hfwkQlYoET
@williammurry3617
@williammurry3617 6 ай бұрын
Excellent work Anne, from an old DOD guy.
@nuclearstarr
@nuclearstarr 7 ай бұрын
Nuclear winter would not be produced by the detonation of a single large thermonuclear weapon over a city. Peer-reviewed studies predict that a nuclear war fought with hundreds or thousands of nuclear weapons is likely to produce nuclear winter, see "Self Assured Destruction: The Climate Impacts of Nuclear War" by Brian Toon and Alan Robock, published in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.
@erdossuitcase7667
@erdossuitcase7667 7 ай бұрын
Tsar Bomba was detonated in the sixties and it was over 50 Mt.
@nuclearstarr
@nuclearstarr 7 ай бұрын
​@@erdossuitcase7667 The studies look at the effects of nuclear weapons currently in the arsenals of the nuclear weapon states and their cumulative effects, which are based on the millions of tons of soot and smoke produced by the nuclear firestorms they create. The self-lofting effect of the soot would cause most of it to reach the stratosphere and create a global stratospheric smoke layer, which would heat to the boiling point of water and facilitate the destruction of most of the protective stratospheric ozone layer, as well as blocking large percentages of sunlight from reaching the surface of Earth. A full-scale US-Russian nuclear war would likely put 150 million tons of soot into the stratosphere that would block 70% of sunlight from reaching the Northern Hemisphere and 35% from the Southern Hemisphere, creating nuclear winter. Daily temperatures in central North America and central Eurasia would fall below freezing every day for 1 to 3 years, and it would be too cold to grow crops for a decade. Most people would starve. According to NukeNet, a 50 MT bomb would ignite fires over a total area of 4362 miles. A fire of that magnitude, centered over a megacity, could create enough soot to have some effect on climate, but I would leave that up to the scientists to predict.
@switchbladefriends2637
@switchbladefriends2637 7 ай бұрын
Detonation of thousands of tested Nuks already and that hasn't caused a Nuk winter. Those theories are debunked.
@AliceinWonderlandzz
@AliceinWonderlandzz 7 ай бұрын
Thank you for an interesting if terrifying preview of your book Annie. Given the nuclear threats from Russia, the build up of Chinese military and Taiwan, the erratic threats of North Korea, the imminent Iranian bomb, the hair trigger nuclear threat between Pakistan and India - it is a genuine wonder we are all alive at all still. I feel I should refocus my life to build a multigeneration bunker to save the world's knowledge and creatures before it all goes up in smoke and fallout. Perhaps Elon would like to throw a couple billion in to a bunker in Baja.
@laars0001
@laars0001 7 ай бұрын
Fat chance Felon Musk will help anyone but himself.
@supersoniq3506
@supersoniq3506 4 ай бұрын
As a child of the 60's, we grew up with the cold war. I remember reading a book in 7th grade about nuclear war and the aftermath. I'm not sure how 'people' can't know how fast it would start and be over for everyone. Its horrific to think prospect of nuclear war was just 'normal' and still is. There is no discussion about putting the Genie back in the bottle, which is insane. And you know why that is? As soon as the world disarmed itself, the race would be on to secretly re arm.
@patrickbass3542
@patrickbass3542 5 ай бұрын
I read the book and have a question: The book does not explain what happens when the President fails to give launch options within the "6-minute time limit".
@nickjohnson3619
@nickjohnson3619 7 ай бұрын
Sometimes nuclear war sounde preferable to another week at work
@elitetrader5468
@elitetrader5468 6 ай бұрын
Yikes. That's sad bro.
@co1937
@co1937 7 ай бұрын
I read all of her books. All are based on declassified info & interviews with people who were there. Why haven't they been made into Netflix or HBO series?
@zx5147
@zx5147 7 ай бұрын
Denis Villeneuve is directing a movie based on this book
@akeating1969
@akeating1969 7 ай бұрын
The book’s fantastic (&& yep - really terrifying - but that’s a good thing)!!! TY Ms. Jacobsen!
@RandomNooby
@RandomNooby 7 ай бұрын
Happy days!
@ptraynor
@ptraynor 7 ай бұрын
Cheer up folks! We’re all going to hell together!
