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-   -   first world problems (http://www.sonicyouth.com/gossip/showthread.php?t=41310)

Dr. Eugene Felikson 10.01.2010 06:14 PM

Another Friday night without plans. Oh joy.

Derek 10.01.2010 06:16 PM

My toe keeps itching.

EVOLghost 10.01.2010 06:58 PM

my iphone is dying.

space 10.02.2010 01:53 PM

Last month I asked Robert McNamara, the secretary of defense during the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, what he believed back in the 1960s was the status of technical locks on the Minuteman intercontinental missiles. These long-range nuclear-tipped missiles first came on line during the Cuban missile crisis and grew to a force of 1,000 during the McNamara years — the backbone of the U.S. strategic deterrent through the late 1960s. McNamara replied, in his trade-mark, assertively confident manner that he personally saw to it that these special locks (known to wonks as “Permissive Action Links”) were installed on the Minuteman force, and that he regarded them as essential to strict central control and preventing unauthorized launch.

When the history of the nuclear cold war is finally comprehensively written, this McNamara vignette will be one of a long litany of items pointing to the ignorance of presidents and defense secretaries and other nuclear security officials about the true state of nuclear affairs during their time in the saddle. What I then told McNamara about his vitally important locks elicited this response: “I am shocked, absolutely shocked and outraged. Who the hell authorized that?” What he had just learned from me was that the locks had been installed, but everyone knew the combination.

The Strategic Air Command (SAC) in Omaha quietly decided to set the “locks” to all zeros in order to circumvent this safeguard. During the early to mid-1970s, during my stint as a Minuteman launch officer, they still had not been changed. Our launch checklist in fact instructed us, the firing crew, to double-check the locking panel in our underground launch bunker to ensure that no digits other than zero had been inadvertently dialed into the panel. SAC remained far less concerned about unauthorized launches than about the potential of these safeguards to interfere with the implementation of wartime launch orders. And so the “secret unlock code” during the height of the nuclear crises of the Cold War remained constant at OOOOOOOO.

After leaving the Air Force in 1974, I pressed the service, initially by letters addressed to it and then through congressional intermediaries, to consider a range of terrorist scenarios in which these locks could serve as crucial barriers against the unauthorized seizure of launch control over Minuteman missiles. In 1977, I co-authored (with Garry Brewer) an article (click here to view) entitled “The Terrorist Threat to World Nuclear Programs” in which I laid out the case for taking this threat more seriously and suggesting remedial measures including, first and foremost, activating those McNamara locks that apparently he and presidents presumed had already been activated.

The locks were activated in 1977.

Genteel Death 10.02.2010 02:32 PM

This materasse is hurting my back.

chicka 10.02.2010 03:31 PM

Sounds like our country all right. Thanks Space.

Dr. Eugene Felikson 10.02.2010 06:23 PM

I just got ding-dong ditched!

nicfit 10.02.2010 06:55 PM

I ended up watching two Skins Season 3 episodes. In a row.

Derek 10.02.2010 07:05 PM

Oh god, are you okay?

nicfit 10.02.2010 07:23 PM

No.

Genteel Death 10.03.2010 05:36 AM

The poking on Facebook is getting out of hand.

ann ashtray 10.03.2010 05:38 AM

My lighter is out of fluid which means I must resort to using the stove.

Damn you, cigarettes.

pbradley 10.03.2010 05:53 AM

My Playstation 3 is not able to read the video files on my external hard drive.

^ hyper first-world problem

space 10.03.2010 01:06 PM

every day is not pancake day. :(

verme (prevaricator) 10.03.2010 08:52 PM

is this where we talk about twitter?

!@#$%! 10.03.2010 08:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by verme (prevaricator)
is this where we talk about twitter?


yes. how you never have time for anything else but it, etc.

space 10.03.2010 09:24 PM

what's a twitter? isn't that the sound of old ladies talking?

akprodr 10.04.2010 08:57 AM

I'm not sure if this is a first world problem but it took place there: I found a mouse floating (dead) in my dog's water bowl.

Genteel Death 11.11.2010 05:25 AM

No brown sugar for my coffee in the staff restaurant. This is destroying my life.

Toilet & Bowels 11.11.2010 08:52 AM

I didn't manage to have my normal forty winks on the train to work this morning so i feel a bit tired. mind you i did do a fairly massive poo this morning so that brightened me up a bit.


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