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Re-examining the Port Chicago Disaster

GoneGaryT writes "Say chaps, this might be old hat, but there's a fab site for conspiracy theory aficionados at portchicago.org ; it's a pdf book expounding the theory of Peter Vogel's that the Port Chicago magazine explosion (1944) was a nuclear weapons test. It's actually pretty thorough, like 20 years of research thorough. Would the US really blow up their own people for the sake of global military supremacy? Naaaah..." Chapter 9 of the book has a factual account of the disaster (which I'd never heard of before); if you're not interested in the rest of the theory, at least reading the historical account is informative and will give you an appreciation of the explosive power of several million pounds of military ordnance.

440 comments

  1. Yessah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First post from the surface of Ragol!

  2. amazing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    wow

  3. woah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1st port!

  4. News? by DraconPern · · Score: 0, Troll

    I don't how this is related to News for nerds. Stuff that matters... Must be a slow day, and it's only 12:48am!

    1. Re:News? by ramzak2k · · Score: 1

      you know, conspiracy theories, underground stuff, basement, nerds with puters up at 12:45 AM.. there is a connection

      --

      Siggy Say, Siggy Do
  5. Nice by Gene303 · · Score: 0

    But knowing how honest bureaucracies are I would still be suspicious. Btw, I'm being watched ;)

    --
    im a hippie
    1. Re:Nice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Btw, I'm being watched"

      I know! Your mom wouldn't want you to browse gay porn websites.

  6. Residual Radiation? by MonkeyBoyo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    where is the residual radiation?

    1. Re:Residual Radiation? by js7a · · Score: 5, Informative
      where is the residual radiation?

      Good question. There isn't any. Case closed.

      The main supporting inference requires considerable suspension of disbelief, and is presented as nothing more than conjecture. From Chapter 10, page 19:

      Deliberate detonation of the carload of Mk-47 bombs spotted at the No. 2 cargo hold of the E.A. Bryan with the purpose to effect the detonation the Mark II fission bomb and to conceal the detonation of that bomb within the larger explosion the E.A. Bryan's massive cargo of TNT and torpex munitions was not sabotage. But that is the means I impute as the origin of the Port Chicago explosion. The Mark II weapon was concealed among the cargo of crated aerial bomb tail vanes loaded 16 July 1944 into the No. 3 hold of the E.A. Bryan and was set with aerial depth bomb or depth charge hydrostatic pressure-activated fuses to detonate the Mark II at a pressure of 3-4 atmospheres in excess of sea level ambient atmospheric pressure; that necessary pressure above the ambient was propagated by the detonation of the carload of Mk-47 bombs.

      The author thinks the thing was loaded concealed and armed with a 4 atm pressure depth charge fuse? Please.

    2. Re:Residual Radiation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you even read the article?!

      That was a joke BTW.

    3. Re:Residual Radiation? by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yea, he's full of shit.

      There wasn't enough weapon-grade Uranium in the United States in 1944 to make a weapon of this class. What did exist was being used to determine the physical properties of the material for weaponization.

      The amount of weapon-grade Uranium from Oak Ridge and Hanford is well documented in histories of the "gadget". And besides, an American test would have taken place not in Chicago but out in the boondocks.

      "Uranium resources were very rare so the bomb would have to be simple and guaranteed to work. The luxury of a test model would not be available."

      It's repeated over and over by everyone involved and in each and every history of the American and Soviet programs at the beginings.

    4. Re:Residual Radiation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative
      an American test would have taken place not in Chicago but out in the boondocks.


      Not to nitpick but Port Chicago is near San Francisco, its not anywhere near the city of Chicago.
    5. Re:Residual Radiation? by ComaVN · · Score: 1

      You mean you expect these people to look at evidence that *doesn't* support their theory? When does that happen?

      On a related note, I've heard the same thing about the Tunguska explosion. Apparantly, they found similarities between Hiroshima and the Tunguska event, so obviously it MUST have been an atomic bomb. Uh, Earth to dipshit: ANY sufficiently powerful explosion will create a mushroom cloud and black rain, there's NOTHING atomic about that. The only surprise about the event is that it wasn't known before that not all big meteorites hit the earth, but some explode high up.

      --
      Be wary of any facts that confirm your opinion.
    6. Re:Residual Radiation? by Zemran · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You mean like in Hiroshima? Hiroshima is a city again with lots of people living there and little radiation. You get more radiation on holiday in Cornwall. A nuclear bomb is the conversion of matter to energy and unlike an accident at a nuclear power plant, does not lead to lots of long term residual radiation. Einstins theory E=mc2 was about matter being energy and the bomb was the proof of that. Unlike a conventional chemical explosion the matter (uranium, plutonium or whatever) is converted into energy rather than converted into another matter in a process that produces energy.

      --
      I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
    7. Re:Residual Radiation? by jcr · · Score: 2

      Good point. This is about as asinine as a conspiracy theory could possibly get.

      As it happens, we know where the Army did their nuclear weapons tests: at Los Alamos.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    8. Re:Residual Radiation? by nosferatu1001 · · Score: 1

      Eh? wtf are you on then? SOME of the matter is converted into energy [actually the difference in atomic bond energy is....] but most of it is converted into atoms of lesser atomic mass, by that lovely FISSION [like, you know, [i]splitting[/i]] process...and most of these tend to be active, slowish decaying isotopes

      so, there would be some residual radiation, but that would have mainly been carried away in the dust cloud....

    9. Re:Residual Radiation? by arivanov · · Score: 3, Informative

      1. If this really was the case then it is in the lake.

      2. From a NUKE you do not get a lot of residual radiation. The neutrons are under 14KEv so they cause minimal side reactions. So you get radiation from the blast and some from the fallout. But not a lot. An H bomb is an entirely different matter. It will generate a considerable quantity of radioactive isotopes in aything that happens to be close to the epicenter.

      3. So 50 years later it will take you using some very serious gear to actually find if a small nuke was blown up.

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    10. Re:Residual Radiation? by nursedave · · Score: 3, Informative

      Some serious gear, like, say, an el-cheapo geiger detector? Go to the Trinity test site during the brief period of time its open to the public every year. The ground is still radioactive. You *do* get residual radiation, from a fission bomb, and it lasts and lasts. No Energizer bunny needed.

      --

      The Democratic Party: We've been pussies since 1968!

    11. Re:Residual Radiation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      A nuclear bomb is the conversion of matter to energy and unlike an accident at a nuclear power plant, does not lead to lots of long term residual radiation.

      You're thinking of an anti-matter bomb, but they only exist in Star Trek. A fission bomb-the thing they were trying to develop in 1944--works by rapidly splitting the nuclei of large, inherently unstable atoms by bombarding them with high energy neutrons. These nuclei fragment and release engery and several kinds of radiation, but mass is conserved. The large unstable atoms become smaller unstable atoms which continue to undergo radioactive decay until they become stable.

    12. Re:Residual Radiation? by orangesquid · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Before you throw something out as "full of shit", here something a simple googling turned up:
      "The induced radioactivity decayed very quickly with time. In fact, nearly 80% of the above-mentioned doses were released within a day, about 10% between days 2 and 5, and the remaining 10% from day 6 afterward." [regarding Hiroshima]

      So it seems residual radiation isn't so hard to hide, after all. Whether the conspiracy theory still holds water, though, is another matter...

      --
      --TheOrangeSquid Is it any wonder things seem so awry? We swim in a sea of confusion and don't have to think to survive
    13. Re:Residual Radiation? by rworne · · Score: 2

      If you read the pdf files where they discuss the efficiency, the efficiency of the two types of devices was 1.5% and 0.5%.

      100% or near that efficiency would have increased the force into the megatons.

      --
      I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit
    14. Re:Residual Radiation? by arivanov · · Score: 2

      I still think that you need serious gear. Here is why:

      Original site does not exist. It all went into the lake. That is besides the fact that the closest you can get to it is quite far away anyway.

      So you are not going to get anywhere with a Geiger counter. Mass spectrometer and looking into oddities in isotop distribution - yes. Geiger counter - not really.

      That is if it was a nuke of course. I personally doubt it but when dealing with the military you can expect anything.

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    15. Re:Residual Radiation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bikini Island?

    16. Re:Residual Radiation? by AndroidCat · · Score: 2
      Of course, most of the uranium resources were provided from Canada (Blame Canada).

      There might have been a third A-bomb lost in the sinking of the cruiser Indianapolis, 29th July 1945. Masanori Ito admits that he is speculating in The End of the Imperial Japanese Navy but there seem to be some irregularities involved.

      1944? Get out of here! (One way or another.)

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    17. Re:Residual Radiation? by Arcturax · · Score: 2

      Yes, but why would we blow up one of our OWN major Pacific ports back in the middle of WWII? After the war, maybe, but during the war, when we needed all the ships and men and supplies we could get? Please. Unless it was an accident, that explosion was very likely conventional. You'd be amazed at how much power conventional explosives can have, especially in proximity to other explosives which can be thrown and explode wherever they land.

      Ammo dump explosions are no laughing matter. There was one in some African country not too long ago (this year?) which killed dozens of people, and that was a small land based military dump (badly placed in a densly populated area). Most of the deaths were from explosives thrown from the main explosion, landing on homes and people in the streets and the ensuing firestorm afterwards. So the damage from that explosion could certainly have been conventional.

      --

      --Won't that be grand? Computers and the programs will start thinking and the people will stop. - Dr. Walter Gibbs
    18. Re:Residual Radiation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dunno, but...

      I bet if it was up your ass you'll kno it,

      Laddy.

    19. Re:Residual Radiation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You get more radiation on holiday in Cornwall.

      Ohmygawd, the Druids have got the bomb! (Who's next?)

    20. Re:Residual Radiation? by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      Most of the American uranium for the A-bombs came from the Belgian Congo.

    21. Re:Residual Radiation? by AndroidCat · · Score: 1

      From the Congo during WWII? Well that's an interesting theory. As for afterwards, where was all the output from Uranium City going?

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    22. Re:Residual Radiation? by Cpt_Kirks · · Score: 2

      Yeah, Grove and others were scouring the earth for uranium and came to find out many tons were stored in barrels in a warehouse in NYC, right under their noses.

    23. Re:Residual Radiation? by Cpt_Kirks · · Score: 2

      I don't have my copy of "The Manhattan Project" handy, but a Belgian had shipped tons out of the Congo and stored it in NYC to keep the Germans from getting it.

    24. Re:Residual Radiation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      What lake are you talking about? Port Chicago is not on a lake (nor anywhere near a lake). You are confusing Port Chicago with the city of Chicago. Not the same place nor no where near each other.

      Port Chicago is located North of San Francisco on Suisun Bay, an outlet of the Sacramento River. It's not in the middle of nowhere, it is located about 2 miles from Martinez, California, Concord, California, and a number of other towns / cities. ANY sort of atomic detonation would have been extremely obvious to any of the universities / labs in the area (Berkeley for example is only 19 miles away). As for "getting near the site" you can walk right up to the outer fence or sail up near the docks (not too close mind you) more than close enough for a geiger counter to check background radiation (especially since most of the buildings have been there since the port was built)

    25. Re:Residual Radiation? by mesocyclone · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Others have pointed out the problem in your physics exposition.

      Let me point out that the large amount of "residual radiation" (fallout) produced by the Hiroshima bomb did not fall near Hiroshima, so there was no residual radiation in Hiroshima itself. The bomb was exploded at altitude and the radioactive components (other than the tiny amount converted to energy) was turned into extremely hot gas. That gas rose into the stratosphere and was distributed, more or less evenly, throughout the northern hemisphere.

      In general, air bursts of nuclear weapons do not produce local fallout.

      The Port of Chicago explosion, had it been nuclear, would have resulted in the lifting of large amounts of dust and other terrestrial material. This would have formed condensation nuclei for the radioactive material, which would have then fallen back to the ground at and within a few hundred miles of the blast. This is classic nuclear fallout for a ground burst. This would have led to significant injury and death, and the residual radiation would still be detectable (although at low levels today).

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

    26. Re:Residual Radiation? by susano_otter · · Score: 2

      Presumably a government could be interested in the practical effects of a nuclear explosion, under real-world conditions. A sufficiently evil goverment might even decide that the "experimental" data obtained by detonating a bomb in a real location would be worth the sacrifice.

      But, as other people have pointed out, the timing was all wrong: the middle of WWII was probably the worst time to destroy badly needed war materiel.

      Tests in a desert only go so far. Sooner or later, you're going to want to actually nuke a city, if only to find out what the bomb is really like.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    27. Re:Residual Radiation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, please you fucking moron. There would have been fallout carried downwind and affecting other people; cancer rates would have been highly abnormal, ala Chernobyl. The Port of Chicago explosion was nothing more than that: an explosion. To think otherwise is sheer stupidity and nonsense.