@dindermufflin7932
@dindermufflin7932 5 ай бұрын
​@@ptraynoru r horrifyingly lost, hopeless, and depressed wow damn
@RoseLee65
@RoseLee65 5 ай бұрын
@@ptraynor There is no hell. We are vibration and energy which can not be destroyed. Look up videos about near death experiences (NDE'S). Many people around the world as well as Doctor's have died and been resuscitated and are sharing their experience of life after death like Orthopedic surgeon Mary Neal who drowned and Neurosurgeon Eben Alexander. Listening to these testimonials I have no fear of death at all because I now realize only the body dies which is a temporary vessel we use to exist and experience this 3 dimensional world. There are however other dimensions and we will live on, but not in HELL as organized religion would have you believe.
@dhLord64
@dhLord64 4 ай бұрын
We are absolutely 100 percent screwed. Inevitable.
@rd264
@rd264 27 күн бұрын
and we screwed with relish.
@KenVet
@KenVet 7 ай бұрын
If sub-launched near the coasts, less than 5 min. to "BOOM".
@brentcampbell3060
@brentcampbell3060 7 ай бұрын
During Berlin wall times, Communist Russians were watching their monitors. All of sudden, symbols of ICBM missles were headed towards Russia. Everyone wanted to light their missiles up in retaliation. One man convinced all the others to stand down. This episode was closer than the Cuba Missile crisis, by far. He is still my hero. Wish I remembered his name.
@TheMighty_T
@TheMighty_T 7 ай бұрын
Stanislav Yevgrafovich Petrov?
@KONNECTORAS
@KONNECTORAS 7 ай бұрын
1983
@beausmith6010
@beausmith6010 7 ай бұрын
Host doesn't need to give away the whole book.
@davidwright8432
@davidwright8432 7 ай бұрын
As the title alone says eveything to anyone who grew up in the 1950s, it's scarcely a spoiler! You might check out Herman Kahn's 1960 or 61 classic, 'On Thermomuclear War'. Plus ca change.
@Rays_Bad_Decisions
@Rays_Bad_Decisions 7 ай бұрын
Is the alternate command structure similar to the stay behind network in Europe like P2 in Italy?
@stringedassassin
@stringedassassin 7 ай бұрын
I turned this off after 20 minutes. The dude starts to speculate on what the Russians may react to, and he has no idea.
@davidwilkie9551
@davidwilkie9551 7 ай бұрын
When you ask yourself what is the most likely thing to be true about this MADness, how it's kept in our faces and why does no one do the most logical thing about what, how and why we're told is the democratically responsible thing to do. First Principle elemental functions self-defining the most probabilistic correlations is not flattering to those supposed to be taking the highest responsibility for "spiritual" continuity. They are overdue for assessment and correction, because it's obvious to anyone who lives on planet earth that they wish to "survive" at the expense of anything that might be an obstruction to them, like someone pointing out this extreme deceit, that they control the protection of the people. (Unlimited disgust for the political contempt revealed in this latest iteration of nuclear terror tactics)
@rlopez11-11
@rlopez11-11 7 ай бұрын
What is a/an pimpitus? Is it like a blimpitus and if so, what is a blimpitus?
@landmine940
@landmine940 7 ай бұрын
I think everyone has forgotten just how powerful and accurate modern nuclear weapons are. I think it’s scientists obligation since they created this weapon should call for atmospheric testing again so the powers to be can be reminded of what they learned in the 50’s and 60’s Plus it doesn’t help that the direct lines of communication have been cut to prevent escalation
@jamesstratton4488
@jamesstratton4488 7 ай бұрын
thanks
@deeratr
@deeratr 7 ай бұрын
got the book on audio. Wow
@Indrid__Cold
@Indrid__Cold 7 ай бұрын
Annie Jacobsen's book on this subject appears to have significant shortcomings. It seems that she may have drawn heavily from the works of Erric Schlosser, Alex Wellerstein, and Daniel Elisburg without providing any substantial original contributions.
@Jen-c6u
@Jen-c6u 7 ай бұрын
I think this lady is an operative.
@dindermufflin7932
@dindermufflin7932 5 ай бұрын
Yup. She is so in on it and already good(prepared).
