Why They Want To Scare Us With the Threat of Nuclear War
Now that there is peace between North Korea and South Korea for the first time in 65 years, the threat is lessened. But we still have to worry about Russia. Cuba is not so much the worry despite what is happening with Russia. They are working on bringing peace to their region with a formal announcement about the end of this conflict coming up at the end of this year. They want to establish a “peace zone” at the conflicted border. The war had begun in 1950, coming to a head with an armistice three years later.
Certainly, my own fears of nuclear war have been eased, by hearing about this peace treaty. Now what to do about Russia and China, however, because we still have to worry about Chinese manufacturing taking over and Putin not leaving office in Russia, ever. I realized lately that nobody is dumb enough to drop the bomb in the present. And be responsible for environmental devastation? No. By now I think nobody is going to drop a bomb anywhere. We might be safer about that than we think. Dropping the bomb is a lost cause.
It is a very unnecessary way of resolving a conflict. It would be great if every country worked on nuclear disarmament. Dropping a bomb on anybody would only serve to set back a public version of First Contact. We stand a much better chance of not demeaning ourselves if we realize that nobody needs to do that. At the summit, Kim Jong Un and Moon Jae-in were busy planting a tree together. They both signed the Panmunjon Declaration for Peace, Prosperity, and Unification on the Korean Peninsula, as the first meeting between North and South Korea in 10 years.
The accord didn’t necessarily set out to tell what North Korea would get for denuclearization. The final peace situation must allow China and the United States to be involved. A deal is not completely agreed to yet. This is optimistic though for many who worry about nuclear war. North Korea has two satellites in orbit, which could mean that they are capable of launching an electromagnetic pulse or a hydrogen bomb such as one that North Korea was testing a year ago in September 2017. Countries with nuclear arsenals include China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States. Other states with nuclear weapons are India, North Korea, and Pakistan. NATO member nuclear states according to Wikipedia include Belgium, Italy, Netherlands, and Turkey. States that formerly had nuclear weapons are Belarus, Kazakhstan, South Africa, and Ukraine. Israel also has nuclear weapons capabilities, as in 75 to 400 nuclear warheads. South Africa previously had nuclear weapons but dissolved them by joining the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons Treaty. When I get a vision while in Sausalito of a nuke being dropped on San Francisco being very visible from where we could see the whole of San Francisco laid out before us, that vision winds up scaring me the rest of the whole day I had it. In that Wikipedia page, (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_states_with_nuclear_weapons) it is clear Russia still has more nuclear weapons than the United States. This is the stuff of good science fiction.
Now that there is peace between North Korea and South Korea for the first time in 65 years, the threat is lessened. But we still have to worry about Russia. Cuba is not so much the worry despite what is happening with Russia. They are working on bringing peace to their region with a formal announcement about the end of this conflict coming up at the end of this year. They want to establish a “peace zone” at the conflicted border. The war had begun in 1950, coming to a head with an armistice three years later.
Certainly, my own fears of nuclear war have been eased, by hearing about this peace treaty. Now what to do about Russia and China, however, because we still have to worry about Chinese manufacturing taking over and Putin not leaving office in Russia, ever. I realized lately that nobody is dumb enough to drop the bomb in the present. And be responsible for environmental devastation? No. By now I think nobody is going to drop a bomb anywhere. We might be safer about that than we think. Dropping the bomb is a lost cause.
It is a very unnecessary way of resolving a conflict. It would be great if every country worked on nuclear disarmament. Dropping a bomb on anybody would only serve to set back a public version of First Contact. We stand a much better chance of not demeaning ourselves if we realize that nobody needs to do that. At the summit, Kim Jong Un and Moon Jae-in were busy planting a tree together. They both signed the Panmunjon Declaration for Peace, Prosperity, and Unification on the Korean Peninsula, as the first meeting between North and South Korea in 10 years.
The accord didn’t necessarily set out to tell what North Korea would get for denuclearization. The final peace situation must allow China and the United States to be involved. A deal is not completely agreed to yet. This is optimistic though for many who worry about nuclear war. North Korea has two satellites in orbit, which could mean that they are capable of launching an electromagnetic pulse or a hydrogen bomb such as one that North Korea was testing a year ago in September 2017. Countries with nuclear arsenals include China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States. Other states with nuclear weapons are India, North Korea, and Pakistan. NATO member nuclear states according to Wikipedia include Belgium, Italy, Netherlands, and Turkey. States that formerly had nuclear weapons are Belarus, Kazakhstan, South Africa, and Ukraine. Israel also has nuclear weapons capabilities, as in 75 to 400 nuclear warheads. South Africa previously had nuclear weapons but dissolved them by joining the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons Treaty. When I get a vision while in Sausalito of a nuke being dropped on San Francisco being very visible from where we could see the whole of San Francisco laid out before us, that vision winds up scaring me the rest of the whole day I had it. In that Wikipedia page, (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_states_with_nuclear_weapons) it is clear Russia still has more nuclear weapons than the United States. This is the stuff of good science fiction.