    28. Re:Residual Radiation? by autocracy · · Score: 2
      1. 10% of what? 10% of a huge number is still a substantial amount. I guarantee they still could get some nice readings after 1 year of time in Hiroshima.
      2. 50 years after a controlled reaction, radiation in Hiroshima is basically undetectable... Hiroshima was a carefully crafted explosion, Port Chicago certainly didn't look like one. Compare a giant mass of random high explosive ornance against one precision crafted bomb. I suspect Port Chicago would be more like Chernobyl in terms of residual radiation (adjusted for assumed amount of nuclear material).
      3. How many people died from radiation in Port Chicago? It's not exactly something that isn't noticeable either... I think this argument alone settles it.
      --
      SIG: HUP
    29. Re:Residual Radiation? by Zemran · · Score: 2

      A geiger counter is not sensitive enough to detect anything at such a site. The difference between any fallout and background radiation would not be significant. You cannot detect anything unusual at Hiroshima with one so why would you expect to detect anything at Port Chicago? Despite all that is said here you could not expect to find any evidence now even at ground zero. This is not like Chernobyl . It is not "claimed" (I am not defending the proposal) to be a leak but a blast. The fallout would fade rapidly and just like in Japan it would be a safe place to live now (if it was not a dockyard).

      --
      I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
    30. Re:Residual Radiation? by jahalme · · Score: 1
      The Mark II weapon was concealed among the cargo of crated aerial bomb tail vanes loaded 16 July 1944 into the No. 3 hold of the E.A.

      Hmm, according to the High Energy Weapons archive, the Mark II, a low-efficiency plutonium implosion type bomb, was only a theoretical design and no units were manufactured. Even if one HAD been manufactured, it would have not been possible as early as July 1944 as large scale production of plutonium was started in mid-December and the explosive-lens design used in implosion type bombs was not finalized until March 1945.

    31. Re:Residual Radiation? by calidoscope · · Score: 1
      IIRC, the Hiroshima bomb had about 50 kg of U-235. Fissioning 1 kg or U-235 or Pu-239 yields about 20 kilotons. The yield quoted for Hiroshima was 12.5 kT, which implies an efficiency (usually reffered to as burnup) of a bit over 1%. !00% burnup would yield about 1 MT.

      The Nagasaki (Fat Man) bomb had a higher yield and IIRC also had less fissile material, I'd guess the burnup was 5 to 10%. The best reported burnups are on the order of 25%.

      As other posters have pointed out, there wasn't enough fissile material in the US to make a bomb in 1944.

      --
      A Shadeless room is a brighter room.
  7. Woudl the US blow up its own people by einhverfr · · Score: 2

    Given the callousness of letting people die in St. George Utah from fallout-related illnesses, I have no doubt they would have during the cold war. That being said, if it had been a test, I would think there would have been major epidemialogical effects (like Leukemia). So if it was a test, it was a miserable failure ;-)

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    1. Re:Woudl the US blow up its own people by MacAndrew · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Funny, isn't it, that the U.S. blowing up "its own people" is considered orders of magnitude worse than it blowing up other people? We do the latter from time to time, sometimes with regret.

      We do apply a similar rule to other leaders; it is also thought reprehensible that Saddam Hussein used poison gas on "his own people," although I seriously doubt he consider the Kurds his people, or vice versa.

      I don't think the U.S. would kill its own people deliberately, as least not often and outside of certain wars, but have noted a willingness to allow some to die by neglect. There's another odd distinction.

      It's kind of like the moral repugnancy of someone killing their own family, though many of us are aware family might be the most tempting to kill. Not our families, mind you -- other people killing their own families.

    2. Re:Woudl the US blow up its own people by marbike · · Score: 1

      The real danger to Southern Utahns were to those living in Moab Utah. Moab had a double dose of radiation. The mines that yeilded the Uranium were found in the area around Moab, as well as a lot of fallout sickness. Families were striken with cancers of all sorts as well as just early deaths wthout attribution. The entire Souther part of Utah was in teh fallout zone, but Moab particularly. People in Northern Az as well as the rest of the four corners areas were all effected.

      --
      it is better to light a flame thrower than curse the darkness. -Terry Pratchett Men at Arms
    3. Re:Woudl the US blow up its own people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well, being a bay area native, there is an area not too far south of port chicago called "cancer alley" though most assume it's caused by the upwind refineries.

    4. Re:Woudl the US blow up its own people by George+Walker+Bush · · Score: 1

      In Hiroshima, there were about a dozen or so US POWs held in Hiroshima castle at the time of the bombing. US Intelligence was very much aware of that fact.

      However, we did not bomb Hiroshima for the purpose of killing "our own people" -- it was a unavoidable side effect.

      --
      George W. Bush
      President, United States of America
    5. Re:Woudl the US blow up its own people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      To kibitz that comment, no you didn't. You did so instead to commit a war crime (attacking a civilian populace). And to those who say "Oh but they had no idea it would be so bad!", that argument falls flat when they did it again to Nagasaki a few days later. You know, after they had all the recon photos in from the first blast...

      I watched a documentary on the two bombs a while back, and one of the military guys they interviewed made a very interesting comment, which was along the lines that as soon as the joint chiefs saw the recon photos for the Hiroshima blast one of them said "My God. We can't let the public see these photos. They'd never forgive us.". Sounds to me like they knew exactly how reprehensible that kind of blast was to civilians. And yet they did it again. No wonder the US doesn't want to sign any treaties on international war crime courts...

    6. Re:Woudl the US blow up its own people by MacAndrew · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A fair number more were killed in the massive Tokyo firebombing. I'm pretty sure they were abandoned in their cells to die. Many POW's were killed in the American attacks on Japanese shipping, presumably with American awareness of at least the risk.

      There was also a proven concern that the Japanese would execute their POW's upon an American invasion. Extracting the Allies in Hiroshima would have been tricky one way or the other.

      Tragic though that anyone died there. War against civilians is a paticularly filthy business.

      There have, to be picky, been instances of the U.S. targeting its own people. Kent State comes to mind, not a whole lot less. It's tough to figure out what to call the Civil War.

    7. Re:Woudl the US blow up its own people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Damn. You caught me out. I guess that was a little bit of a war crime there, when I dropped the bomb at Hiroshima. But that's just my nature as an American-- we're all alike!


      I'm glad the Europeans and Russians are so far morally superior-- because, you know, someday the world will cast off the chains of the evil despotic U.S.-ianz, and they'll get their Lebensraum!

    8. Re:Woudl the US blow up its own people by FeloniousPunk · · Score: 2

      There have, to be picky, been instances of the U.S. targeting its own people. Kent State comes to mind, not a whole lot less.
      Kent State was a riot-control situation gone awry. "Targeting its own people" implies premeditation, which was not the case.
      It's tough to figure out what to call the Civil War.
      Not really. I prefer "civil war."

      --
      I know this because Tyler knows this.
    9. Re:Woudl the US blow up its own people by afidel · · Score: 2

      Putting soldiers on a college campus that had little history of violent action may not be premeditated murder but it is premeditated stupidity, which when added to people being killed is usually called manslaughter. There was no riot at Kent State that needed to be controlled that day, and soldiers were the wrong people to be controlling a riot anyways. The only time I heard of soldiers being better at riot controll then properly trained riot police was a story from my dad of the aftermath of a protest in Washington, DC. After several tens of thousands of protesters were arrested and huddled in the rain in an open stadium the officer of the platoon that was assisting the local police asked the commanding officer of the police force why he had not distributed the blankets, tarps, food, water and other provisions that he had for the protesters. The policeman's response was to let the damn hippies suffer, well it was a very cold day and the officer could see that people were going to get sick and possibly die so he ordered his men to start distributing the supplies. When the policeman asked him very heatedly under what authority he was seizing the supplies and distributing them, he respondly cooly with "the authority of a rifle platoon, if you wish to make a complaint to my superior officer after this is over you may"

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    10. Re:Woudl the US blow up its own people by operagost · · Score: 2

      I don't like comparing the start of the Civil War to what happened at Kent State. There's a big difference between a demonstration and the armed seizure of a military installation.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    11. Re:Woudl the US blow up its own people by FeloniousPunk · · Score: 2

      Putting soldiers on a college campus that had little history of violent action may not be premeditated murder but it is premeditated stupidity, which when added to people being killed is usually called manslaughter. There was no riot at Kent State that needed to be controlled that day, and soldiers were the wrong people to be controlling a riot anyways.
      Well, those soldiers were from the Ohio National Guard, and as it happens, riot control is a mission of the National Guard. National Guard soldiers are trained annually in "civil disturbance training" and most NG units also have appropriate equipment for this (batons, plexiglass face shields that fit on to helmets, etc.). I don't know if you've ever been to Kent, but it is small and only big cities have actual riot police. All other places get the NG.
      Although I believe that the situation was a terrible cock-up, I am not surprised they were deployed. There was an ongoing riot as a matter of fact, it was violent and there was certainly plenty of precedent for violent riots in the years prior to Kent State. Don't forget that two days before, the ROTC building was set afire and fire department equipment was sabotaged so that the blaze couldn't be put out; the previous day, protestors and the Guard clashed with injuries on both sides, and the day of incident protestors rained rocks on the Guard. I am not justifying the Guard firing on the protestors, but I can see how it came to pass.
      In any case, in those days NG units didn't have the appropriate equipment for the mission and Kent State lead to changes in how the NG is trained and equipped for the mission.

      --
      I know this because Tyler knows this.
    12. Re:Woudl the US blow up its own people by MacAndrew · · Score: 1

      There's a big difference between a demonstration and the armed seizure of a military installation.

      Now, which was which? ;-)

      I wasn't really comparing, just casting about for ideas. Civilians clearly suffered a great deal in the course of the Civil War, for better or worse.

  8. The Manhatten Project? by Adar · · Score: 3, Funny

    You'd think some of that twenty years of research would be dedicated to getting the name right.

    1. Re:The Manhatten Project? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The guy is wearing a hat to hide his baldness. He's known as The Manhatten.

    2. Re:The Manhatten Project? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'd think some of the twenty seconds you took to post would be dedicated to getting the spelling of Manhattan right.

    3. Re:The Manhatten Project? by BlankTim · · Score: 1

      You'd think some of the time you spend reading /. would be better spent working on improving your reading comprehension skills.

      --
      Just once, I'd like it if someone called me "Sir".
      Without adding, "You're creating a scene."
  9. Interesting Story... by vudufixit · · Score: 3, Interesting


    I always like to read about incidents I've never heard of. This is one of them.
    It may not be especially relevant to Slashdot's ostensible mission, but it does make for an interesting read.

    1. Re:Interesting Story... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I always wear diapers to prevent ambarrasing incidents.

    2. Re:Interesting Story... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wtf?

    3. Re:Interesting Story... by bryanp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It may not be especially relevant to Slashdot's ostensible mission,

      Sure it does. Slashdot can't resist a conspiracy theory. If you've never been around a conspiracy nerd, it's quite a sight. They make us computer / scifi / anime / trek nerds look like a bunch of social gadflys. These guys are just sad. Whether it be Kennedy or the moon landing, they can't possibly believe that any event could go by without a Vast Conspiracy behind it and they're quite glad to bend your ear. For hours. Repeatedly.

      --
      "An unarmed man can only flee from evil, and evil is not overcome by fleeing from it." Col. Jeff Cooper
    4. Re:Interesting Story... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I always like to read about incidents I've never heard of. This is one of them.
      It may not be especially relevant to Slashdot's ostensible mission, but it does make for an interesting read.

      As a sidelight, the Coast Guard was in cheare of dangerous cargo handling. The Navy thought they could do better (mainly faster). After the event, control of dangerous cargo handling was returned to the CG.

  10. Theres no conspiracy by ball-lightning · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Since there were places that the US could (and did) test nuclear bombs, there is no reason for them to test it there. In addition, there was no radiation, and the survivors showed no signs of radiation poisoning. It was just a normal explosion, albeit a very big one.

    1. Re:Theres no conspiracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sir, would you like to cherish my freshly shaved balls?

    2. Re:Theres no conspiracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i just sahved my balls a few hours ago. love that.

    3. Re:Theres no conspiracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would like to cherish them with a nice bottle of chocolate syrup and a sledgehammer. First I would coat them in saucy chocolate, and then smash the shit out of them until you cry like a little baby that just shit itself.

    4. Re:Theres no conspiracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      May I join you good sir, I love chocolate covered nuts, crushed or whole.

    5. Re:Theres no conspiracy by MickLinux · · Score: 1

      I too am inclined to think that there is no conspiracy, but I would not be hugely surprised to find that the initial blast was nuclear in nature. I could imagine where the government would be transporting nuclear materials, and in an effort to keep it secret, labeled it as something else. Then you just place a few of the loads of purified uranium to close together, maybe on either side of a bilge, and --- presto. Instant munitions accident. But at that, the majority of the accident would still be conventional.

      --
      Correct Horse Battery Staple: 72 bits of entropy. Enter "Correct H" into google. When it generates the phrase, that's
    6. Re:Theres no conspiracy by Cpt_Kirks · · Score: 2

      Actually, it's pretty damn hard to get a nuclear explosion. For an implosion bomb, the explosives have to be detonated with near microsecond precision. For a gun-type, just slamming the subcritical masses together works, but still needs some precision. Just having bomb parts near each other would not be enough to have them go nuke. You need a neutron source too.

    7. Re:Theres no conspiracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Implosion, which I believe is usually used with plutonium-derived atomic bombs, also need to be near perfect spherical implosions, otherwise, critical mass is not achieved.

      Gun type, typically used with uranium derived nukes, requires slamming things together to achieve that critical mass. Since it's a one-shot deal, you don't really need much (e.g. the gun barrel can be woefully non-reinforced since it does not have to stand up to repeated firings).

    8. Re:Theres no conspiracy by MickLinux · · Score: 1

      No, an explosion is easy. A high-yield explosion is difficult. Drop two moderately large pieces of uranium in the same water bath, and you'll get an explosion. That perhaps could set off TNT.