@SpaceFrawg
@SpaceFrawg 7 ай бұрын
26:49 ... for those that don't understand how long six minutes is :)
@JoseCalixtoTome-cn4ej
@JoseCalixtoTome-cn4ej 7 ай бұрын
Jacobsen ambassador to nuclear war prevention program, must call all chief executive of every country to evaluate the present condition of the conflict, cancelletion of the word deployment of nuclear missle in evry media or military conversation, this will reduce the anxiety of head of state to frequently use the word nuclear retalliation
@ChowZeb
@ChowZeb 7 ай бұрын
no to nukes! time to save humanity
@dindermufflin7932
@dindermufflin7932 5 ай бұрын
Unfortunately nukes is saying humanity.
@rca6576
@rca6576 2 ай бұрын
People who are reading this book need to read Daniel Ellsberg's work The Doomsday Machine too. It's every bit as important as this current work and as terrifying.
@yolandavolcy3450
@yolandavolcy3450 2 ай бұрын
This makes so much sense. The big bang, then life starts again somewhere off the grid in Africa 🌍 with some tribe that's been off the grid somewhere self sufficient
@stevenryle5709
@stevenryle5709 7 ай бұрын
Putin isn't sabre rattling. Putin is giving a firm but cautious warning.
@laars0001
@laars0001 7 ай бұрын
Wanted International war criminal has a napoleon complex
@Cursingboot5
@Cursingboot5 7 ай бұрын
I’m going to be so upset if nuclear war arrives before my book is delivered
@RichardPhillips-ve4ru
@RichardPhillips-ve4ru 3 ай бұрын
Annie! Write a new book, researched like “Nuclear War”, about the approaching climate disaster!!
@byronfranek2706
@byronfranek2706 7 ай бұрын
In the context of nuclear winter, expensive guidance and delivery systems are essentially irrelevant. It does not actually matter where numerous bombs are exploded.
@Dayjob351
@Dayjob351 7 ай бұрын
Does anyone have a solution?
@allenmiller2071
@allenmiller2071 7 ай бұрын
Yes, rent a spaceship that takes you out to space.
@dindermufflin7932
@dindermufflin7932 5 ай бұрын
​@@allenmiller2071😂🤣
@untouchable360x
@untouchable360x 7 ай бұрын
"Not nuclear war. Special military reset." Putin
@BruceChamberlin-y4r
@BruceChamberlin-y4r 5 ай бұрын
900,000 years ago mankind went through a major choke point and almost went extinct. They went down to less than 1500 breeding individuals, and they recovered, but the gene pool was greatly reduced. Perhaps the survivors were the really smart ones, they must have been. Then we started over again with a small, but greatly improved gene pool of super intelligent people who survived. And that is where we are today.
@orionred2489
@orionred2489 4 ай бұрын
it doesn't follow that to survive they must have been the smartest. the choke point was climate related, and more likely it was related more to location.
@scare6262
@scare6262 5 ай бұрын
When do think we will have this nuclear war, what year ? Someone drop a year ?
@johnthompson7420
@johnthompson7420 6 ай бұрын
she makes a good case for first strike.
@erwin643
@erwin643 7 ай бұрын
@16:20 - They only change their tune because they're already retired, and their paycheck doesn't depend on it. BTW, just ordered the book.
@operationgoldilocks2481
@operationgoldilocks2481 7 ай бұрын
“Military-industrial-congressional complex” is what Ike had in his draft of the speech…to Congress. So he struck the last entity of the compound adjective.
@c2dvr
@c2dvr 7 ай бұрын
I appreciate Annie's work,however anyone destroying The Most High's throne,THE EARTH,will be sorry they were even born!
