Aug 162019
 

Hmmm.

Exclusive: Russian Doctors Say They Weren’t Warned Patients Were Nuclear Accident Victims

As more information dribbles out about the recent Russian missile explosion that released radiation of an undefined sort, this story is kinda interesting. There is some hey-didn’t-I-see-that-sort-of-thing-on-that-Chernobyl-show level paranoid bureaucracy skullduggery going on with doctors not being given all the facts, but one of the more interesting bits is that one of the doctors who treated the incident victims was found to have cesium 137 in his muscle tissue. There are a whole lot of useful bits of data left out here, such as how *much* cesium 137 and whether he could have picked it up elsewhere or whether any of the many other doctors and nurses involved were also contaminated with cesium 137. Given how often cesium 137 shows up in lower left nuclear incidents, such as industrial radioactive sources being simply lost or misplaced, it’s entirely possible that that one doctor came across it somewhere else. But if the doctor was contaminated internally to an important degree by a victim flown in from hundreds of mils from the incident site, it would indicate that there must be a *lot* of cesium 137 floating about. because cesium 137 would be an odd substance here. It’s a byproduct of the fission of U-235, but you’d imagine that uranium would be the bigger story if that was the source. It’s not seemingly terribly useful for military applications.

Cesium 137 is a beta emitter; it’s pretty much useless in a reactor, though I imagine someone clever might be able to find a way to harness the beta emissions somehow. It won;t make a bomb, though you might turn very fine powder into a cladding for a dirty bomb. Cesium salts are water soluble and play hell with biological systems since it infiltrates easily. But it’s actual practical uses in industry all seem kinda pointless for a missile:

Caesium-137 has a number of practical uses. In small amounts, it is used to calibrate radiation-detection equipment.[5] In medicine, it is used in radiation therapy.[5] In industry, it is used in flow meters, thickness gauges,[5] moisture-density gauges (for density readings, with americium-241/beryllium providing the moisture reading),[6] and in gamma ray well logging devices.[6]

I *suppose* it might have been used in a propellant flow meter for a rocket engine? Maybe?

I’m no nuclear expert, but for the life of me I can’t come up with a good use for the stuff.

 Posted by at 8:42 pm
Aug 092019
 

There seems to be something wrong with our bloody Russians this week.

A Russian military ammo depot that blew up earlier this week just exploded again

But wait! There’s more!

‘Brief radiation spike’ after rocket engine blast in northern Russia

Ummmm…

Radiation levels peaked between 11:50 and 12:30 (08:50-09:30 GMT) before falling and normalising by 14:00, the city administration in Severodvinsk said on its website, without reporting how significant the spike had been.

“They advise everyone to close their windows and drink iodine, 44 drops per glass of water.”

And…

Is Putin covering up a nuclear disaster? Ambulances covered in protective film transport six Russians who suffered severe radiation poisoning in mystery explosion during ‘test of new hypersonic missile’

UMMMMM…..

The Daily Mail article suggests that this was a “Zircon” hypersonic missile that exploded. The 3M22 Zircon is an experimental scramjet-powered anti-ship/land target missile with  range of about a thousand miles, with the capability of carrying a 600 kiloton thermonuclear warhead. If there was a radiation release, that would indicate that the missile was carrying an actual nuclear warhead… something that seems *really* unwise for a peacetime test flight. it’s unlikely that the warhead actually detonated; that would be Big News virtually impossible to hide. Instead I guess the warhead must have either been blown apart by the chemical explosives, or trashed on impact. in either case, it seems a little odd that the radiation spike would go back down.  You’d think there’d need to be a substantial cleanup. Unless, I suppose, the plutonium actually caught fire and burned and the smoke rifted downrange…

There is also speculation that this wasn’t a Zircon, but a Burevestnik nuclear-powered cruise missile. The existence of a truly nuclear powered Burevestnik is by no means certain, but who knows. In the unlikely case that this what what crashed, then perhaps the burst of radiation came from the engine melting down in flight or on impact; the drop in radiation coming as the reactor sank into mud or a pond or even just the dirt. Shrug.

 Posted by at 5:31 pm
Jun 072019
 

We’ve all seen those entertaining dashcam videos out of Russia showing all manner of bad driving. But when it comes to drunken Russians steering all over the place, it’s not restricted to ice-covered Moscow streets, but also extends to the Philippine Sea. Here the USS Chancelorville was steaming in a straight line, recovering a helicopter, when the Russian destroyer Udaloy decided to nearly sideswipe it. Sure seems like maybe the US Navy needs to talk to Q and have him install some of those wheel-hub extendable drillbit things from the DB-5 under the waterlines of American vessels.