      My dad, Ph.D. in fusion at U. of Wisconsin [1972: his statement that fusion won't be practical in 50 years got him kicked out of the field by all the 10-year people] tells me that this really happened in a lab, and a couple of lab workers were irradiated. Before they died, they were screaming "help me, I'm burning up." They weren't -- it was the damaged nerves in their skin firing. [Sorry, no refs here] High price to pay for a mistake, trying to save some time.

      But I think you could concievably get an explosion.

      But I could be wrong -- I'm often wrong [and no, I didn't invent Data. That was Al Gore.]

      --
      Correct Horse Battery Staple: 72 bits of entropy. Enter "Correct H" into google. When it generates the phrase, that's
    9. Re:Theres no conspiracy by Cpt_Kirks · · Score: 2

      Louis Slotkin died that way.

      I don't think it would be an explosion, more of a run away fission process that would vaporize the uranium.

  11. Re:ack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    congrats

  12. Must sleep by MeanMF · · Score: 5, Funny

    Wow, that was the most interesting 354-page article I've ever seen posted here. I think it said something about some stuff blowing up, but I'm not really sure. I'm going to go to sleep now.

    1. Re:Must sleep by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have an attention span of 15 seconds. You should stick with comic books.

    2. Re:Must sleep by interiot · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Ha. The first couple chapters of the book read like the start to 2001: A Space Odyssey, eg. all the events leading up the Port Chicago explosion, starting with the big bang. And then he has the gall to say things like this:
      • Most of the comprehensive data and analyses of those data that are available in Government Port Chicago explosion records are extraneous to the purpose of this book and will not be considered. Sections of available Port Chicago explosion records, for example, that precisely detail and mathematically dissect the "Percentage of plaster damage to total houses damaged" and the "Frequency distribution of number of structural members broken by buildings, area" would be neither instructive nor interesting to a general readership.
      Maybe he should have had such a clue for the rest of the book.
    3. Re:Must sleep by Asprin · · Score: 2


      Yeah - crackpots do that. It sorta reminds me of that quote/joke/'source unknown truism': "Your Honor, I object to this evidence on the grounds that it makes my client look guilty."

      Sorry it's OT, but so is the rest of my life - why should my /. posts be any different?

      --
      "Lawyers are for sucks."
      - Doug McKenzie
    4. Re:Must sleep by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Clown will eat you!

    5. Re:Must sleep by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, that was the most interesting 354-page article I've ever seen posted here. I think it said something about some stuff blowing up, but I'm not really sure. I'm going to go to sleep now.

      It'll be even more interesting when CmdrTaco reposts the article the next day.

  13. Re:This makes no sense. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The people who run this website are anti-everything-good, including America, Microsoft, and even anti-women.

  14. Its the aliens who run the goverment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The aliens are the ones in power! How else can you explain the fact that Strom Thurmond is not dead? Its the symbiotic alien organism keeping him alive. The same ones who promote global warming to change our climate to be more like their own. Why do you think Al Gore lost the election? Mind control lasers made the old people in Florida punch the wrong hole.
    They have big plans, they can control your mind, they can control your TIVO!!!

    1. Re:Its the aliens who run the goverment by Cpt_Kirks · · Score: 2

      How else can you explain the fact that Strom Thurmond is not dead? Its the symbiotic alien organism keeping him alive.

      From the look of him, they need to run him through the sarcophagus again. The damn host is falling apart!

  15. Maybe an accident? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who knows... maybe they were loading a nuke onto one of the boats, and it went off?

    Given that the construction techniques of the era weren't too wonderful, and predated the interlock systems of today, it's possible...

    3.5M tons of TNT is just a baby bomb.... Still, I can imagine someone saying "oh shit... "

    1. Re:Maybe an accident? by Slashamatic · · Score: 3, Interesting

      IIRC, the bombs were 'shipped' in part assembled form. There is no way they could be detonated early until they were on the delivery plane.

    2. Re:Maybe an accident? by gordgekko · · Score: 0

      I think you're wrong on that. I believe the atom bombs weren't put together until they reached their final pre-flight destination (that is, on the island where the bombers took off from to deliver the bombs). The USS Indianapolis (more famous for another incident just days later) delivered the dissembled parts that ended up the bomb that was used over Hiroshima, IIRC.

      --
      You want to know who isn't running Firefox 2.x? They spell it "definately" and "rediculous".
    3. Re:Maybe an accident? by Alsee · · Score: 1

      I think you're wrong on that.

      He said the same thing you did. His first sentence was phrased confusingly, but his second sentence makes his point perfectly clear:

      There is no way they could be detonated early

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  16. Cheap ripoff the Philadelphia Experiment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Now THERE's a government conspiracy! Making ships/people disappear AND travel through time!

  17. Once again, uh-huh by MacAndrew · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I know it's consider incorrect around here to comment on spelling, but the author begins to lose credibility when he misspells "Manhattan Project" on his front page.

    One observation is that many people are slow to draw the connection between nuclear and ordinary explosives because today's nuclear yields are so high. The Hiroshima and Nagasaki each had raw explosive power of around 10 kilotons each (the Nagasaki plutonium bomb was a good deal more powerful than the U-235 Hiroshima bomb, but because of inaccurate placement inflicted about half the damage). Nuclear explosions are worse for human life by heat and gamma radiation, but otherwise this tonnage could realistically be delivered by aircraft by conventional explosives or, in equivalent destructive terms, by firebomb bombardment such as had leveled most of Tokyo and Dresden.

    So there was some resistance at the time to focusing on the nuclear program when waves of 1,000 B-29's delivering 10 tons each could do the same task with proven technology. In another parallel, some estimates are that the "$3 Billion Dollar Gamble" B-29 may have cost more to develop and build than the bomb!

    Also, all large explosions assume the familiar mushroom cloud appearance.

    I don't address at all the propriety of dropping "the bomb," just the reasons a conventional explosion might be mistaken for one.

    1. Re:Once again, uh-huh by dietlein · · Score: 1


      I know it's consider incorrect around here to comment on spelling [...].

      Someday it may be considered incorrect to comment on bad grammar too.

      Until then, however...

    2. Re:Once again, uh-huh by baba · · Score: 1

      I know it's consider incorrect around here ...

      People in glass houses...

    3. Re:Once again, uh-huh by MacAndrew · · Score: 1

      Oh, fie on you. It's not like I'm getting paid for this!

      Note that spelling was a minor point, not the only point.

      Besides, even people in glass houses can throw stones accurately. :)

    4. Re:Once again, uh-huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's tragic how the pedantic are so reluctant to concede having made a mistake. Because it's themselves they're trying to improve when they criticize other people.

      If you've ever wondered about what neurotic really means, few personality types give a clearer example than the pedantic personality.
      Someone who makes the trouble to correct the spelling mistakes of strangers on the internet will most likely have many similar behaviors they inflict upon the people around them in real life.

    5. Re:Once again, uh-huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't worry, he's just a stupid Frenchman, who is too damn dumb to distinguish past and present tense. Or is it that the French are just too proud of their ignorance of the English language, the same way as Windows users are so proud of their ignorance of computers?

    6. Re:Once again, uh-huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      People in glass houses...

      ...such as those ugly Louvre pyramids... Why is it that the French can't be bothered to spell correctly?

    7. Re:Once again, uh-huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And english speakers are so proud of not having the mental capabilities to learn other languages.

    8. Re:Once again, uh-huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Congratulations. You managed to insert a Microsoft bashing statement into a perfectly enjoyable crackpot discussion about a WWII event.

      Please subscribe me to your newsletter.

    9. Re:Once again, uh-huh by Zordak · · Score: 2
      but otherwise this tonnage could realistically be delivered by aircraft by conventional explosives or, in equivalent destructive terms, by firebomb bombardment such as had leveled most of Tokyo and Dresden.
      On this vein, if I am remembering my numbers correctly, Nagasakin and Hiroshima accounted for approximately 1/4 the total damage inflicted on Japan in bombing raids -- meaning that the conventional fire bombing inflicted 3 times as much damage as the two nukes. Although there is something to be said for inflicting that much damage in one shot, it is clearly possible to inflict as much with conventional weapons. Somebody else pointed out in this thread how small nukes actually are compared to perception. They're devestating weapons, to be sure, but they do not vaporize whole cities in a single blow.
      --

      Today's Sesame Street was brought to you by the number e.
  18. Global military supremacy? by Spyffe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Actually, what was going on in 1944 and prompted the US nuclear program's development was not the US trying to gain global military supremacy.

    Instead, we were trying to develop a weapon which would obviate the need to land troops in Japan, which would have led to one of the bloodiest invasions ever. (Read about the Japanese preparations for the invasion - the villagers with pikes training to "stave" off armed infantry.)

    Even given hindsight, nuclear weapons didn't give us global supremacy. If anything, they allowed third world countries (China, the Soviets, Pakistan) to play hardball politics with the "big boy" Western powers.

    Second, as to your (sarcastic) reference to the US killing our own citizens to test a nuke: If we were to do that, we'd pick an uninhabited place, surely! Somewhere we could hush it up better than, say, a couple miles from San Francisco!

    --
    Sigmentation fault - core dumped
    1. Re:Global military supremacy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      There was only one reason for our development of the atomic bomb during WWII.

      We needed to do so before the Germans did first, and we knew that their scientists were well on the way there. We knew they had stopped Uranium-bearing ore exports in 1939.

      We had to get to it first. Using it in Japan was an afterthought, which was in itself based on the casualty estimates for a full scale island hopping land invasion of Japan. We may not have been able to do it--the Japanese were more than willing to be suicidal rather than surrender.

    2. Re:Global military supremacy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you for the America propoganda version of events, i graduated from high school so long ago that my memory of the propoganda and brainwashing was actually starting to fade after enough graduate history courses...

      Ahh ya those evil nazis i just love to hate those meanies!

      America Rules!!! Death to those other sucky countries and stuff!!

    3. Re:Global military supremacy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What kind of retard are you? The USSR was superior to the USA, it was not a third-world nation.

    4. Re:Global military supremacy? by iocat · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Not quite. The fear of a German bomb was what got Einstein to write a very influential letter supporting the nuclear weapons program to FDR, and that was certainly a supporting reason, but we ultimately developed it for the same reasons the Germans wanted to -- to make a really big bomb.

      As for dropping it on Japan, I suggest anyone interested in the subject at all check out a book called Downfall: The End of the Imperial Japanese Empire by Richard B Frank. He examines original source material and lets the reader decide whether or not it was good idea.

      Some of the interesting things he reveals: the Japanese plan, to fight the US to a bloody standstill on the beaches and then sue for a negotiated peace, would certainly have been bloody. The Japanese were massing *all* their remaining forces exactly where the US was planning to strike.

      Certainly there would have been tens if not hundreds of thousands of Allied and Japanese casualties. But, it wouldn't have mattered in the long run, because most of the Japanese population would have starved to death shortly after, anyway.

      See, Since the cities were totally bombed out, General LeMay's next targets were the rail-heads. After two weeks of bombing them Japan would have been totally unable to ship food around the counry, resulting in mass starvation, regardless of their surrender. (It's unclear if LeMay knew this would be the result, but since he spent the months before fire-bombing civilian areas, it seems likely that he probably didn't care that much.)

      Anyway, it's a pretty fascinating book...

      It's really an open question as to what would have happened if we hadn't dropped the bomb -- people in the US were so sick of war Japan may have been able to get a negotiated peace (just before they all starved to death).

      --

      Dude, I think I can see my house from here.

    5. Re:Global military supremacy? by FearUncertaintyDoubt · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Instead, we were trying to develop a weapon which would obviate the need to land troops in Japan, which would have led to one of the bloodiest invasions ever. (Read about the Japanese preparations for the invasion - the villagers with pikes training to "stave" off armed infantry.)

      According to John Kenneth Galbraith, who worked on an independent civilian commission appointed by President Roosevelt to study what really happened in the aftermath of WWII, Japan was ready to surrender before the A-Bomb was dropped.:

      Didn't the dropping of the A-bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki shorten the Pacific war?

      The bomb did not end the Japanese war. This was something that was carefully studied by our bombing survey. Paul Nitze headed it in Japan, so there was hardly and bias in this matter. It's ironic that he has since become fascinated with the whole culture of destruction. The conclusion of the monograph called Japan's Struggle to End the War was that it was a difference, at most of two or three weeks. The decision had already been taken to get out of the war, to seek a peace negotiation.

      The Japanese government, at that time, was heavily bureaucratic. The decision took some time to translate into action. There was also a fear that some of the army units might go in for a kind of Kamikaze resistance. The decision was not known in Washington. While the bomb did not bring an end to the war, one cannot say Washington ordered the attacks in the knowledge that the war was coming to an end.

      Would not millions have been lost, American and Japanese, in the projected attack on the mainland, had it not been for the bomb?

      That is not true. There would have been negotiations for surrender within days or a few weeks under any circumstances. Before the A-bombs were dropped, Japan was a defeated nation. This was realized.

      Taken from "The Good War," by Studs Terkel

      I think the "we had to drop the A-bomb becauase the invasion would have been worse" story is a remarkably well done piece of propaganda which has endured to the point of becoming accepted fact. As Mr. Galbraith points out, the US did not know that Japan was ready to surrender at the time. However, it is wrong to keep using that story now, given that it is probably false. I would rather the US say, OK, we didn't know that Japan was going to surrender, but we wished we did because we wish we didn't drop the bomb on them.

