Tuesday 26th of November 2024

donald strangelove

strangelove

Adapted fiction from the New Yorker (this is a bad Gus spoof -- though a frightening possibility)

 

May 2017 marks the fifty-third and four month’s anniversary of Stanley Kubrick’s black comedy about nuclear weapons, “Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb.” Released on January 29, 1964, the film caused a good deal of controversy. Its plot suggested that a mentally deranged American President could possibly think of a love-in with the Soviet Union, but his generals decided to flip the President to the war machine’s way of life: make war, not love

 

One reviewer described the film as “brilliantly dangerous … a beautiful thing about an evil Duck.” Another compared it to Soviet propaganda. Although “Strangelove” was clearly a farce, with the comedian Donald Trump playing three roles, including himself, it was criticized for being too plausible. An expert at the Institute for Strategic Studies called the events in the film “possible on a dozen counts.” A former Deputy Secretary of Defense approved the idea that a President should authorize the use of a nuclear weapon without Congress’ approval: “Nothing, in fact, could be more accurate than this alternative fact.” (See a compendium of clips from the film). General McMaster, the President chief of staff, said. “Something this pretty can happen. It will be like fireworks on Sunday”. 

 

The first casualty of every war is the truth—and the new Cold War fomented by the Democrats is no exception to that dictum. Half a century after Kubrick’s mad goose, Jack Donald Ripper, launched a nuclear strike on the Soviets to defend the purity of “our precious bodily fluids” from Communist subversion and from global warming falsity, we now know that American Presidents indeed have the ability to start a Third World War on their own. And despite the introduction of flimsy safeguards in the years since then, the risk of a mad man and his NATO friends engaging in nuclear detonation somewhere is on the card.

 

 

original text at: http://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/almost-everything-in-dr-strangel...

 

the sad grand revival of war by donald backflip...

President Donald Trump is continuing his foreign odyssey with a stop in Brussels to meet leaders of other NATO members. The visit is primarily a meet-and-greet highlighted by dinner, but it illustrates the president’s apparent capture by Washington’s conventional wisdom.

No international institution may better illustrate Public Choice economics than the transatlantic alliance, which survived despite the demise of the Soviet Union and Warsaw Pact. Indeed, NATO’s boosters now are proclaiming a grand revival and pressing for an ever greater U.S. commitment to the organization.

Yet the NATO now-and-forever caucus ignores the larger reality against which U.S. foreign policy must be judged. Uncle Sam is functionally bankrupt. He has around $200 trillion in unfunded liabilities, promises made with no money set aside for payment. Indeed, the Congressional Budget Office warns that without responsible decision-making on Capitol Hill—and who wants to bet on that—the federal government will be back to trillion-dollar annual deficits within a decade—without a financial crisis. The numbers will only worsen as the entitlement tsunami builds with the continuing retirement of baby-boomers. The U.S. is looking at a debt burden equivalent to that of Greece before its crash.

Military outlays aren’t likely to survive unscathed. Domestic discretionary spending, the most easily controlled portion of the budget, accounts for less than 15 percent of federal outlays. The rest goes to Medicare, Social Security, Medicaid, interest, and the military. Seniors are not likely to voluntarily sacrifice their medical care or retirement to defend the European welfare state. Medicaid expansion is a done deal and there is no cheap way to provide health care to the nation’s poor. Interest payments will rise substantially as the Federal Reserve abandons its zero-interest policy. Which leaves the Pentagon as an inevitable target for cuts.

Moreover, the U.S. is busier than ever elsewhere in the world. The Obama administration announced a “pivot” or “rebalance” to Asia, emphasizing a shift in resources to what is increasingly the globe’s economic engine in the midst of rising security challenges. The Trump administration has carried this policy forward with its emphasis on North Korea. Washington’s role will grow ever more complicated if Pyongyang develops a genuine nuclear deterrent.

Read more:

http://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/trumps-new-and-misguided...

donald is a bad role model...