@pauldelray5839
@pauldelray5839 7 ай бұрын
Love Annie's books. Big fan. But the reality is so much worse than described here. This discussion talks about old technology. The new weapon is hypersonic nukes. The do not travel in a high orbit and adversaries can compute a math solution to intercept. it. There is no defense currently against any hypersonic. Mach 5 or higher. Plasma gas and decoys makes detection difficult. Russia and China fire these missiles from the ground in a variety of methods. Russian submarines already have hypersonics. We are behind both Russia and China.The United States just, very recently, can fire our hypersonic nukes from planes and drones. But it is an empty promise of protection. Hypersonics once launched use a rocket to reach high speed and then separate and simply glide to target. This vehicle can avoid and change route by itself. Distance is not a problem because of the high speed. Impossible to intercept. Less warning than discussed here. President Reagan with Russia reduce 70,000 nukes to around 12,000 in the 1980's -1990's. Current War situations around the world makes reduction of Nukes, the only real solution, impossible. Putin is at war with the West. He believes his hypersonics give him the advantage. The only other solution is that most nukes can be dialed up or down on radiation release. So some nukes could be used and create less radiation damage. If Putin invades Poland or eastern european countries and explodes these smaller bombs. What happens next? Does NATO unite or collapse? Hypersonics are indefensibile for all sides. It has become a first strike weapon. Terrifying.
@contactericjones
@contactericjones 7 ай бұрын
Ohio Class Submarines carry 20 Trident D-5 Missiles MIRV'd with 8 W88 warheads with a power of 475 kilotons each
@KbB-kz9qp
@KbB-kz9qp 7 ай бұрын
The Ukraine war seems like an example of how misunderstandings can take hold with a vengeance.
@c2dvr
@c2dvr 7 ай бұрын
This is because everyone knows whom The Most High chosen people really are!
@davidwright8432
@davidwright8432 7 ай бұрын
Oppenheimer later said working on the bomb was 'Technically sweet'. But he understated the emotion. It's technically very, very seducive. I speak from experience; decades back I had professional involvement with such work. It was indeed hypnotizingly attractive. I quit after a short time because of the nightmares.
@michaelduncan6287
@michaelduncan6287 7 ай бұрын
Nothing said of effective counter measures to bring down missiles before impact,,,, ???
@Gotjits0156
@Gotjits0156 7 ай бұрын
Doesn't exist.
@RandomNooby
@RandomNooby 7 ай бұрын
Because the US doesn't even have enough to counter North Korea with 100% efficiency, so it's a moot point.
@keisersozay3772
@keisersozay3772 5 ай бұрын
Terrifying isnt it?
@MMorMM
@MMorMM 7 ай бұрын
Yow. Duck & cover.
@daltonwatson5795
@daltonwatson5795 7 ай бұрын
Help!!!😉
@dlabor1965
@dlabor1965 7 ай бұрын
22:55 Second number zero: nuclear blast in space (electromagnetic pulse). Second number one (detection) and following (data processing) don't occur. Wesley K. Clark: kzbin.infoVk8_UBmKu0U?si=CBl17vze8eoARqon&t=2283
@roypedersen5212
@roypedersen5212 7 ай бұрын
The i formation was reliable until the Xaparocia incident. She says the attack was made by Russia. But, the Zapparochia power plant was under Russian forces within the first days Of the conflict. What Else is false??
@greatchalla3799
@greatchalla3799 7 ай бұрын
The Ukrainian’s were trying to destroy their own nuke plant and blaming Russia….there’s a good reason they took it over!
@orionred2489
@orionred2489 4 ай бұрын
well...kinda. the plant itself and the invasion encampment are separate entities. Both sides are blaming the other for the shellings of the plant. One side is and has worked with inspectors to verify claims and asses damage.
@switchbladefriends2637
@switchbladefriends2637 7 ай бұрын
Not for deterrence and even blaming deterrence for our woes. It's a liberal slant on appeasement. Her work is available at the online library, Library Genesis, compliments of Ruskies.
@orionred2489
@orionred2489 4 ай бұрын
disagree. the fix for mutual nuclear deterrence is a bigger conventional response that can be used as a threat.
@RichardPhillips-ve4ru
@RichardPhillips-ve4ru 3 ай бұрын
Deterrence works, until it doesn’t
@rkmklz7562
@rkmklz7562 4 ай бұрын
Nuclear War=The End 😮
@williamarks
@williamarks 7 ай бұрын
Just started a diet, now I want to comfort eat
@ptraynor
@ptraynor 7 ай бұрын
Is it really mutually ASSURED destruction? Is it assured? Or would a civilized side decide not to retaliate. In favour of possibly saving billions of people… ? (Whether it would be a world worth living in would be another question.)
@Robw1960
@Robw1960 7 ай бұрын
According to Ms. Jacobsen 'You'd have a better chance of winning powerball'. .. at least as far as the US not retaliating goes.