      As far as villagers training with pikes, that's probably on the same level as the bomb drills in US schools where everyone hid under their desk -- something to give ordinary citizens some feeling of security, nothing more.

    6. Re:Global military supremacy? by leandrod · · Score: 2
      > Taken from "The Good War," by Studs Terkel

      From the same book there is the first-hand account by a black navy worker that simply discredits the whole contention that Port Chicago saw a nuclear explosion. There were huge amounts of explosives there, and they were handled carelessly. Also no radiation after effects.

      > the "we had to drop the A-bomb becauase the invasion would have been worse" story is a remarkably well done piece of propaganda

      No. As Galbraith himself points, that the Bomb in itself did not end the War was learned afterwards. This was sure the feeling at the time, even if it was based on flawed evidence.

      So if there is any propaganda, it lays on saying the invasion would have been worse instead of we thought the invasion would have been worse. It is a distinction that should be done, but we are at the soundbite era.

      > As far as villagers training with pikes, that's probably on the same level as the bomb drills in US schools where everyone hid under their desk -- something to give ordinary citizens some feeling of security, nothing more.

      Not. These civilians were instructed to first resist with spikes, then to commit suicide if failing.

      And they really meant it, as the Okinawa suicides during the invasion proved.

      --
      Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
      DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
      GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
    7. Re:Global military supremacy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow... a grad student. Maybe, in your infinite wisdom, you would care to tell us what the true and authentic interpretation is? Or maybe I don't need to ask, mein commandant.

    8. Re:Global military supremacy? by zby · · Score: 1

      The Soviets in several decades after the WWII had a really powerful conventional army and actually it was the nuclear weapond that did deterred them against invasion in the West.

    9. Re:Global military supremacy? by CharlesEGrant · · Score: 2, Informative
      Thanks for an interesting reference. The full memo of the US Strategic Bombing Survey is available online at the Truman Library.
      The language used in the memo seems to me more equivocal then Galbraith's statments in the interview with Terkel.
      Consider:
      The war minister and the two chiefs of staff opposed unconditional surrender. The impact of the Hiroshima attack was to bring further urgency and lubrication to the machinery of achieving peace, primarily by contributing to a situation which permitted the prime minister to bring the Emperor overtly and directly into a position where his decision for immediate acceptance of the Potsdam declaration could be used to override the remaining objectors. Thus, although the atomic bombs changed no votes of the Supreme War Direction Council oncerning the Potsdam terms, they did foreshorten the war and expedite the peace.
      and
      Indubitably the Hiroshima bomb and the rumor derived from interrogation of an American prisoner (B-29 pilot) who stated that an atom bomb attack on Tokyo was scheduled for 12 August introduced urgency in the minds of the government and magnified the pressure behind its moves to end the war.
      and
      There is little point in attempting more precisely to impute Japan's unconditional surrender to any one of the numerous causes which jointly and cumulatively were responsible for Japan's disaster.
      The memo does conclude that surrender was inevitable even without an invasion, and without the use of the atomic bomb. However, it does seem to assume the continued conventional bombing of the Japanese mainland, something Galbraith fails to mention in his comments to Terkel. "Bomber" Harris in the UK and LeMay in the US had long been making optimistic claims about the power of conventional bombing to end the war. Could this memo be part of the the same school?
    10. Re:Global military supremacy? by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

      I believe that is incorrect.

      Japan was who eventually got the shaft, but the original intent of the US nuclear weapons program was the Germans. Unfortunately, the development of a working bomb and the production of enough weapons-grade uranium took too long, and Germany had fallen before the bomb was ready to be employed..

      Also, modern historians tend to doubt that Hiroshima and Nagasaki did much to end the war with Japan. Japan was already starting to break up and looking for an exit. The Soviets announcing war would have pretty much clinched it.

      The most significant benefit that the demonstration of nuclear power likely bought the United States was a trump card for use in post-war negotiations with the USSR.

    11. Re:Global military supremacy? by Yokaze · · Score: 2

      > as the Okinawa suicides during the invasion proved.

      The only thing that it proves is, that they feared the US soldiers. Unless, you provide some reference for civilians attacking with spikes.

      --
      "Between strong and weak, between rich and poor [...], it is freedom which oppresses and the law which sets free"
    12. Re:Global military supremacy? by kir · · Score: 2

      Please.

      --
      3cx.org - A truly bad website.
    13. Re:Global military supremacy? by NullAndVoid · · Score: 1

      the original intent of the US nuclear weapons program was the Germans. Unfortunately, the development of a working bomb and the production of enough weapons-grade uranium took too long, and Germany had fallen before the bomb was ready to be employed.

      Err, was it really so unfortunate that Germany fell before we had a chance to nuke them?

      Also, modern historians tend to doubt that Hiroshima and Nagasaki did much to end the war with Japan. Japan was already starting to break up and looking for an exit. The Soviets announcing war would have pretty much clinched it.

      Interestingly, I've read that a key benefit of dropping the bomb and getting the Japanese to surrender quickly was it avoided the US having to share the occupation of Japan with the Soviets, as it did with Germany. The allied agreement was that the Soviets would declare war if the Japanese didn't surrender by a deadline, and that would have obligated sharing the occupation. (Reference: Probably Zinn.)

      --


      -- Sigs are for losers
    14. Re:Global military supremacy? by WillAdams · · Score: 3, Informative

      iocat said:
      >(It's unclear if LeMay knew this would be the
      >result, but since he spent the months before
      >fire-bombing civilian areas, it seems likely
      >that he probably didn't care that much.)

      That's a bit disingenuous.

      Japanese cities of the time were not nicely, neatly divided into industrial / residential areas, and a lot of Japanese war production was at the cottage level, making that kind of differentiation in targeting well-nigh impossible. Granted, Life magazine said of the Tokyo fire-bombing, ``We have now proven that a Japanese city when properly kindled will burn like autumn leaves.'', but given the behaviour of Japan during World War II such sentiment can be understood in context.

      William

      --
      Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow.
    15. Re:Global military supremacy? by Raindog · · Score: 1

      Check out John Dowers "War Without Mercy"...good read. While there was a Japanese policy of "no-surrender" and suicide, this was backed up, in many instances, by US refusal to take prisioners. There was so much animosity going back and forth that both sides completly demonized the other. This is in contrast to say US attitudes towards the Germans, who were still regarded as "human" in ways the Japanese were not.

      Please note that the US commander of Corrigor (a general Wainwright) in the Phillapines (sp...sorry) was expect to fight to the death, and McArther (spelling again, its late, give me a break) flipped when he heard of the surrender.

      Japanese civilian fear of the US is well documented, it is visable thoughout books on the war. I have heard of no US atrocities against Japanese civilians (which were not encounted till late in the war, and in limited numbers in places like Saipan and Okinawa), but this does not mean that the fear was not there, a byproduct of the massive racial animosity that had developed.

      Dower is a great author, "War Without Mercy" sketched out this racial animocity very well, and also demonstrates how it quickly changed after surrender. His "Embracing Defeat", regarding the occupation of Japan, is a masterpiece, and goes into more detail regarding the rapid shift in perceptions and culture.

    16. Re:Global military supremacy? by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 2

      > I think the "we had to drop the A-bomb becauase the invasion would have been worse" story is a
      > remarkably well done piece of propaganda which has endured to the point of becoming accepted fact.

      But it is fact. We *did* have to drop the A-bomb; to blame the US for not knowing about secret Japanese deliberations is essentially to blame them for not being psychic.

      Chris Mattern

    17. Re:Global military supremacy? by leandrod · · Score: 2
      > > as the Okinawa suicides during the invasion proved.

      > The only thing that it proves is, that they feared the US soldiers. Unless, you provide some reference for civilians attacking with spikes.

      You are right, I messed the events.

      The spike training was not applied in Okinawa, only the instructions to suicide. The spike training came later, when it became clear to the military they would not be able to defend mainland.

      What the suicides do prove is that they would have fought or suicided. In any case, given that the US most probably did not know they were about to surrender, dropping the bomb might (not necessarily should) be considered having been the right thing to be done.

      An additional piece of history about this is that the Nagasaki bomb was dropped because of pedantic language. When the Japanese spokesman briefed the press on the governments' answer to the Allied ultimatum after Hiroshima, he used an archaic word meaning it was being favorably considered. Even the Japanese journalists did not knew the word, and it was translated as meaning the ultimatum was being disregarded. While we can never say for sure what would have happened, had a clear, then-modern word been used the use of the second bomb would not have been a given.

      --
      Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
      DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
      GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
    18. Re:Global military supremacy? by TarPitt · · Score: 1
      The most significant benefit that the demonstration of nuclear power likely bought the United States was a trump card for use in post-war negotiations with the USSR.


      Saw a convincing explanation that the point of the bomb was not to convince the Japanese to surrender, but to stop Stalin from occupying northern Japan (and who knows what else - Alaska?). Two bombs were needed to show the US possibly had an arsenal - if one bomb were dropped Stalin could believe that was all we had. After the fall of Germany, Soviet troops were turned eastwards. Truman may have had a well founded fear of where they would go next. Can't find ref - believe History Channel presented this theory.

      That said, it was very terrible to kill so many Japanese civilians in so horrible a fashion to make this point

      --
      If your children ever found out how lame you are, they'd murder you in your sleep
    19. Re:Global military supremacy? by iocat · · Score: 3, Informative
      You're totally right, even if LeMay wanted to bomb only industry, he would have torched many, many civilian establishments (especially since factories, as you point out, tended to be in the middle of residential areas). But it seems clear that LeMay's strategy was the deliberate firebombing of population centers, without, as was the case in Europe, even nominal moves towards avoiding civilians.

      In the book referenced above, Franks makes an excellent point, which was that the American people were so sick, by 1944, of the inhumanity of war, that they were willing to tolerate and support any inhumanity, no matter how big, to get it over with faster. Given that, and given the enormous number of US casualties we would have taken to invade Japan, I find it pretty hard to argue with *any* of the US strategy in pressing the war against Japan.

      --

      Dude, I think I can see my house from here.

    20. Re:Global military supremacy? by FearUncertaintyDoubt · · Score: 2

      Actually, the US did not have to drop the bomb. The US had no way of knowing for sure at the time, but that doesn't mean that you can still say afterwards that the US *had* to do it.

    21. Re:Global military supremacy? by AndroidCat · · Score: 1
      a Japanese city
      when properly kindled
      will burn like autumn leaves

      Almost a haiku, but not a very happy one.

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    22. Re:Global military supremacy? by beaverfever · · Score: 1

      I really, really wish I could remember the name of the book (not the one mentioned in another reply I saw here), and perhaps that failure makes this reply almost worthless, but this book I read regarding post-WWII japan quoted US military sources/reports that the pre-bomb casualty predictions of an invasion of japan were grossly overstated, and that Japan was in such an impoverished state that the use of the bombs probably only reduced the duration of the war by days and maybe weeks, not months. The idea that tens and hundreds of thousands of allied troops would be slaughtered on the shores of japan was described as a long-standing erroneous myth created, partly as propaganda, over 50 years ago.

    23. Re:Global military supremacy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Soviet Russia, state retards you!

    24. Re:Global military supremacy? by FearUncertaintyDoubt · · Score: 2
      No. As Galbraith himself points, that the Bomb in itself did not end the War was learned afterwards. This was sure the feeling at the time, even if it was based on flawed evidence.

      Yes, I know. That's why I said in my original post "As Mr. Galbraith points out, the US did not know that Japan was ready to surrender at the time." I don't understand why you disagree with me and then say the exact thing I said. Also, a number of generals and officials in the US believed the Japanese would surrender in time, although the belief that they would not won out in the end.

      So if there is any propaganda, it lays on saying the invasion would have been worse instead of we thought the invasion would have been worse.

      I think it is a little more than a small distinction. It's a bit like the cop who shoots someone because they think the person has a gun, and then it turns out it's a cell phone. Yes, the cop did what he thought was right, but the person still died needlessly.

    25. Re:Global military supremacy? by H310iSe · · Score: 3, Informative

      mmmm - I was living in DC around '95 when the 50th anniversary of hiroshima was being greeted by an exhibit at the national air a space museum. The original exhibit was critical of the decision to drop the bomb and exposed some lies (like we didn't know about what the radiation would do the the population) and, as I recall, the director of the museum was fired and the script re-written befor the exhibit opened. Here's a little bit of that story, complete with quote:

      "One major problem was the consequences of not using the atomic bombs. The earlier scripts implied Japan would have surrendered without an invasion. Dr. Tom Crouch, one of the exhibit's curators explained the evidence for that conclusion:

      '(take) The Strategic Bombing Survey team for example. Paul Nitze and John Kenneth Galbraith and the economists who were in Japan in the months immediately after the war to assess the impact of the strategic bombing campaign. They looked at everything I mean at economics, at morale, at what happened to fire departments and particular industries, particular towns. With regard to Japan. Their final comment on the (Atomic) bomb was that their studies indicated had there been no bomb, had there been no invasion, Japan would of surrendered in September-October. Something of that sort. Other Post-War studies said the same thing. I don't think we quote any of the others. Marine Corps and Army immediate Post-War gaming situations in 1946-1947, when they were playing with the political elements suggested essentially the same thing. The collapse was closer than the Japanese themselves realized and would of come at that point. If you see that in the script you're only going to see that as a quote from somebody else. There will be quotes to the contrary.' "

      --
      closed minded is as closed minded does
    26. Re:Global military supremacy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While we can never say for sure what would have happened, had a clear, then-modern word been used the use of the second bomb would not have been a given.