Teenager folgen Trends, das ist fast ein Naturgesetz. Manche Moden sind so bizarr, dass Eltern erstmal beim Experten nachfragen müssen. Aktuelles Beispiel: "Pussy Slapping".

Okay, es ist jetzt so weit. Ich bin alt und vergrätzt und verstehe "die jungen Leute" nicht mehr.

read more:

http://www.spiegel.de/panorama/gesellschaft/pussy-slapping-was-steckt-da...

 

Yes, this is weird, but then when the world has Donald Trump for a US President, a man who has self-described as "pussy grabbing" on secret tapes, what is there not to be worried about?

 

"Now, however, it seems to be common practice among some of the schoolgirls to take a slap on the "Venushigel""...

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Donald Trump is not fit to be president of the United States. He does not possess the requisite intellect and does not understand the significance of the office he holds nor the tasks associated with it. He doesn't read. He doesn't bother to peruse important files and intelligence reports and knows little about the issues that he has identified as his priorities. His decisions are capricious and they are delivered in the form of tyrannical decrees.

He is a man free of morals. As has been demonstrated hundreds of times, he is a liar, a racist and a cheat. I feel ashamed to use these words, as sharp and loud as they are. But if they apply to anyone, they apply to Trump. And one of the media's tasks is to continue telling things as they are: Trump has to be removed from the White House. Quickly. He is a danger to the world.

Trump is a miserable politician. He fired the FBI director simply because he could. James Comey had gotten under his skin with his investigation into Trump's confidants. Comey had also refused to swear loyalty and fealty to Trump and to abandon the investigation. He had to go.

Witnessing an American Tragedy

Trump is also a miserable boss. His people invent excuses for him and lie on his behalf because they have to, but then Trump wakes up and posts tweets that contradict what they have said. He doesn't care that his spokesman, his secretary of state and his national security adviser had just denied that the president had handed Russia (of all countries) sensitive intelligence gleaned from Israel (of all countries). Trump tweeted: Yes, yes, I did, because I can. I'm president after all.

read more:

http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/donald-trump-is-a-menace-to-th...

the doomsday prep...

 

 

By William Astore — a retired US Air Force lieutenant colonel and history professor. This story first appeared on the TomDispatch website.


Has there ever been a nation as dedicated to preparing for doomsday as the United States? If that’s a thought that hasn’t crossed your mind, maybe it’s because you didn’t spend part of your life inside Cheyenne Mountain. That’s a tale I’ll get to soon, but first let me mention America’s “doomsday planes.”

Last month, troubling news emerged from US Strategic Command (STRATCOM) that two of those aircraft, also known as E-4B National Airborne Operations Centers, were temporarily disabled by a tornado, leaving only two of them operational. And that, not surprisingly, caught my attention. Maybe you don’t have the world’s end on your mind, not with Donald Trump’s tweets coming fast and furious, but I do. It’s a kind of occupational hazard for me. As a young officer in the US Air Force in the waning years of the Cold War, the end of the world was very much on my mind. So think of this piece as the manifestation of a disturbing and recurring memory.

 

In any case, the reason for those doomsday planes is simple enough: in a national emergency, nuclear or otherwise, at least one E-4B will always be airborne, presumably above the fray and the fallout, ensuring what the military calls “command and control connectivity.” The E-4B and its crew of up to 112 stand ready, as STRATCOM puts it, to enable America’s leaders to “employ” its “global strike forces” because… well, “peace is our profession.” Yes, STRATCOM still references that old SAC motto from the glory days of former Strategic Air Commander Curtis LeMay who was so memorably satirized by director Stanley Kubrick in his nuclear disaster film, Dr. Strangelove.

The Pentagon reassuringly noted that, despite those two disabled planes, the E-4B’s mission—including perhaps the implementation of a devastating nuclear strike or counter-strike that might kill tens of millions and even cause a “nuclear winter” (a global nightmare leading to a billion deaths or more)—could be accomplished with just two of them operational. Still, relieved as I was to hear that, it did get me thinking about the other 190 or so nations on this planet. Do any of them have even one “doomsday” plane to launch? And if not, how will they coordinate, no less survive, the doomsday the US government is so willing to contemplate and ready to fund?

