Mine too. There really should be a curb on what weapons can be traded legally with Israel in much the same way there are in other states in that region, if only to bring them to the negotiating table with a sensible mindset.My money's on Israel.
Mine too. There really should be a curb on what weapons can be traded legally with Israel in much the same way there are in other states in that region, if only to bring them to the negotiating table with a sensible mindset.My money's on Israel.
Seeing as you are laying the blame for tension at the us's door that's understandable. The country that freed Asia from Japanese imperialism is now acting like a true ally to japan in the face if Chinese expansionism and it's their fault? No wonder the yanks wonder why they bother sometimes. But anti Americanism is rife on here. Still let's see what life is like under a China dominated world I would suspect it won't be a barrel of laughs and the telly imports will be harder to understand for starters
Yep, I refer back to my post #32 – it wasn’t a constant state of terror at all, but at times it did feel more a question of ‘when’ rather than ‘if’.
The programme last night quoted the figure that 40% of the British public believed that “nuclear was inevitable within ten years”, yet some of the posters on this thread are angrily indignant at the suggestion that people felt this way. It’s really quite bizarre.
The IRA was a daily concern and a real threat. I remember the briefings we had from the police and company security when working in a record shop in Brighton during the Tory conference, just down the road. Every bin, every pillar box was a potential hiding place for a bomb. But despite the horrors of a car bomb in a busy shopping street, and their other atrocities, it was a different type of fear. It was evil and deadly, but wouldn’t result in mushroom clouds over Britain.
Yep, I refer back to my post #32 – it wasn’t a constant state of terror at all, but at times it did feel more a question of ‘when’ rather than ‘if’.
The programme last night quoted the figure that 40% of the British public believed that “nuclear was inevitable within ten years”, yet some of the posters on this thread are angrily indignant at the suggestion that people felt this way. It’s really quite bizarre.
The IRA was a daily concern and a real threat. I remember the briefings we had from the police and company security when working in a record shop in Brighton during the Tory conference, just down the road. Every bin, every pillar box was a potential hiding place for a bomb. But despite the horrors of a car bomb in a busy shopping street, and their other atrocities, it was a different type of fear. It was evil and deadly, but wouldn’t result in mushroom clouds over Britain.
...but it doesn't spare the world of its own imperialism - it's a warmongering menace to the world, it's been in a constant state of war since long before any of us were born and has by far the most nuclear weapons in the world.
What is your problem?
Yep, I refer back to my post #32 – it wasn’t a constant state of terror at all, but at times it did feel more a question of ‘when’ rather than ‘if’.
The programme last night quoted the figure that 40% of the British public believed that “nuclear was inevitable within ten years”, yet some of the posters on this thread are angrily indignant at the suggestion that people felt this way. It’s really quite bizarre.
The IRA was a daily concern and a real threat. I remember the briefings we had from the police and company security when working in a record shop in Brighton during the Tory conference, just down the road. Every bin, every pillar box was a potential hiding place for a bomb. But despite the horrors of a car bomb in a busy shopping street, and their other atrocities, it was a different type of fear. It was evil and deadly, but wouldn’t result in mushroom clouds over Britain.
People have selective memories to meet their own personal agendas. Admitting they believed at the time the country could be nuked might be construed as being too leftist and a doom and gloom merchant. Being nuked (and surviving) was a different scariness to being blown to smithereens by the Provos.
were you mostly drunk in the 80`s?
Besides, as was kind of made clear in last night's programme, there was no threat at all from the mid-80s on. It evaporated once Gorbachev came on the scene.
The programme last night quoted the figure that 40% of the British public believed that “nuclear was inevitable within ten years”, yet some of the posters on this thread are angrily indignant at the suggestion that people felt this way. It’s really quite bizarre..
People have selective memories to meet their own personal agendas. Admitting they believed at the time the country could be nuked might be construed as being too leftist and a doom and gloom merchant. Being nuked (and surviving) was a different scariness to being blown to smithereens by the Provos.
The country that freed Asia from Japanese imperialism is now acting like a true ally to japan in the face if Chinese expansionism and it's their fault? No wonder the yanks wonder why they bother sometimes.
Yeah. Stupid Japs should be grateful when their daughters get raped by US servicemen...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1995_Okinawa_rape_incident
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Brown_Okinawa_assault_incident
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yumiko-chan_incident
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-21626049
(And before you continue your thinly veiled anti-Japanese rant by bringing up Nanking, let me just point out that these incidents are still happening NOW and are likely to continue, certainly in Okinawa.)
If you listen carefully on the car radio at start of Threads they read out a result for BHA. 1-0 to us of course.
Ha! Was just looking back at this old thread (pun intended) I started years ago, and noticed the typo in the title
Anyway, the version on YouTube has long since disappeared, but if you want to watch Threads (genuinely essential viewing) you can do so here - [video]https://archive.org/details/threads_201712[/video].
Or you can buy the remastered DVD from Amazon using Bozza's link, obvs.
Ah, the joys of seeing an 8 year old thread about nuclear annihilation bumped due to the topical nature of its content.