      Like Douglass Adams said: "Careless words can cost lives"

    27. Re:Global military supremacy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What, haven't you read your damn history books? What you're saying is standard bullshit. In reality, we (the U.S.) had cracked all of the Japs encrypted communications, which detailed how they wanted to give up REAL BAD. Their only stipulation was that they got to keep their emperor. Now, the justification was that "oh no, we can't do that", and of course the Russians were the only country left in one piece at that point besides ourselves...
      of course after we bombed them we let them keep their emperor as a figure-head, just like they originally wanted. You might also like to know that the high command of U.S. military knew about the Pearl Harbor attack about a week before the actual event, which is why they moved their major carriers out to deep sea. The expendable troops were left there to die to justify involvement in Europe. This is WELL DOCUMENTED history.

    28. Re:Global military supremacy? by murdocj · · Score: 1
      But it seems clear that LeMay's strategy was the deliberate firebombing of population centers, without, as was the case in Europe, even nominal moves towards avoiding civilians.

      The Allied bombing of Europe certainly attacked population centers. One of the German cities (Dresden?) was deliberately destroyed by firestorm. The bombers first used high explosive to break up the buildings into kindling, then later waves of bombers dropped incendiaries to set them on fire. The book "Why the Allies Won", claimed that the only reason the same treatment wasn't applied to other German cities was that they were out of range of fighter cover.

    29. Re:Global military supremacy? by susano_otter · · Score: 2

      But is the cop evil, if evidence after the fact contradicts the reasonable conclusion he reached on the evidence available to him at the time? Or is he just doing his job the best he can?

      At least we're reasonably certain there will be an investigation of the shooting. The evidence available to the cop, the training he received, and how he applied that training to the evidence, will be carefully reviewed. If he made a good decision, a proper investigation will probably exonerate him, and perhaps the training will be revised to prevent further mistakes of the same nature. If he made the wrong decision, he'll be suitably punished, and maybe training (or hiring practices, or performance reviews) will be adjusted as well.

      Better than demonizing the U.S. willy-nilly for making a controversial decision during a major military conflict, would be to actually investigate the matter without bias, and either exonerate or censure the decision-makers (and the nation as a whole--the citizens should bear some responsibility for the behavior of their elected representatives), as the evidence indicates.

      This is, of course, an utter fantasy.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    30. Re:Global military supremacy? by susano_otter · · Score: 2

      "We had to drop the bomb, because the invasion would have been worse."

      "No, it wouldn't have."

      "You're right, but we didn't know that at the time."

      Proving that we didn't have to drop the bomb seems to have been trivial after the fact. Can we please move on to proofs that the U.S. was reasonably certain that the bomb was unnecessary, but chose to use it anyway?

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    31. Re:Global military supremacy? by Raindog · · Score: 1

      The Soviet Union actually did declare war, several weeks before the surrender. Not sure why they didn't get to share in the occupation of Japan, maybe the creation of North Korea (Korea was then a Japanese colony) was deemed to be enough. The SU also got some islands (the Kuriles, I believe) to the north of Japan.

    32. Re:Global military supremacy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The book "Why the Allies Won", claimed that the only reason the same treatment wasn't applied to other German cities was that they were out of range of fighter cover."

      A quick look at the map ought to disprove this. Dresden is in the southeast of Germany. The bombers were flying from the UK. Most of the major cities in Germany (except perhaps Munich and Nurnberg) could be reached as easily as Dresden.

      The firebombing came late in the war. It wasn't used further because it wasn't necessary. Germany was in the final stages of collapse.

    33. Re:Global military supremacy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "From the same book there is the first-hand account by a black navy worker that simply discredits the whole contention that Port Chicago saw a nuclear explosion. There were huge amounts of explosives there, and they were handled carelessly. Also no radiation after effects."

      In the article with first triggered this thread, the author explains his hypothis. The device of Port Chicago was a different type of nuclear device from that used on Japan, with a yeild at least an order of magnitude less than those used in Japan, and a low-radiation profile. Specifically, he claims the device was a "low-effciency implosion bomb" using uranium hydride rather than uranium 235, and with an explosive force of about 1000 tons of TNT. Two similar bombs were tested in 1953 and 1954, and neither of those test detonations produced much radiation. The facts he has assembled are very interesting, even if they are poorly organized and haphazardly presented.

    34. Re:Global military supremacy? by multiplexo · · Score: 1
      This is such crap. John F. Kennedy, who served in the Pacific Theatre, made remarks to the effect that the farther away you were from the war the more likely you were to have reservations about using the bomb. Paul Nitze and John Kenneth Galbraith spent WWII in the safe confines of Washington D.C. I would suggest that you speak to some people who had been in the Pacific theatre and ask them how they felt about dropping the bomb. My grandfather, who served in the Army in the Pacific on New Guinea thought the bomb was great, my step-grandfather, who spent four years in a submarine in the Pacific was also in favor of the bomb.

      In his article Thank God for the Atom Bomb Paul Fussell points out that casualties in the Pacific theatre were around 7,000 a day. Had the war lasted for one month beyond the August 16th surrender of Japan that is 210,000 casualties, had it gone into October, lasting two months, 420,000 casualties. Most of these casualties would not have been the Harvard classmates of Nitze or even the University of California classmates of Galbraith, rather they would have been working class Americans serving in the armed forces.

      Harry S. Truman, who spent World War I in in France as a captain of artillery understood how brutal war was in a way that Galbraith, Nitze, Alperowitz and others who never served never could. Truman made a decision to end a brutal and bloody war on the best terms for the United States, he made the decision as Commander in Chief that the lives of American and Allied soldiers, marines, sailors and airmen were more important than those of Japanese civilians who had spent the last fourteen years since the invasion of Manchuria supporting a war that was designed to build an Asian empire for Japan.

      After the war the Japanese managed to play the victim card for all that it was worth. Atrocities such as the Rape of Nanking or the biological experiments that the Japanese carried out against the Chinese were downplayed or covered up. Since most of Japan's atrocities took place in China, which even then was in the process of being taken over by the Communist Chinese, there was no way for anyone to find out exactly how bad the Japanese were. Only now, with revelations about Korean women being kidnapped for Japanese brothels and excellent historical studies such as Iris Chang's The Rape of Nanking are we finding out how bad Japan was.

      As for the argument that the United States dropped the bomb to show the Soviets what we could do, if it is true, so what. Remember if you will that the Soviet dictator at the time was none other than Josef Stalin, the architect of the Moscow show trials of the 30s, the Ukrainian starvation and the signer of a non-aggression pact with Adolf Hitler. Stalin was every bit as evil as Hitler and if the bomb only served to deter him it would still be justified. Ask the Japanese if they would have rather had Hiroshima and Nagasaki nuked or not had them nuked and had the home islands divided in two as North Korea and South Korea or East and West Germany.

      --
      cheap labor conservatives - they want to keep you hungry enough to be thankful for minimum wage.
    35. Re:Global military supremacy? by mge · · Score: 1
      The Soviet Union actually did declare war, several weeks before the surrender.
      I believe the sequence went

      A-bomb dropped on Hiroshima by US (Aug. 6).

      USSR declares war on Japan (Aug. 8).

      Nagasaki hit by A-bomb (Aug. 9).

    36. Re:Global military supremacy? by FearUncertaintyDoubt · · Score: 2
      No, I am not trying to demonize the US for the decision to drop the bomb. But the continued use of "we had to do it because an invasion would have been bloodier" is no more valid that if the cop still said, "the suspect had a gun, so I had to shoot" after it was proven that the suspect only had a cell phone.

      I'm not attacking the decision at the time. What I have a problem with is the continued deception that there was no alternative. In the fog of war, it seemed best. But not anymore.

      Your point about corrective action is exactly why this is important. The US can learn from this terrible mistake. The idea that Japan was going to fight so tenaciously, so suicidally, was based partly on racial stereotype and misinformation. In the midst (and also on the brink of) of war against another oft-maligned group of people, the muslims/Arabs, I think it is quite relevant. How well do we really know what the enemy is going to do? Many people are sure that Saddam is going to use chemical/bio weapons if we attack, and that we should respond with tactical nukes. Do we really want to do that to find out he was about to be overthrown by his own people or some other thing which made it unneccessary?

    37. Re:Global military supremacy? by FearUncertaintyDoubt · · Score: 2

      No, it is not trivial. It certainly means we should have re-evaluated the decision making process, how intelligence was captured/analyzed, and how important cultural understanding of the enemy is. Just saying, well that's too bad, is saying, hey who cares, we're not going to try to change things so we don't make that mistake again.

    38. Re:Global military supremacy? by susano_otter · · Score: 2
      My mistake. I used "trivial" in the sense of "easy to do".

      Please read the sentence as "Proving that we didn't have to drop the bomb seems to have been easy to do after the fact."

      I certainly didn't intend to say that the issue is unimportant or irrelevant!

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    39. Re:Global military supremacy? by Zemran · · Score: 2

      When America bombed Japan, Japan had already lost the war. They could not fight. They had no oil and their navy was out of fuel. America knew this. Yes, Japan would have put up a fight in the event of a beach assault but they would have soon starved if America had laid seige.

      America had a new bomb and they wanted to test it while they still had a reason. If America had let the war end any other way they could not have tested the new bomb on "real" people.

      A virgin target was chosen, one which served no military significance and had therefore never been bombed before. The results would be only the results of this new bomb.

      Soon after dropping it the Americans had enough plutonium to make a new bomb... they had to really rush to drop this one so they could test it on some other real people and again they chose a virgin target...

      Forget the spin, it is boring. The nuke programme was about killing innocent people and although I have no reason to believe this Port Chicago story I do believe that America is capable of such an act. I know that real soldiers where lied to and used in the tests and you do not have to look far to find out that joint research with the UK still uses civilian areas for such tests (depleated uranium shells were tested in SW Scotland to find out the effects)...

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/1420916.stm

      --
      I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
    40. Re:Global military supremacy? by FearUncertaintyDoubt · · Score: 2

      Fair enough. Thanks for clarifying.

    41. Re:Global military supremacy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      It may be a fascinating book, but it is utter propaganda. The Japanese (via the Emperor's nephew) had already approached the Soviets with a surrender offer. Truman knew of this and dropped the bomb anyway. Had Truman accepted that offer, thousands of lives (including the hundreds of men on the USS Indianapolis) would have been saved. The bomb wasn't dropped to avoid an invasion - that was never going to be necessary. The bomb was dropped to show the world we had it and what it could do to anyone who fucked with us.

    42. Re:Global military supremacy? by dasunt · · Score: 2

      I'm sure someone can cite a reference for this one way or another: Was a naval blockade of the home islands ever considered at the end of WWII?

      Consider this: Japan is an island, with nowhere near the gas, oil, or metals to support a war effort. Hell, we had broken some of the Japanese codes near the end of WWII, and we were capturing their defenses - we knew that the Japanese were hurting for supplies by the end of WWII.

    43. Re:Global military supremacy? by DerekLyons · · Score: 2
      According to John Kenneth Galbraith, who worked on an independent civilian commission appointed by President Roosevelt to study what really happened in the aftermath of WWII, Japan was ready to surrender before the A-Bomb was dropped.:
      Interesting that a dead man can form a commission to study something that happened months after he died...
      The Japanese government, at that time, was heavily bureaucratic. The decision took some time to translate into action.
      The Japanese wartime goverment was not only bureaucratic, it was utterly controlled by the military. So much so that it took the Emperor's personal intervention after Nagasaki to make a surrender happen, and the military in the goverment attempted to physically prevent the Emperor's Rescript from being published. (Hardly the actions of a goverment who had already decided to surrender.)
    44. Re:Global military supremacy? by H310iSe · · Score: 2

      The point was - was the bombing of the cities w/ an atomic weapon necessary to bring a swift conclusion to the war and save american lives? I'm not sure that's really addressed in what you say - for example, why bomb nagasaki when the Japanese surely were going to surrender after hiroshima? and why hiroshima and not a more military, less densly populated target (one must have existed).

      Were the japanese acting like lunatic criminals? Absolutely. Should we, in turn, do likewise?

      I believe at the least IF there was no other way to bring the war to a quick end (and that's debatable) then at least we should have waited longer (a few more days?) between heroshima and nagasaki, and we should have taken a 'shot across the bow' first somewhere other than a city.

      We lied when we said we didn't know what would happen to the people, we lied when we said the japanese weren't already near surrender and we lied when we said we didn't drop the bomb out of malice and revenge. We did. If we'd tell the truth about that then maybe we could have a reasonable look at the rest of the story and judge ourselves based on the whole, not just a partial, truth. Nothing wrong with that, right?

      --
      closed minded is as closed minded does
    45. Re:Global military supremacy? by murdocj · · Score: 1

      As I said, I *thought* the city was Dresden. In fact it was Hamburg in mid-1943 (certainly before Germany was "in the final stages of collapse).

      "Why The Allies Won" states: "When the heat died away almost three quarters of the city had been destroyed and fourty thousand of its inhabitants consumed in the inferno".

      The book goes on to say that firebombing wasn't used on other cities because they were out of range of the radio target-finding device. It's worth remembering that in WWII, bombing was in its infancy, and many times the entire payload might be dropped miles away from the target.

