Posted on 06/30/2004 4:57:05 AM PDT by 7.62 x 51mm
On the way into work at 6:20am, I was listening to local radio station, WBSA's (www.wsba910.com) Dennis Edwards, interview of Paul L. Williams, author of his new book, "Osama's Revenge: The Next 9-11", who said there are already 20-40 tactical (10 kiloton) nukes in the US, in major cities. He also said that in October 2001, George Tenet testified that he'd sent President Bush a memo detailing some of the information and the serial numbers of two (2) of the nukes.
Anyone else hear this? Really ruined my day, if true.
I'm in the York-Lancaster, PA area, and have seen numerous men in blue military field uniforms with NEST on the backs of their suits, over the past 4-5 weeks.
We have Three Mile Island (north) and Peach Bottom (southeast) nuclear reactors within 20 miles of my home and business, but otherwise this area is not a "target-rich" environment.
I did a Google search for that acronym and didn't find anything relating to Nuclear Emergency Search Team or anything close to it, after 8 pages. FR has a few articles in their search archives.
It's 7:53am as I write this. and the next interview with author Williams will be on at 8:10am. You can get it streamed over the Net. They also carry Rush and Hannity daily. Sorry I didn't get this on sooner, but I have 4 landscape crews to brief and get moving, plus the retail garden center staff to get started-up and moving by 7am.
If this book is even partially accurate, we have a major headache brewing.
Interview on now...
Then the nukes won't go off.
They require ongoing maintenance and replacement of scarce material (such as tritium, which costs about $50,000 a gram).
No, you mean Tactical Nookie.
Or a Suitcase Nookie.
How about silk or plastic? Nothing living will survive radiation.
Iowa to check for radioactive cargo |
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Posted by FairOpinion On News/Activism 06/29/2004 11:38:23 PM CDT with 16 comments Omaha World Herald ^ | June 29, 2004 | AP DES MOINES (AP) - Drive-through radiation detection equipment will be installed at five weigh stations on Interstates 35 and 80 later this year to look for radioactive cargo in heavy trucks. State officials told the Des Moines Register that Iowa will become one of the first states in the country to routinely check trucks for the illegal cargo, as part of an effort to stop terrorists from smuggling bomb-making materials or stolen nuclear weapons. "You are going to see a lot more of this. It is part of the new landscape," said Jack Legler, vice president of the American Trucking... |
; )
May be, but 20-40 is far too low.
I'll consult my contacts on Gamma-Nu Epsilon 5 as soon as my hyrogen powered extra telepathic nikon brain flash freezes up.
I was trying to be nice, but you busted me.
If they actually had nukes in the fall of 2001, why didn't they use them? Why'd they use airplanes as missiles instead?
Bottom line: this story has been on the net since 1997. Notice that we don't have any huge smoking holes in the ground? Methinks the Russian Mafia sold Osama a few cases full of old pinball machine parts.
Nut grass and dollar weed will. I promise you that! LOL!
The more Tactical Nooks the better.
This one is fun!
Would a blow-up doll qualify as a Suitcase Nookie?
Yeah, because a "dirty bomb" (using explosives to disperse radioactive material) is a very real threat, as is a FUTURE contingency that al-Qaeda might get nukes.
But the idea that they've had them since 1997 and are just waiting for the right moment is a load of crap.
No one remembered the matches.
I'm hoping you're right. This info is chilling my blood.
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