When it comes to nuclear weapons and what once was called “thinking about the unthinkable,” no other nation has as varied, accurate, powerful, deadly, or (again a word from the past) “survivable” an arsenal as the United States. Put bluntly, the nation that is most capable of inflicting a genuine doomsday scenario on the world is also the one best prepared to ride out such an event (whatever that may turn out to mean). In this sense, America truly is the exceptional nation on planet Earth. It’s exceptional in the combination of its triad of nuclear weapons, its holy trinity of sorts—nuclear missile-carrying Trident submarines, land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles, and strategic bombers still flown by pilots—in the thoroughness of its Armageddon plans, and especially in the propagation of alockdown, shelter-in-place mentality that fits such thinking to a T.

Once upon a time, I thought I was exceptional, or at least exceptionally well protected. My job as an Air Force software engineer granted me regular access to the innards of the Cheyenne Mountain Complex, America’s nuclear command center. In the 1960s, the complex had been tunneled out of granite at the southern edge of the Front Range of mountains, dominated by Pike’s Peak, near Colorado Springs, Colorado.

I can still remember military exercises in which the mountain would be “buttoned up.” That meant the command center’s huge blast doors—think of bank vault doors on steroids—would be swung shut, isolating the post from the outside world. I don’t recall hearing the word “lockdown” in those days (perhaps because back then it was a term generally applied to prisons), but that was certainly our reality. We sheltered in place in that mountain redoubt, the most literal possible version of a Fortress USA. We were then cut off (we hoped) from the titanic blasts and radioactive fallout that would accompany any nuclear attack, most likely by that Evil Empire, the Soviet Union. In a sense, we were a version of a doomsday plane, even if our mountain couldn’t be sent aloft.

 

My tour of duty lasted three years (1985-1988), the specifics of which I’ve mostly forgotten. But what you don’t forget—believe me, you can’t—is the odd feeling of having 2,000 feet of granite towering over you; of seeing buildings mounted on huge springs intended to dampen the shock and swaying caused by a nuclear detonation; of looking at those huge blast doors that cut you and the command center off from the rest of humanity (and nature, too), theoretically allowing us the option both of orchestrating and surviving doomsday.

I sometimes think the decision in the 1960s to bury a command center for nuclear war under megatons of solid granite was America’s original lockdown moment. Then I remember the craze for building small, personal, backyard bomb shelters in the 1950s. There was a memorable Twilight Zone episode from 1961 in which neighbors fight bitterly over who will take refuge in just such a shelter as the threat of nuclear war looms. Indeed, the idea of a mountain of a bomb shelter to keep out nuclear war was no more anomalous in those years than Donald Trump’s “big, fat, beautiful wall” to keep out Mexicans is today. Both capture a certain era of fear, whether of exploding nukes or rampaging immigrants, and an approach to that fear—controlling it by locking it out and us in—that was folly then and is folly now.

For soon after Cheyenne Mountain was completed, the Soviets developed improved missiles sufficiently accurate and powerful to obliterate the command center. Assuming Trump’s dream wall was ever completed, immigrants would assuredly develop the means to subvert its intent as well. But no matter: Cheyenne Mountain became a symbol of American resolve as well as fear, the ultimate shelter, just as Trump’s wall has become a symbol of a different sort of resolve and fear. (Keep “those people” out!)

 

Eventually decommissioned, Cheyenne Mountain lives on as a manifestation of an American bunker mentality in the age of doomsday that’s suddenly back in vogue. Or rather what’s in vogue now is not the militarized mountain I remember, which was dark, dank, and depressing, or those crude, tiny, private backyard nuclear shelters of the 1950s, but a craze that fits a 1 percent era with a bizarre billionaire as president. A new urge is growing among the ultrawealthy for what are, in essence, privatized mini-Cheyenne Mountains for the super-rich. Think:billionaire bunkers with all the perks of home, including a pet kennel, a gun safe, and a small gym, as well as “12-and-a-half-foot ceilings, sumptuous black leather couches, wall art featuring cheerful Parisian street scenes, towering faux ferns, and plush carpets.” Surviving doomsday never looked so good.