      It's pretty clear that the Allies would have jumped at the chance to firebomb Germany into submission.

  19. Say chap by The+Bungi · · Score: 2, Funny

    I have some black helicopters and a bridge in Brooklyn for sale, if you want them.

    1. Re:Say chap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My black helicopters are better, faster, and cheaper than your black helicopters.

      You can keep the bridge.

  20. Good read by jsse · · Score: 1

    At least this is not as vague as Philadelphia Experiment

    1. Re:Good read by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These are vague, money-making accounts. The US was testing alien technology on that ship, the implications of which were astronomical. No further information will ever be found, well, until we make proper alien contact that is.

  21. Point of order... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    It is my personal opinion that we should all start referring to the "megaton" as the "2x gigapound."

  22. Port Chicago by ericdano · · Score: 5, Informative
    I live near it. You can't go on some of the trails around there because of the security. Most all of the stuff is underground. There are a lot of rail road tracks that go down into the ground into bunkers. It is a real creepy place.

    Whether or not there was a nuclear explosion, I don't think so. However, that area has always played a very important part of the military in the Bay Area.

    --
    It's either on the beat or off the beat, it's that easy.
    I moderate therefore I rule!
    --
    1. Re:Port Chicago by EMDischarge · · Score: 1

      Yeah, dude, that's the Concord Naval Weapons storage area. Of COURSE it's high security - in the 80's when I lived in the Bay Area the rumor had it that tactical nukes were stored in those underground bunkers.

      Anyway, that's not Port Chicago. Port Chicago is the PORT on the OTHER side of I-680. It was a major rail-sea link in WWII as it cut several hours off of travel to other ports such as Oakland. Not to mention there wasn't much out there 50 years ago.

      I modded you down too.

      --
      Quintus malus puer est.
    2. Re:Port Chicago by ericdano · · Score: 2
      It's not I680, it's 24. And they are connected. And anything that was stored there would be moved to the port. We're talking like a mile or two.


      Oh, and you can't mod and comment at the same time either.....

      --
      It's either on the beat or off the beat, it's that easy.
      I moderate therefore I rule!
      --
    3. Re:Port Chicago by Basil+Ganglia · · Score: 1

      This is all old news...

      http://www.nexusmagazine.com/PortChicago.html

      --
      Basil
    4. Re:Port Chicago by ehintz · · Score: 2

      Minor nitpick-24 is way down in walnut creek. You want 4. 242 is close as well but the part separating the storage area from the bay is 4. See, I'm intimately familiar with it, as I drive all of the above on my commute from Antioch to San Carlos (ouch).

      There's a rather amusing writeup by some folks that took photos of it for the confluence project at this locale...

      --
      ehintz
    5. Re:Port Chicago by ericdano · · Score: 2

      Yeah, your right, Highway 4. Coffee had not kicked in yet when I posted earlier.....

      --
      It's either on the beat or off the beat, it's that easy.
      I moderate therefore I rule!
      --
  23. Sounds like BS by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 5, Informative

    I skimmed some of the PDFs.

    What I didn't see were comparisons to larger known conventional maritime explosions like in Texas or Halifax.

    Just because it was a big blast doesn't mean it was a nuke. As for Teller, it was obvious from the interviews in the Atomic Bomb Movie that Teller is off his rocker.

    http://members.iinet.net.au/~gduncan/maritime-2b .h tml

    "British Ministry of War Transport steamship (7,142 tons) loaded with 1,400 tons of munitions and a cargo of 9,000 cotton bales, was berthed in Bombay docks when a fire broke out with such ferocity that it soon reached the ammunition stored in the forward section of the ship. The resulting explosion was almost as great as the blowing up of the ammunition ship Mount Blanc in Halifax Harbour during the First World War. Fires on shore blazed for two days and nights as the flaming bales of cotton were hurled into the air only to drop onto the wooden shacks and shanties of Bombay's slums. In the harbour itself, eighteen merchant ships were either sunk or severely damaged. A total of 336 people died and over 1,000 injured."

    "A gigantic explosion occurred at the West Lock Munitions Facility, Pearl Harbor, the cause of which has never been explained. The ammo-loaded ships were spaced in line apart from each other when the first explosion occurred at the dock setting off a series of explosions on the other ships. Some vessels managed to take evasive action thus terminating the domino like chain of explosions. Destroyed were the Landing Ship (Tank) LST-43, LST...69, LST-179, LST-353 and LST-480. Also destroyed were the Landing Craft (Tank) LCT(6)-961, LCT(6)-963 and LCT(6)-983. Bodies were being dragged from the water days after the event. Casualties were said to be over 1,000 killed or wounded."

    So the Navy Pier accident isn't unique in violent destructive power.

    There are two other explosions I've read about with similarities to the one that is pdf'ed to hell and back.

    http://www.region.halifax.ns.ca/community/explod e. html

    Stored in the holds, or simply stacked on deck,of the Mont Blanc were 35 tons of benzol, 300 rounds of ammunition, 10 tons of gun cotton, 2,300 tons of picric acid (used in explosives), and 400,000 pounds of TNT.

    "The Mont Blanc drifted by a Halifax pier, brushing it and setting it ablaze. Members of the Halifax Fire Department responded quickly, and were positioning their engine up to the nearest hydrant when the Mont Blanc disintegrated in a blinding white flash, creating the biggest man-made explosion before the nuclear age. It was 9:05am.

    Over 1,900 people were killed immediately; within a year the figure had climbed well over 2,000. Around 9,000 more were injured, many permanently; 325 acres, almost all of north-end Halifax, were destroyed.

    Much of what was not immediately levelled burned to the ground, aided by winter stockpiles of coal in cellars. As for the Mont Blanc, all 3,000 tons of her were shattered into little pieces that were blasted far and wide. The barrel of one of her cannons landed three and a half miles away; part of her anchor shank, weighing over half a ton, flew two miles in the opposite direction. Windows shattered 50 miles away, and the shock wave was even felt in Sydney, Cape Breton, 270 miles to the north-east."

    http://sdsd.essortment.com/texascityexplo_rkvi.h tm
    http://www.texasoutside.com/galveston/texascity. ht m

    1. Re:Sounds like BS by G-funk · · Score: 2

      Stored in the holds, or simply stacked on deck,of the Mont Blanc were 35 tons of benzol, 300 rounds of ammunition, 10 tons of gun cotton, 2,300 tons of picric acid (used in explosives), and 400,000 pounds of TNT.

      Is that a typo, or did they think 300 rounds was worth mentioning? Did they also list the packet of matches in the captain's shirt pocket?

      Or is it like big-ole-country ammunition like for a howitzer or some such?

      --
      Send lawyers, guns, and money!
    2. Re:Sounds like BS by Cyberdyne · · Score: 3, Informative
      Stored in the holds, or simply stacked on deck,of the Mont Blanc were 35 tons of benzol, 300 rounds of ammunition, 10 tons of gun cotton, 2,300 tons of picric acid (used in explosives), and 400,000 pounds of TNT.

      Is that a typo, or did they think 300 rounds was worth mentioning? Did they also list the packet of matches in the captain's shirt pocket?

      Or is it like big-ole-country ammunition like for a howitzer or some such?

      The latter, I imagine, since these are ships they are talking about. In which case, those 'rounds' are each a couple of inches across, very heavy, and packed with enough explosive to kick it through a warship's armored hull a couple of miles away. Not something you want to drop on your foot...
    3. Re:Sounds like BS by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

      While I agree that the thesis is BS, they do infact cover both of these (in Ch7). I'm actually reading through them just for the summaries of other explosions, which are pretty interesting.

      I do have to say one thing, though -- they have a *lot* of filler material and quoted crap.

    4. Re:Sounds like BS by wagemonkey · · Score: 1
      I don't know what sort of rounds they were, but a 15" HE shell came in around 1 ton of explosive.
      Propellant seperate of course.

      This reminds of why the Warspite took so many shots to sink the German destroyers at Narvik, she was expecting a heavy cruiser and was loading with AP, so basically the Germans were having 15" shells going through them until enough damage was done - HE would have been much quicker (probably only 1 hit needed). IIRC they were nearly being knocked over by the impact...

    5. Re:Sounds like BS by sconeu · · Score: 2

      IIRC, destroyers use either 5in or 8in shells. These are incredibly heavy. A battleship used 16in shells. A friend of mine who served in Vietnam once told a story about a guy who called for fire, and somehow the request got relayed to a battleship. He said it was like having a VW Beetle come in overhead.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    6. Re:Sounds like BS by Alsee · · Score: 2

      Just because it was a big blast doesn't mean it was a nuke.

      Yeah! Real good proof there!
      It MIGHT not have been a nuke, therefor it wasn't!

      Damn kooks bashing on every conspiracy they hear about. Just because it's a conspiracy don't mean its false. Bah! Waste of breath talking to kooks like you. You'll believe anything they tell you.

      Port Chicago was a nuke, just like Pompeii.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    7. Re:Sounds like BS by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      "The resulting explosion was almost as great as the blowing up of the ammunition ship Mount Blanc in Halifax Harbour during the First World War. Fires on shore blazed for two days and nights as the flaming bales of cotton were hurled into the air only to drop onto the wooden shacks and shanties of Bombay's slums..."

      Mental note: Avoid cities with the word "bomb" in their name.

    8. Re:Sounds like BS by ruiner13 · · Score: 2
      "So the Navy Pier accident isn't unique in violent destructive power."

      Navy Pier? Huh? Mavy Pier is in Chicago, put Port Chicago is in San Francisco. There was no mention of Navy Pier anywhere in your post, what big explosion were you referring to? I'm from Chicago and I have never heard of a large explosion on any pier.

      --

      today is spelling optional day.

  24. who's offtopic? Well besides me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't how this is related to News for nerds. Stuff that matters...

    What your post? Me either.

    I see posts like it attached almost every article though, and they are boring and repetitive as hell. Who gives a fuck if you think an article fits in with the Slashdot motto? Micheal obviously thought it did, and as an editor he defines what Slashdot is. This isn't "pick the one that doesn't belong" from Sesame Street. Slashdot is whatever it is today, whatever the editors decide to post. And that's the way it's always been. Therefore this article fits the pattern perfectly.

    If you don't like their choices (if you don't think this story matters) say why you don't like them at least. Just saying "Duh, I dont think this is news for nerds" is a waste of space and should get your post modded to Slashdot hell.

  25. You think THAT'S scary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you're not concerned about the Invisible personnel and criminal life control surveillance system yet, you should be. I never knew half of this stuff.

  26. Conspiracy! by Dachannien · · Score: 3, Funny

    Was it a nuke test? Naaah. ...But it might have been aliens.

  27. Cool....second conspiracy theory tonight!..... by Dr_Marvin_Monroe · · Score: 4, Funny

    ....First it was the RFID chips in my tires monitoring my position in front of Taco-Bell for the government and now it Nuclear blasts in a densely packed city!......

    Does Oliver Stone know about this?.....

    1. Re:Cool....second conspiracy theory tonight!..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are an ass. The RFIS chips in your tires are FACTS.

      Can you read the links? Can you think?

      Make fun of it then you small minded little jerk.

      The fact that your comment is at +2 sickens me. Find one factual flaw in the RFID expose if you dare try. The US gov tracks car tires emmisions at only two locations in the expose : customs borders, and on highways.... not Taco bell, you idiot.

    2. Re:Cool....second conspiracy theory tonight!..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are gay.

  28. 5 kiloton conventional explosion... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm going to respond to the article logically, resisting the impulse to immediately smack the conspiracy theorists upside the head.

    Being European, I was not familiar with the incident. Running a very quick search shows that there was an accident at a port (Port Chicago), when it was used for loading and transporting ammunition during WW2.

    Sources say that there was an explosion of approximately 5 thousand tons of conventional explosives, started accidentally. Undoubtedly it was a massive chain reaction and there had apparently been some (certainly understandable) concern over the safety of the facility.

    The article source claims it was a nuclear weapon.

    The documentary "Trinity and Beyond - The Atomic Bomb Movie" (good footage, narrated by William Shatner) contains recently de-classified footage. It shows the US military staging a conventional explosion of the order of a kiloton, designed to help figure out what to expect from a real nuclear explosion. And guess what... it behaved very much like you would expect a nuclear explosion.

    The facts are as follows:

    (1) There was a big explosion.

    (2) A 5-kiloton conventional explosion could at first glance be mistaken for a nuclear explosion. Big explosions look similar, it doesn't matter how they're triggered.

    The critical problem with their argument is as follows: The test site of the very first atomic weapon, Trinity, is still noticably radioactive today, possibly dangerous. Indeed, the fallout effects are still noticable from other sites exposed to nuclear weapons - in the environmental and survivor's radiation poisoning.

    To those who assert that the Port Chicago explosion was the result of a nuclear explosion - how do you explain a nuclear weapon with no fallout and radioactivity? I vouch that you are trying to manipulate the facts to justify a theory - rather than basing your opinions from facts.

    You would have thought that during a "20 year investigation" they would have gone out there with a geiger counter and check out the background radiation. Which would have discounted nuclear weapons very quickly.

    1. Re:5 kiloton conventional explosion... by ender81b · · Score: 2

      how do you explain a nuclear weapon with no fallout and radioactivity?

      I do not advocate or support this theory about port chicago being a nuclear explosion at all but what about a Neutron Bomb?. Granted they weren't even thought of till 1958 but... Shrug.

