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"24" or 5 to 12
MND ^ | January 19, 2007 | By Frank Salvato

Posted on 01/20/2007 4:10:10 AM PST by Nasty McPhilthy

Two manufactured events took place this week that lend credence to the notion that we live in very dangerous times. The first, the detonation of a “suitcase nuke” nuclear device on American soil by Islamist terrorists, as portrayed on the FOX series “24,” was fiction. The second, the updating of the “Doomsday Clock” to five minutes to midnight, though based in scientific reasoning, is also artificial. But when viewed through the terroristic chaos in which the world is embroiled only the naïve and those in denial can afford the luxury of discounting the probability of an “American Hiroshima” taking place in the near future.

I doubt that my wife and I were the only people who sat speechless as the season premiere of “24” concluded. The cutting edge fictional accounting of the war against Islamist terrorists set on our own soil “went there”; they depicted a nuclear attack in a suburb of Los Angeles. As the vision of a nuclear mushroom cloud emanating from an American city loomed on the television screen my wife captured the moment with “Oh my God, Frank.”

Oh my God indeed.

I started thinking about the casualties. In a city like Los Angeles one would have to assume that the dead would be in the hundreds of thousands almost immediately. Perhaps another couple hundred thousand would die the slow torturous death that radiation poisoning affords in the days that followed. The aftermath of a nuclear detonation in an American city would be carnage.

Then I thought about the chaos that would envelop the country should a terrorist detonate a nuclear device within the United States. It would cripple the country for a good period of time – the World to a lesser extent – as our leaders and emergency personnel decided how to handle the situation. Would our leaders then be able to set aside political opportunism to confront the problem of radical Islamist terrorism in earnest? Would the political power-plays then be abandoned for effective, cohesive government? Would our nation set aside the absurdity that is the notion of fighting a politically correct war to stand as one and set out to kill the bastards that attacked us, that killed hundreds of thousands of us? Judging from where we are five years on from September of 2001, the prospects don’t look too good.

Then again, this was only a television show…a FOX television show. In the minds of many – and especially among those who comprise the Progressive-Left – this was just a fictitious Armageddon, scare tactics delivered to the American people from the mouthpiece of the Bush Administration. Domestically, we have a handle on radical Islamist terrorism and for that matter there is no concrete evidence that Osama bin Laden or Hassan Nasrallah or any of the lunatics who prefer the 7th Century over the 21st have ever possessed nuclear capabilities, even in the most elementary sense. Right? Now, back to American Idol.

I do have to congratulate the mainstream media progressive propaganda complex. They have done an incredible job of creating a generation of people whose attention spans are so limited they can’t even recall the horror they felt on September 11, 2001. The empathy all Americans displayed, but for Ward Churchill, for those who had to leap to their deaths from the upper stories of the World Trade Center has waned. We are back to feasting on the bubblegum for the mind that are the antics of Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan and the feud between the ego with the comb-over and the ego with no talent.

The truth be told, there is quite a bit to be concerned about when it comes to the possibility of Islamist terrorists detonating a nuclear device on American soil. To borrow a phrase, “It’s not a question of if…”

Osama bin Laden has been seeking nuclear capability since before the attacks of September 11th. Only a blithering idiot would believe that he has, for some reason, given up his desire to possess them. He believes that the fastest and most effective way to affect an American “surrender” is to duplicate the events that brought Imperial Japan to the decks of the USS Missouri at the end of World War II: nuclear holocaust.

It is common knowledge among those in the law enforcement and counterterrorism communities that Adnan el Shukrijumah, al Qaeda’s nuclear expert, hand picked by bin Laden himself (alluded to in a character on “24”), has been fomenting his plan for an “American Hiroshima.” The FBI has had el Shukrijumah on their Most Wanted Terrorist List for years. And there is a $5 million reward for information that leads authorities to him. The most recent reports have el Shukrijumah sighted in Mexico, Canada and even in South Florida and California.

In his books The al Qaeda Connection, Osama’s Revenge and The Dunces of Doomsday, Dr. Paul L. Williams outlines the threat posed by a nuclear al Qaeda. He sheds light on the misunderstood reality of what many call suitcase nukes, small portable nuclear devices developed by the Soviets during the Cold War. That several of these devices have gone missing from the Russian arsenal should be disturbing to us all.

Critics assert that the Soviet made suitcase nuke is a high maintenance piece of equipment and, therefore, unlikely to be used by terrorists in an attack on the United States. This assertion is somewhat true. One of the most difficult pieces to obtain for a suitcase nuke is also the most difficult to maintain. This component is the “trigger.” This piece is used to affect the chain reaction that facilitates the nuclear explosion.

One element, polonium, used in conjunction with beryllium to form a functioning trigger, is rare and, incidentally, quite hard to come by. It is a highly radioactive metalloid that has a brief lifespan, a half-life of only 138.38 days. Coincidentally – or perhaps not – polonium was the substance used to poison former KGB spy Alexander Litvinenko. That this rare substance is “out there,” along with the missing suitcase nukes, should send chills down the spines of every American.

I remember the days immediately after September 11th, 2001, how everyone was shaken to the core. I remember how police officers, firefighters and EMTs balanced their emotions between unbridled anger at the deaths of their brothers and sisters murdered at the World Trade Center and the Pentagon and a sense of foreboding as they realized their jobs and their lives had changed forever.

I remember the disturbing feeling that came over me when I passed O’Hare International Airport only to see hundreds of planes on the ground and not one in the skies. I recall news reports of how people were stranded all around the world because the American airspace had been “closed.”