@browngreen933
@browngreen933 7 ай бұрын
Oppenheimer was America's Adolf Eichmann. 😢
@greatchalla3799
@greatchalla3799 7 ай бұрын
The entire scientific community where all procured from Europe after the war. These one time enemies or Nazi’s where very instrumental in developing the weaponry we have today. V-2 rocket technology was the precursor to these ICBM’s.
@elitetrader5468
@elitetrader5468 6 ай бұрын
Problem is someone else would have invented this monstrosity if not for him. Humans are the worst. That's why I only like canines. : )
@joelbell9082
@joelbell9082 5 ай бұрын
I grew up with Duck and Cover How ridiculous that was In a what if scenario two commercial vessels located in major ports in the United States We're able to smuggle several nuclear bombs in the their ships below water storage compartments With welded lead flooring above the bombs and were detonated in major ports in the United States What would be the response to that another important question that has to be asked and answered that some of these nuclear missiles are so old they might be degraded to the point where they not even function
@michaeltortola9476
@michaeltortola9476 7 ай бұрын
This is the stuff I tell all the silly preppers I meet, there is no surviving this type of event, ohhhh you have a bunker and some mre's , fantastic! Do you have 10 ears worth, or for that matter, clean water, fuel,.. no we're all dead!
@pootieputin2771
@pootieputin2771 7 ай бұрын
Great interview.... one thing Annie got wrong is, Russia was protecting the Nuclear power plant in Ukraine.... Russia would never fire on this facility.
@robinantonio8870
@robinantonio8870 7 ай бұрын
Oh yes they would
@youtubesucks2575
@youtubesucks2575 7 ай бұрын
@@robinantonio8870how do you know ?
@robinantonio8870
@robinantonio8870 7 ай бұрын
@@youtubesucks2575 same way you do.
@laars0001
@laars0001 7 ай бұрын
BullS
@michaelwatson2743
@michaelwatson2743 5 ай бұрын
Annie, are you the same woman listed in the opening credits on the Tom Clancy’s series “Jack Ryan”?
@janklaas6885
@janklaas6885 7 ай бұрын
📍52:56 2📍46:42 yes life will go one, but not complex life and humans will never ever be the dominant, because we will be extinct, because were the most complex life but also the most fragile. 3📍43:56
@stringfeever
@stringfeever 7 ай бұрын
Check out Helen Caldacot.
@feiyang2561
@feiyang2561 7 ай бұрын
Stop interrupting the author....come on
@dennissavage4007
@dennissavage4007 7 ай бұрын
All about a nuke war when nukes don't exist.
@GlenCooper-sj4lh
@GlenCooper-sj4lh 6 ай бұрын
Have you suffered head trauma recently?
@orionred2489
@orionred2489 4 ай бұрын
cool, I heard about this new conspiracy nonsense. now I've met one. What's the bottom line? That there really aren't nuclear weapons at all?
@SA-lj4eq
@SA-lj4eq 7 ай бұрын
This is insane intel............for normal Human beings to be aware of and thanks to Annie..................I will not be worried by the democratic nations and more importantly good grounding on human values in religious teachings not to start with as they have value for other humans who do not believe in theirs................But after 7 Oct what happened to Israel................I am worried about this nuclear capability with ideology of Political Islam regimes who have no value for life if you don't belong to them.....is a worry.............and that is where western world should put efforts to neutralize this nations getting this or if any have one should be taken out of their hands......We all know how Iran is getting this knowledge from other similar ideological nations......and they will not think twice to use this as their hate for Infidels is in their bones..............................
@springer-qb4dv
@springer-qb4dv 7 ай бұрын
Completely disagree with premises of "Faustian bargain". If US didn't develop atomic bomb, Soviet union would have developed it first. And then what? Stalin would have no compunction about exploiting atomic bomb first mover advantage to the max. Where USA failed was being first country to possess atomic bomb, it was obvious what the next step needs to be to prevent global nuclear Armageddon. USA must be only nation in the world who has nuclear weapon and it must keep it that way. But USA failed, and now Armageddon is inevitable.
@danscouler5175
@danscouler5175 6 ай бұрын
The author seems strangely excited about the end of humanity. Watch the British movie Threads and you will want to be at ground zero
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