    2. Re:5 kiloton conventional explosion... by mpe · · Score: 2

      I do not advocate or support this theory about port chicago being a nuclear explosion at all but what about a Neutron Bomb? [nuclearfiles.org]. Granted they weren't even thought of till 1958 but...

      This is still a nuclear weapon, thus will still spread fission products, nuclear fuel and irradiated bomb components around as fallout.

    3. Re:5 kiloton conventional explosion... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the article, the author claims that 1,000 of the 5,000 tons of TNT was actually a nuclear device, that it triggered first, and that it caused the other 4000 tons of chemical ordanance to explode. He further claims that it was a Uranium Hydride bomb code-named Mark II that was an order of magnitude less powerful than the bombs dropped on Japan, and that the radiation dispersed rapidly, following the pattern of the other two uranium hydride bombs detonated by the United States for testeing in 1953 and 1954. His findings are thouroughly documented, if somwhat haphazardly presented.

  29. An enormous grain of salt by stwrtpj · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ... is what anyone should take this theory with.

    I will openly admit that I did not RTFA, simply because the FA is too F long. I did go to the site and tried to skim the salient points, and I read the historical account (of an event I had never heard of, and I tend to consider myself something of a WW II history buff).

    At first glance, this is shaping up to be a case of someone starting from a false premise and building an argument to support it. Several times people have attempted the old "wow this was way too powerful to have been a conventional explosion it must be nuclear" gambit.

    I can easily cite an example of another historical event that resulted in a very large conventional explosion that mimicked atomic bomb effects. On December 6, 1917, a French cargo ship carrying a large amount of picric acid, TNT, benzole, and guncotton caught fire and exploded in Halifax harbor. The force of the explosion is estimated to have been in the neighborhood of 3 kilotons. It had all the effects of a atomic blast: fireball, mushroom cloud, shock wave, even a small tidal wave since the explosion was over water, and so on, all but the radiation. However, no one by any conceivable stretch of the imagination can claim that this was an atomic explosion.

    In addition, it is my understanding that it took a great deal of time and expense to build first the test device that was exploded in the desert and then the two that were dropped over Japan. That represented the sum total of America's nuclear arsenal at the time. A great deal of care was taken with these devices. It seems very odd to me that there would be some sort of "accident" with a heretofore unknown weapon that America possessed at the time. Atomic weapons just do not simply "go off" unless the bomb were specifically armed, and there would be no reason to keep an armed atomic weapon in the hold of a ship.

    As for purposely detonating a device to test its effects on a populated area? Please. I can only stretch my incredulity so far. Yes, the US government has done some terrible things in the past, but it would take a great deal of very compelling evidence to make me believe they would do something that blatant.

    Anyone who has read the entire book from beginning to end, feel free to poke holes in my argument. My research into this theory was hampered by the fact that the site did not contain a concise summary of the theory itself. For someone with the time, perhaps this would be a good candidate for applying the Carl Sagan Baloney Detection Kit.

    --
    Karma: Frotzed (mostly due to the Frobozz Magic Karma Company)
    1. Re:An enormous grain of salt by nickco3 · · Score: 1
      Atomic weapons just do not simply "go off" unless the bomb were specifically armed, and there would be no reason to keep an armed atomic weapon in the hold of a ship.

      On the contrary, one of the most challenging parts of building a nuclear weapon is making sure that it doesn't do just that. If you gather enough fissionable material in one place it will "go off" on it's own.

      This is because an atom bomb is triggered by firing neutrons at uranium-235, and uranium-235 sheds neutrons itself while it is just sitting there. This is a big problem for the factory that produces the U235, as the place will blow up if you get too much of it together, be that in a filter, a valve, or the the warehouse. You can't even keep it in adjacent rooms because neutrons go through walls.

      The critical mass for a piece of Uranium 235 in the right (wrong!) configuration is about 15kg. It is quite believable to see that coming together unintentionally.

      --
      -- Nick "Hallo this is Beel Gates, und I pronounce weendows as ... WEENdows"
    2. Re:An enormous grain of salt by ComaVN · · Score: 1

      Doesn't make that creating a fission bomb extremely easy? Well, as long as you don't mind getting blown up in the process, anyway. I think I know some people who don't. :(

      Also, couldn't you just make a bomb by getting two 7.5kg parts of U235, and seperate them by a meter of lead during transport, drop the lead and push the parts together?

      --
      Be wary of any facts that confirm your opinion.
    3. Re:An enormous grain of salt by gilroy · · Score: 2
      Blockquoth the poster:

      On the contrary, one of the most challenging parts of building a nuclear weapon is making sure that it doesn't do just that. If you gather enough fissionable material in one place it will "go off" on it's own.

      Yes, but not usefully. Unless the pieces are assembled quickly, their proximinity in sub-critical density will release enough heat to vaporize and disperse the uranium before it truly chain-reacts. You get a big, messy, hot puddle of uranium but not a (gigantic) explosion ... just a "fizzle" and a lot of radiation.


      While obtaining the U235 was the hardest part of the Manhattan Project, it was also considered a major accomplishment to wrangle injection of the critical mass...

    4. Re:An enormous grain of salt by rworne · · Score: 2

      There have been instances of nukes getting dropped (odd, Sandia Labs deleted the link, hrrm thank you Google) and blown out of silos without ever detonating. They are quite hardy devices.

      Read This Link for more hair-raising stories.

      For a good laugh, search Google for "nuclear bomb silo explosion wrench" and see the helpful ads on the side of the page.

      --
      I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit
    5. Re: An enormous grain of salt by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2


      > It had all the effects of a atomic blast: fireball, mushroom cloud, shock wave

      When I was a kid, a chemical plant just outside my home town was mixing chemicals in a tank car and it popped. I didn't see the fireball because I was home playing in my yard, but the shock wave made all the neighborhood screen doors open and close, and you could easily see the mushroom cloud over the rooftops.

      This kind of stuff really doesn't take all that big an explosion.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    6. Re:An enormous grain of salt by Kombat · · Score: 2
      For a good laugh, search Google for "nuclear bomb silo explosion wrench" and see the helpful ads on the side of the page.

      Not to mention, provoking an exciting visit to your home by some very concerned feds...

      --
      Like woodworking? Build your own picture frames.
    7. Re: An enormous grain of salt by Neon+Spiral+Injector · · Score: 2

      I observed a mushroom cloudish shape in my back yard when I set off 10 lbs. of solid rocket fuel. (I also later observed that my hair and eyebrows were covered in a white ash and melted together.)

      I think the fuel was so hot and made so much smoke (it had a smoke tracer in it) that the initial updraft pulled the smoke with it. As it cooled the cloud took a more traditional cloud shape.

    8. Re:An enormous grain of salt by Detritus · · Score: 2

      It would produce a "fizzle" and kill anyone in the immediate area. You need about 52kg of U235 to make a gun assembly bomb. The primary problem in assembling a critical mass of any fissionable material is the assembly time in relationship to the frequency of spontaneously generated neutrons. The critical mass must be assembled quickly enough that the probability of a "fizzle" caused by background neutron radiation is reduced to an acceptable level. U235 has a low level of background neutron radiation, allowing assembly of a critical mass by the relatively slow method of a gun shooting a U235 plug into a U235 target. Pu239 has a much higher level of background neutron radiation, making gun assembly impractical. This resulted in the development of implosion systems, which have a much faster assembly time. The higher the background neutron radiation level, the faster you must assemble the critical mass.

      --
      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
    9. Re:An enormous grain of salt by Alsee · · Score: 2

      There have been instances of nukes getting dropped

      I suddenly have this image of one man holding a baby in a room full of 100 women.

      Sometimes "oops" just doesn't cut it.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    10. Re: An enormous grain of salt by Alsee · · Score: 2

      and it popped.

      General: Err, excuse me, Mr. President?
      President: What? Can't you see I'm busy here?
      General: Well, The aircraft carrier Stennis was in port in San Diego for routine maintenece, and ahhh..... one of the nukes popped sir.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  30. This I Truly Love ... by SuperDuG · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Would the US really blow up their own people for the sake of global military supremacy? Naaaah...

    It is very American to stand up and say that you're patriotic especially after September 11th, and then go on and on about how "they" the government are trying to control you "the sheep", or how "they" want to go to war.

    Here's a little lesson in how things work for Americans, because obviously some of you just don't get it. American Government is ran by AMERICANS. "they" are "us" and no different except the titles beside their names.

    So would "they" set off a nuke on "their" own people?

    HELL NO

    This was an accident that was covered up because the Armed forces (that ensure our freedom and lifestyles as Americans) made a mistake and like ANY human they didn't want to fess up to it. It's a whole lot easier to pretend something didn't happen or "bend the truth" then to come right out with it. That's the one thing that just doesn't register with me, since when is "the government" some new breed of people in America?

    Sometimes it sickens me to see people so proud to be Americans to just turn around and bitch about what they take for granted.

    In Soviet Russia, you wouldn't see a book like this.

    "I may not agree with what you have to say, but I will fight to my death for your right to say it" - Voltaire

    --
    Ignore the "p2p is theft" trolls, they're just uninformed
    1. Re:This I Truly Love ... by mgblst · · Score: 2

      In Soviet Russia, you wouldn't see a book like this...

      No, the Russians could probably handle a book a little bit longer.

    2. Re:This I Truly Love ... by miu · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Sometimes it sickens me to see people so proud to be Americans to just turn around and bitch about what they take for granted.

      1026 changed everything.

      I don't believe that Port Chicago was a nuke test, but the vicious stupidity displayed by the passage of the patriot act makes me very afraid of what the US will become.

      --

      [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
    3. Re: This I Truly Love ... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2


      > Here's a little lesson in how things work for Americans, because obviously some of you just don't get it. American Government is ran by AMERICANS. "they" are "us" and no different except the titles beside their names.

      > So would "they" set off a nuke on "their" own people?

      > HELL NO

      Just like they wouldn't secretly give their soldiers LSD and watch what happened?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    4. Re:This I Truly Love ... by sckeener · · Score: 2

      Your analogy does not work.

      I'm sure the Jews assumed they were part of the 'them' in democratic Germany only to be marched into death camps.

      So

      So would "they" set off a nuke on "their" own people?

      Hell Yes, if they were ordered to...

      --
      "Only one thing, is impossible for god: to find any sense in any copyright law on the planet." Mark Twain
    5. Re:This I Truly Love ... by Blkdeath · · Score: 2
      Here's a little lesson in how things work for Americans, because obviously some of you just don't get it. American Government is ran by AMERICANS. "they" are "us" and no different except the titles beside their names

      Please, oh please tell me that you're not this naive. Do you really think the oil-baron, conglomerate corporate executives who become elected officials in North America are no different from John Q. Public who elect them? Come on. I've heard more plausible conclusions come out of children's fairy tales.

      --
      BD Phone Home!

      Shameless plug. Like you weren't expecting it.

    6. Re:This I Truly Love ... by Alsee · · Score: 2

      In Soviet Russia, you wouldn't see a book like this.

      they would see YOU!

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    7. Re:This I Truly Love ... by SuperDuG · · Score: 2
      You don't like it? You think there's something wrong?

      Get up off your ass and RUN FOR PUBLIC FREE ELECTIONS. The old saying of "vote to voice your opinion" is pure and utter apathetic BULLSHIT. You want something to change, talk to your Representative, Governor, AG, SecState, Comptroller, Treasurer, Clerk, Judge, Senator, FBI, or whoever you just don't like because people who seem to be "privledged" run the country.

      Tell them how you feel, don't think you're getting the right response, then run against them in the next election. This really isn't a hard concept, in democracy if you don't like something, you a citizen can change it. Don't tell me you're so helpless that you think you can't change anything, if so then you are worthless to society as a whole and should move to a dictatorship country where your shit views of government can make some real sense.

      Funny you should mention fairy tales, those are stories told to small children to enstill the philosophy that anything is possible ... ANYTHING.

      --
      Ignore the "p2p is theft" trolls, they're just uninformed
    8. Re:This I Truly Love ... by Blkdeath · · Score: 2
      Get up off your ass and RUN FOR PUBLIC FREE ELECTIONS.

      Ok, so I can possibly get elected to a municipal council. I'll get to affect changes to the size and number of speed bumps around certain school zones. I'll be able to vote on such poignant issues as the number of trees that should be planted around the water front.

      Oh, wait, did you mean run for political positions that mean something? Ok, so I run for [Provincial|State] office. I run, with a limited budget with minor campaign contributions from my non-conglomerate backers against people with hundreds of thousands of dollars and dozens of corporate backers in their pocket. I air one television spot; they air a hundred. I air a short radio stint, they air a week-long blitz. I appear on local, free, or otherwise small-scale radio stations - they interview on national shows in prime time.

      Welcome to your capitalist dream society. The little moralistic guy can't win - it's just not built that way. The only way to win an election is to have the financial support and backers to get your message out to the public, and even then it has to be a message that people will want to put their vote behind.

      So let's assume I do get financial support via some magical windfall. My opponent (who, let's not forget, is the amoral type we're trying to remove from office in the first place) does a little digging and comes up with some not so tasteful elements of my past, or the past of any of the major contributors / members of my campaign party. So now they're slinging mud, and hey, how can I throw back what with my moralistic campaign and all?

      Welcome to your modern representitive democracy; where the media wins and loses elections based on popular opinion.