And who can blame the richest among us for planning to outlast doomsday or aTrumpocalypse in the style to which they are already accustomed? With the world’s “doomsday clock” ticking ever closer to midnight, seeking (high-priced) shelter from the storm has a certain logic to it. If it’s not full-scale nuclear war that beckons, then perhaps major climate catastrophe and social collapse. As Naomi Klein recently put it at The Intercept, “high-end survivalists” from Silicon Valley to Wall Street are “buying space in custom-built underground bunkers in Kansas (protected by heavily armed mercenaries) and building escape homes on high ground in New Zealand.” I don’t normally pity the Kiwis, but I will if legions of doomsday-fleeing uber-rich start hunkering down there like so many jealous dragons guarding what’s left of their gold.

Remember those old American Express card commercials with the tag line “Don’t leave home without it”? If America’s Department of Homeland Security had its own card, its tag would be: “Don’t leave home.”

Consider the words of retired General John Kelly, the head of that department, who recently suggested that if Americans knew what he knew about the nasty terror threats facing this country, they’d “never leave the house.” General Kelly, a big bad Marine, is a man who—one would think—does not frighten easily. It’s unclear, however, whether he considers it best for us to “shelter in place” just for now (until he sends the all-clear signal) or for all eternity.

One thing is clear, however: Islamic terrorism, an exceedingly modest danger to Americans, has in these years become the excuse for the endless construction and funding of an increasingly powerful national security state (the Department of Homeland Security included), complete with a global surveillance system for the ages. And with that, of course, goes the urge to demobilize the American people and put them in an eternal lockdown mode, while the warrior pros go about the business of keeping them “safe” and “secure.” 

 

I have a few questions for General Kelly: Is closing our personal blast doors the answer to keeping our enemies and especially our fears at bay? What does security really mean? With respect to nuclear Armageddon, should the rich among us indeed start building personal bomb shelters again, while our government continues to perfect our nuclear arsenal by endlessly updating and “modernizing” it? (Think: smart nukes and next generation delivery systems.) Or should we work toward locking down and in the end eliminating our doomsday weaponry? With respect to both terrorism and immigration, should we really hunker down in Homeland USA, slamming shut our Trumpian blast door with Mexico (actually long under construction) and our immigration system, or should we be working to reduce the tensions of poverty and violence that generate both desperate immigrants and terrorist acts?

President Trump and “his” generals are plainly in favor of you and yours just hunkering down, even as they continue to lash out militarily around the globe. The result so far: the worst of both worlds—a fortress America mentality of fear and passivity domestically and a kinetic, manic urge to surge, weapons in hand, across significant parts of the planet.

Call it a passive-aggressive policy. We the people are told to remain passive, huddling in our respective home bunkers, sheltering in place, even as America’s finest aggressively strike out at those we fear most. The common denominator of such a project is fear—a fear that breeds compliance at home and passivity before uniformed, if often uninformed, experts, even as it generates repetitive, seemingly endless, violence abroad. In short, it’s the doomsday mentality applied every day in every way.

Thirty years ago, as a young Air Force officer, Cheyenne Mountain played a memorable role in my life. In 1988 I left that mountain redoubt behind, though I carried with me a small slab of granite from it with a souvenir pen attached. Today, with greying hair and my very own time machine (my memories), I find myself returning regularly to Cheyenne Mountain, thinking over where we went wrong as a country in allowing a doomsday-lockdown mentality to get such a hold on us.