 

 Posted by at 2:39 pm
Jun 062019
 

Tim Pool reads through an NBC News piece from a few weeks ago that reports on “leaked” Russian documents that purport to show that something the Russians have been trying to do is foment racial discord in the US. Included in this is a supposed plan to take a number of black Americans to Africa for training in sabotage and then return them, with the goal of having them try to form a “Pan-African Nation” in the southern US. Tim Pool seems dubious of the idea. However, it seems not only reasonable, but to be expected. The Unites States, after all, has plans in place for how to fight a war not only against Russia, but against Canada and space aliens. Such plans are just good exercise in deviousness and strategy, though it’s generally not a good idea to let them slip out. And such an “asymmetrical” approach to undermining the US would, if the Russians could pull it off, work fantastically to hobble the US militarily and economically. if the US fell into civil war, or even peacefully split apart, the repercussions would be devastating. And if simply prodding the SJWs to foment racial discord can do this… it’d be a hell of a lot cheaper and *safer* than lobbing a thousand nukes at the US.

It would be interesting if these documents turn out to be not only legit, but proven to be part of official Russian government efforts. In that case, perhaps members of BLM and Antifa should be made to register as agents of a foreign power?

 

 

 Posted by at 5:38 pm
Apr 192019
 

Razorfist breaks it down for you calmly in ENTIRELY SAFE FOR WORK language*.

*Note: No, it’s not.

After a couple *years* of Democrat party hacks screeching on about “collusion” and “treason,” it has been amazing to watch them pivot not on a dime but on a freakin’ quark to screeching about “obstruction of justice,” with their best evidence being that Trump wants to bring the fraudulent Russiagate investigation to an end…but didn’t actually do anything to make that happen.

One wonders if, after getting the Covington Kids half a billion dollars from the media and celebrities for slandering and libeling them, perhaps the lawyers could go after the people who most vociferously pushed the “collusion” line. I suspect that that would be covered under the 1st Amendment, especially given that Trump is a public figure… but some newly-enriched attack lawyers could tie up Pelosi and Nadler and such in court long enough to impoverish them. I’m usually quite opposed to using lawsuits to simply harass people… but some people just plain suck. Reasoning with them hasn’t worked. Providing evidence hasn’t worked.

Jonathan Frakes describes the Russiagate story for 47 seconds…

 Posted by at 11:22 am
Mar 312019
 

Somehow I suspect there’s not a “soyboy division” here.

Russia’s ‘Male Slapping Championships’ need to be seen to be believed

This is a silly thing. But there is, I think, value to be placed in a competition where your job is to just stand there and take it. I bet an argument could be made for competitive taser-holding.

The real question now that it is Current Year: are they going to open the competition up to women? I didn’t see any there facing off against the men. Clearly that’s due to the patriarchy preventing women from competing on an even level with the men.

 

 Posted by at 6:31 pm
Mar 252019
 

BREAKING: Co-Conspirator In Alleged Avenatti Fraud Scheme Is CNN Analyst, Jussie Smollett’s Lawyer, Report Says

Michael Avenatti is the lawyer who spent the last year or so trying to smear Trump and Kavenaugh… and now he’s not only discredited, he’d been arrested. And his associate Mark Geragos, lawyer for another guy who tried to smear Trump,is not only in legal hot water bu thas been fired from CNN.

Bonus round: Former CIA head John Brennan, who has spent the last couple of years smearing Trump as a Russian agent, now has this to say:

“Well, I don’t know if I received bad information but I think I suspected there was more than there actually was.”

While it’s nice to see him publicly say that he might have been wrong, it’s entertaining to think that the CIA was run by a guy who would have so readily accepted what has turned out to be a fabulously wrong assumption about the President.

The last several years have been sorta defined by false media/political narratives. Collusion. Smolletting. White privilege. Covington. Hands-Up-Don’t-Shoot. The Wage Gap. Kavenaugh as rapist. “Ghostbusters/The Last Jedi was a good movie.” The patriarchy. Nazis everywhere. The Steele Dossier.  It would be nice to think that, now that media organizations are starting to get hit with fractional-billion-dollar lawsuits and hoaxers are going to jail, that maybe, just maybe, things might change for the better. Maybe the press might actually take their job more seriously, and actually try to get the story factually right. This, I think, is unwarranted excess optimism. But who knows.

 Posted by at 8:03 pm
Mar 102019
 

And this time I’m not being sarcastic.

US ‘Gets Its Ass Handed To It’ In Wargames

In short: modern US Navy supercarriers are marvels of technology and engineering, and they are fantastically useful in peacetime. in wartime? Giant easily-sunk targets. F-22s and F-35s sweep the skies clean of enemy fighters, then get erased when they land back at the base.

The US goes for quality over quantity. The likes of Russia and China go for quantity over quality. But when it comes to offensive missiles, at a certain point “Chinese quality” is “good enough.” A relatively cheap ballistic missile can be produced in substantial numbers by the likes of China, and even without a nuclear warhead such a missile would be perfectly capable of holing a carrier or trashing an airbase. And the US has done fark-all about building up the sort of anti-missile capability that we need.

And then there’s the easily smashed command and control system, which the Chinese can likely turn into a vast field of blue screens of death with relative ease.

The Russians and the Chinese cannot conquer the US. But they could conquer, say, the South China Sea or Eastern Europe by taking America’s terribly expensive and terribly undefended local resources out of the fight in short order. If this is demonstrated *anywhere,* it is probably safe to assume that the whole world order will collapse overnight.

 Posted by at 11:56 am