The idea that our elected officials are playing political games with securing our borders and defending our nation against a vicious ideologically foe is infuriating. Securing our borders does not have to be married to immigration reform and with el Shukrijumah itching to turn an American city into a nuclear wasteland it shouldn’t be. Democrats, Progressives, Republicans and Libertarians should be crafting laws that enable us to defend ourselves, not leaking classified information to the press so our enemies are alerted to our tactics before we get the chance to kill them. Our government is failing us in this fight and this time, if we lose, we lose it all.

As I watched the “make believe” nuclear mushroom cloud shooting skyward on my television, calculating those who would be murdered if it were real, I realized that the anguish and frustration I felt on September 11, 2001 would pale in comparison to the torment and anger I would feel at the devastation of a nuclear attack perpetrated on our soil. Sadly, if our government doesn’t come together to fight this threat aggressively, it just may come to pass.

America. It’s five to midnight. Do you know where the terrorists are?


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government
KEYWORDS: 24; 24or5to12; 25or6to4; twominutestomidnight
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To: blu

25 or 6 to 4...
25= LSD-25
6 to 4 the length of an average "trip"


41 posted on 01/20/2007 6:03:07 PM PST by westmichman (The will of God always trumps the will of the people.)
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To: westmichman
25 or 6 to 4...
25= LSD-25
6 to 4 the length of an average "trip"

Or...It could be just a song about a songwriter with writer's block...

Robert Lamm, who wrote the song, explains the meaning of "25 or 6 to 4": "It's just a reference to the time of day. The song is about writing a song. It's nothing mystical." And at 3:35 (or 3:34) am, well, waiting for the break of day makes perfect sense, especially if you can't sleep."

42 posted on 01/20/2007 6:18:57 PM PST by socal_parrot (Someone left the cake out in the rain.)
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To: Nasty McPhilthy
As I watched the “make believe” nuclear mushroom cloud shooting skyward on my television, calculating those who would be murdered if it were real, I realized that the anguish and frustration I felt on September 11, 2001 would pale in comparison to the torment and anger I would feel at the devastation of a nuclear attack perpetrated on our soil. Sadly, if our government doesn’t come together to fight this threat aggressively, it just may come to pass.

I had a similar feeling when I saw the TV show, "The Day After," which showed what Kansas City might look like after being "nuked."

The simple fact is that we're vulnerable in countless ways, and being nuked is actually, probably the least of our worries. On the other hand, imagine what would happen should a nuclear device come across our border, either from the south or the north, or shipped in one of the countless cargo containers that move through our ports. Right now we know that Pakistan and probably North Korea have nukes, and only lack delivery systems to hit us... Pakistan in marginally "friendly," but that could change in an instant.

But being nuked is something from Hollywood. Big mushroom clouds make "good TV." Something far more realistic might be seen in the TV mini-series, "The Stand," (though not through the same method) where every time the camera pans, you see dead bodies. The casualness of those scenes was far more unsettling to me than the mushroom clouds.

Mark

43 posted on 01/20/2007 6:27:39 PM PST by MarkL (When Kaylee says "No power in the `verse can stop me," it's cute. When River says it, it's scary!)
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To: socal_parrot

Sounds like a good reason, unless he was awake because he was tripping. There were lots of references to drug use in the music of that day and to believe that the members of "Chicago" weren't part of that culture is a stretch IMHO.


44 posted on 01/20/2007 6:39:42 PM PST by westmichman (The will of God always trumps the will of the people.)
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To: Nasty McPhilthy

Bogus scenario..

Why would terrorists nuke their friends in Hollywood?


45 posted on 01/20/2007 6:42:01 PM PST by TomServo ("Uh, Donner, party of three please.")
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To: westmichman
It would be naive to think that members of Chicago didn't do drugs in the 60/70's, but you would think that there would be more songs to point to that could be construed as clandestine drug references. Unless you think there is something sneaky about "Saturday in the Park".
46 posted on 01/20/2007 6:48:44 PM PST by socal_parrot (Someone left the cake out in the rain.)
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To: Osage Orange
"How is it you blame the moderators?"

If you have to ask, you probably wouldn't understand an explanation.

47 posted on 01/20/2007 6:55:22 PM PST by mighty_righty
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To: westmichman
6 to 4 the length of an average "trip"

Really, that short, huh?

48 posted on 01/20/2007 7:05:57 PM PST by blu (All grammar and punctuation rules are *OFF* for the "24" thread.)
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To: paratrooper82

You tell'em chicken little.


49 posted on 01/20/2007 7:07:17 PM PST by lndrvr1972
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To: blu

I would guess ten hours is a long time for those suffering that affliction.


50 posted on 01/20/2007 7:09:54 PM PST by westmichman (The will of God always trumps the will of the people.)
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To: ovrtaxt
Nuclear Bomb Fear mongering against "conservatives" is AOK.

But on "24"? Oh no, Fox is "FEAR MONGERING!"!

Despite the fact that terror supporting states with nuclear or almost nuclear status like Iran and Korea have threatened to use them against us -- despite the fact that the leaders of major terror organizations have said they would use them if they could get them.

51 posted on 01/20/2007 7:31:27 PM PST by bvw
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To: mighty_righty

O booy..yea, eye b stoopid Okee...knot umberstant u smod Freepy's


52 posted on 01/21/2007 8:25:04 AM PST by Osage Orange ("The man who most vividly realizes a difficulty is the man most likely to overcome it.")
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