Amazingly, Barack Obama, the president who made high-minded pleas to put an end to nuclear weapons (and won a Nobel Prize for them), pleas supported by hard-headed realists like former Secretaries of State Henry Kissinger and George Shultz, gave his approval to a trillion-dollar renovation of America’s nuclear triad before leaving office. That military-industrial boondoggle will now be carried forward by the Trump administration. Though revealing complete ignoranceabout America’s nuclear triad during the 2016 election campaign, President Trump has nevertheless boasted that the US will always be “at the top of the pack” when it comes to doomsday weaponry. And whether with Iran or North Korea, he foolishly favors policies that rattle the nuclear saber.

 

In addition, recent reports indicate that America’s nuclear arsenal may be less than secure. In fact, as of this March, inspection results for nuclear weapons safety and security, which had been shared freely with the American public, are now classified in what the Associated Press calls a “lockdown of information.” Naturally, the Pentagon claims greater secrecy is needed to protect us against terrorism, but it serves another purpose: shielding incompetence and failing grades. Given the US military’s nightmarish history of major accidents with nuclear weapons, more secrecy and less accountability doesn’t exactly inspire greater confidence. 

Today, the Cheyenne complex sits deactivated, buried inside its mountain, awaiting fresh purpose. And I have one. Let’s bring our collective fears there, America. Let’s bury them under all that granite. Let’s close the blast doors behind us as we walk out of that dark tunnel toward the light. For sheltering in place shouldn’t be the American way. Nor should we lock ourselves down for life. It would be so much better to lockdown instead what should be truly unthinkable: doomsday itself, the mass murder of ourselves and the destruction of our planet.

William Astore is a retired US Air Force lieutenant colonel and history professor. He blogs at Bracing Views.

 

 

http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2017/07/cheyenne-mountain-nuclear-bunker-donald-trump/

 

 

 

strange love...

The Pentagon recently released its new Nuclear Posture Review. Its critics are stunned. Not only is the use of nuclear weapons now more thinkable, but the threshold for their use has been lowered. Doctor Strangelove would be proud. Is the world facing another dangerous arms race?

 

Read more:

https://www.rt.com/shows/crosstalk/418341-pentagon-nuclear-weapon-danger...

 

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“nice and new and ‘smart’” missiles...

Idiot... IDIOT! IDIOT! Madman Trump is an idiot. All Americans supporting his “nice and new and ‘smart’” missiles on Syria are mad as well... Are we living on the same planet?

 

My prediction in the spoof at top is coming true! Hell!

 

Noice!??? Because Assad has been deemed to be a mad nasty madman by the media, even decent people think it's okay for another mad nasty madman (Trump) to go and "punish" him... This is insane!

you should be worried...

The US Air Force has deployed B-52 heavy bombers to the Middle East in a “defensive” move to “deter aggression,” the Pentagon said, as military officials hype a “potential attack” by Iraqi militia groups supported by Iran.

A pair of B-52H Stratofortresses were sent on a “short-notice, non-stop mission” over the Middle East from their base in Barksdale, Louisiana, US Central Command announced on Thursday, saying the deployment is “designed to deter aggression” as well as “rapidly integrate” the warplanes with “multiple regional partners.”

“Potential adversaries should understand that no nation on Earth is more ready and capable of rapidly deploying additional combat power in the face of any aggression,” said CENTCOM commander General Frank McKenzie.

The bomber task force mission successfully highlighted our global reach capability while helping our pilots retain familiarity with the airspace in the region. This type of mission is invaluable as it allowed our crews to integrate with US and partner air assets, seamlessly. https://t.co/PMPdkdKjnK

— US AFCENT (@USAFCENT) December 10, 2020

While CENTCOM declined to name which adversary it hoped to “deter,” as well as the exact area the bombers would operate, the deployment comes amid reports that armed groups in Iraq are preparing an attack on US forces with backing from Tehran. According to a military official cited by Politico, the Pentagon has seen “troubling indicators of potential attack preparations” by the militias. The official did not detail what indicated an impending attack, however, and noted that the deployment is “not offensive in nature.” 

“There is no plan here to act, there is a plan to portray a strong defensive posture that would give a potential adversary pause,” they said.

 

 

Read more:

https://www.rt.com/news/509300-b52-middle-east-iran/

 

 

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