      So now I get into office. I've had to struggle like a madman for probably a little over a decade with likely upwards of half a million dollars invested in my campaign. Now I have a seat in Parliament where I can make a difference, right? Wait - no, I can't. I'm voting my voice against the majority [Liberal| Conservative| Republican| Democratic| Progressive Conservative| etc] government, and the minority opposition. So my vote is heard among the hundreds of other voices. Well gee whiz - what a load of good I've just accomplished for one riding who, oh, wait, can decide that they don't like the progress I'm (not) making and subsequently elect my ass out of office.

      Welcome to reality. It's all well and good to stand on your patriotic soapbox and tell people that they can make a difference, but some of us know that this is a crock. We've been living in a capitalist corrupted system for more than a century that's only getting worse by the year as the separation of church and state becomes less pertinent as the separation of corporation and state; a margin that grows ever smaller as each and every day goes by.

      So if you think a small individual can make a difference in a world whose apathy exceeds all bounds, by all means, show me a solid plan. Show me where you plan on finding the hundreds of thousands of dedicated individuals who won't just get behind the cause of the moment but who'll stand behind your everlasting cause of change of the system through thick and thin.

      When you're done mulling, maybe you can wake up and join me in the knowledge that you can't use a corrupt system to change its roots. The next major change to our way of life will come at the end of a large payload that makes my two story house the tallest building for hundreds of miles. Or, perhaps, it'll come in a more subtle form.

      --
      BD Phone Home!

      Shameless plug. Like you weren't expecting it.

    9. Re:This I Truly Love ... by SuperDuG · · Score: 2
      So if you think a small individual can make a difference in a world whose apathy exceeds all bounds, by all means, show me a solid plan. Show me where you plan on finding the hundreds of thousands of dedicated individuals who won't just get behind the cause of the moment but who'll stand behind your everlasting cause of change of the system through thick and thin.

      Look back ... everyone is a "small" individual as no one is born great. Granted some get their a little quicker through opportunities that aren't present for others. But anyone who wants to get to the top can, it takes simple determination. The day you become part of the the solution and not a critic of the problem will be the day you see where I'm coming from. Many many campaigns have been won on "grass roots" approaches where a candidate goes door to door and uses the idea of people knowing other people and spreading the word to gain popularity. You want to get to the top you gotta start small I would love for you to point out ANY prime minister/president who started there with no other background or proven political track record.

      --
      Ignore the "p2p is theft" trolls, they're just uninformed
  31. Not only during the Cold War. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Read enough and you'll discover that the JCOS appear to be homicidal maniacs driven to sow war wherever and whenever possible.

    You think nuking people for testing purposes is bad, what about the FOIA documents on "Operation Northwoods", a "pretext operation" (a term whose very existence in JCOS/Pentagon jargon is frightening) involving the slaughter of U.S. citizens designed to increase support for a war against Cuba?

    Or what about the US and "simulants" in the 60s?
    Serratia marcescens, anyone? Bacillus subtilis in your subway car sound good?

    How about Unit 731? Japanese vivisected humans to develop bioweapons, and the US kept it classified after the war... in exchange for the data!

    1. Re:Not only during the Cold War. by billburroughs · · Score: 1

      I'm just glad they are not doing things like that anymore. ;)

      --
      - The word is a virus.
  32. Where did this stupid article come from? by Animats · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The Port Chicago disaster is well-known. Some people make a big deal out of it for racial reasons (most of the people killed were black). But a nuclear explosion? No way.

    The San Francisco area has a number of nuclear embarassments. There are leaky barrels of radioactive material off the Farralones, and ground contamination at Hunter's Point. Ships used near nuclear tests were decontaminated or scrapped there. Mare Island used to be a nuclear weapons storage area. But the SF area's anti-nuclear activists have never brought up Port Chicago, and if there was any evidence of contamination, it would have been noticed by now.

    The author's online chapter sections don't even seem to have much relevance to his conspiracy theory.

    1. Re:Where did this stupid article come from? by KagakuNinja · · Score: 1

      The Port Chicago disaster is well-known. Some people make a big deal out of it for racial reasons (most of the people killed were black). But a nuclear explosion? No way.

      Uh, no. People made "a big deal out of it" because: black soldiers, many of whom were qualified for technical jobs, were being forced to work as menial laborors, in extremely dangerous conditions. The white overseers had competitions amongst themselves, to see who get their black boys to load ships with explosives the fastest. Then, when the completely avoidable disaster did happen, the black soldiers refused to continue loading ships until safety was improved; they were all court-marshalled, and the entire event was covered up for decades. No one really talks about it, even today.

  33. Blast Statistics by Captain+Chad · · Score: 3, Interesting

    From chapter 9:

    • The buildings of the Naval Magazine were damaged extensively; sporadic damage to structural members of buildings was proven up to 13 miles - Suval [railroad] Station, California; plate glass was broken up to 35.5 miles - Petaluma, California; and a legitimate claim for plaster damage was reported at 48 miles - Calistoga, California.
    Death count: 320 dead, 81 bodies recovered, of which 30 were positively identified.

    A pilot flying at 9000 feet saw pieces of white-hot metal rise above his altitude.

    I'm impressed...

    --
    Check out Chad's News
  34. NOW I remember this one -- and not for the boom by MacAndrew · · Score: 5, Informative

    I was sure the incident sounded familiar, but not for the reason stated.

    Port Chicago is known as a tragedy and milestone in race relations in the U.S. military, which was segregated throughout WWII. Here is the Navy account, not bad in its honesty.

    "The explosion at Port Chicago accounted for fifteen percent of all African-American casualties of World War II." Some 320 people were killed instantly, nearly all of them black. The ordnance loaders were a black unit. Hundreds of the survivors refused to return to work after the accident without safety changes. A couple hundred were summarily court-martialed, and 50 more were tried for mutiny with a possible death sentence.

    The incident drew a great deal of attention, again not for allegedly being nuclear, and mau have factored into President Truman's historic integration of the military.

    This may not be a technological angle, but it does emphasize that poor safety practice with conventional explosives caused the disaster, as I suggested in an earlier post.

    1. Re:NOW I remember this one -- and not for the boom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a movie based on it, saw it on tv a few months back. forgot the title and am too lazy to search for it now. Whoever wants to search for it, have fun and karmawhore a few points for posting the name and a link to a review.

      -t

    2. Re:NOW I remember this one -- and not for the boom by froodishone · · Score: 1

      The Public Radio show This American Life did a segment about this event in 1996 (it's act 3 of episode 37) and interviewed some of the survivors. They did a nice job exploring the segregation and racial issues. The show is available as a Real Audio stream from This American Life website.

    3. Re:NOW I remember this one -- and not for the boom by MacAndrew · · Score: 1

      Thanks. IIRC the most recent reason the incident was revisited came was the 1997 (?) pardon by President Clinton of one of the last living vets of the "mutiny." One of his better pardons.

  35. Another Conspiracy Theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's not forget that the CIA is responsible for spam too.

  36. Mushroom Cloud blast by michaelrn · · Score: 2, Informative

    My former boss worked for a decade at a New Mexico university (not sure which one) doing highspeed photography work. He had compiled a tape of much of the non-classified footage he had accumulated over the years. He lent it to me and I found it some very cool footage. It contained several conventional weapons detonations including one 20,000 ton TNT blast. It created a mushroom cloud exactly like what I have seen off nuclear weapon blasts. Mushroom cloud != Conspiracy Residual radition = Conspiracy (for me) But I've seen no evidence for any. Case closed.

    1. Re:Mushroom Cloud blast by bofkentucky · · Score: 1

      I had a coworker (Vietnam Vet) describe what is now known as a Daisy Cutter (15000 Pound Conventional, formerly known as Commando Vault) blast. By his estimation he was at a range of 5-8 miles from the drop point and just happened to see a section of jungle go up in a very distrinctive, loud blast from his position in a small village. He always thought it was the most terrifying thing actually used in the air war, becuase unlike any of the attack aircraft or heavy bombers, you didn't see the contrails or hear the jets, your position could just all of a sudden detonate, without a single peep from the attacker, kind of a mass destruction ambush.

      --
      09f911029d74e35bd84156c5635688c0
    2. Re:Mushroom Cloud blast by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well no, you would not hear any jets since the Daisy Cutter is so large that no jet could carry it. It was dropped out the back of a C-130 attached to parachutes.

      Contrails were likely out of the question since any drop would occur at an altitude where contrails would be infrequent.

  37. In other news.... by PsychoElf · · Score: 1

    The CIA has implanted bugs in my body. Now they can track me where ever I go. Also, my dog was not mysteriously blown up, that was the government testing a nuke in my backyard. (This is a joke, if you dont think its funny, dont bother moderating :) )

  38. Holy crap, that guy is stupid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    From here.
    Advanced government and hacker methods are known to be able to bypass normal PC-based ISP security and thus able to snoop such files. This is not considered possible at this site because it is a Mac-based ISP selected for that very reason - the same reason that even CIA uses Macintosh.
    Yes, if it's on a Mac, it's instantly secure.
  39. In case the site gets slashdotted... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here's the story below!

    [ Read More / 2828729829282092929 bytes ]

  40. Ggrrrr PDF! by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Grrrrrrrrrrrrrr!!!! I mean it! GRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR!!!!

    --
    -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
    1. Re:Ggrrrr PDF! by LucidityZero · · Score: 1

      Why grrrrr PDF? I see this a lot, and I'm just not sure why. Can anyone explain? Don't tell me it's some sort of comptability issue, cause then you're just running a wack OS. I've been Microsoft free for a while now, and I've never had a problem reading PDF's. There are a thousand tools available. Is there another reason people around here seem to hate them?

      --
      Sig.i>
    2. Re:Ggrrrr PDF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the fuck are you getting your panties in a twist for? There are plenty of open source pdf readers and in fact the fsf even distributes it's magazine in pdf so "GRRRRRRRRRRRRRR!!!!!!" these nuts ok wanky.

    3. Re:Ggrrrr PDF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No reason, he's just some cluetard trying to act cool.

    4. Re:Ggrrrr PDF! by McCrapDeluxe · · Score: 1

      Hell, if someone doesn't have a .pdf reader, they can use Google.

    5. Re:Ggrrrr PDF! by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      The existence of a PDF reader does not negate my dislike for reading PDF files. I'm sitting here reading on a web browser, which for some inexplicable reason is done a hundred times better than any PDF reader I've ever used. Is there a PDF plugin for a linux based browser? I dont mean sticking a seperate viewer inside the browser, I mean using the browser to render the page
      I have never seen a good PDF viewer, okay? That's why "Grrrrr, pdf!", I really dont know why such a thing has become so standard for use on the internet. If it's on a web page, why not link instead to (OMFG!!!) a web page!?
      I'm not all for Free Software, and thinking adobe is evil or some shit. I have something probably unheard of by most people here- Legally purchased copies of adobe products.

      My problem with PDF is that the required use of a seperate viewer, which as I have stated is consistently crappy, makes me opt instead for Not Reading it.
      Now for people who would here say "Well then dont read it, nobody's forcing you to!", you are what we humans call the most fucking moronic kind of idiot it is possible to concieve of. You, I suppose, would rather never eat toast than have to sit in a fire while holding a peice of bread. Well, see there's this other option where you use a toaster.
      I want toast, and I dont want to use any of the horrible PDF viewers availible (Yes, the official adobe one is shitty too)
      I have always seen them as slow, needlessly difficult to scroll through, and in general no where near as good for reading as say, a web browser. Why might this be? BECAUSE PDF IS FOR PRINTING, YOU JACKHOLES. Sure, it can be and often is used for other things, but in every instance that other thing turns out very crappy.
      And if you're of a differing opinion, any comment you post in responce is wrong. This is because I have here stated my opinion, and personal experience. So trying to combat this with your opinion or personal experience is.. see above for comment about you being a moron.

      --
      -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
    6. Re:Ggrrrr PDF! by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1

      See 1 up and to the right. [two people asked the same question, I dont want to give two unique replies]

      --
      -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
    7. Re:Ggrrrr PDF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Batman didn't get to suck Robin's dick this morning? Drool comes out of your mouth when you are yelling like that, it's so cute!

    8. Re:Ggrrrr PDF! by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 2

      You idiot, everyone knows who the bitch in that relationship is. The man is forced to wear Bright Red and Green underwear all the time!

      --
      -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
    9. Re:Ggrrrr PDF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey genius if your fucking browser sucks too much ass to display fucking PDF in it then that's your fucking browsers problem not PDFs ok ya fucking turd burglar.

    10. Re:Ggrrrr PDF! by Blkdeath · · Score: 1

      Since this is a response to an obvious troll, I'll not +1 myself.

      Is there a PDF plugin for a linux based browser? I dont mean sticking a seperate viewer inside the browser, I mean using the browser to render the page I have never seen a good PDF viewer, okay?

      Why would the browser render something that the plugin is more than capable of handling? I've got Acrobat Reader 5 installed, including the Netscape plugin being used with both Mozilla 1.2.1 and Phoenix 0.5 and it works fine for me. I can still use my browser controls for back / forward, and I've got all the functionality of the Acrobat reader software (what more do you need? Zoom, scroll, search, print, text selection, copy'n'paste, ...). The same is true for any non-HTML data format sent to web browsers (spreadsheet, document, etc.) in that the browsers can not, and should not render these formats.

      If you'd like, you could write a simple plugin that converts the PDF data to another format more to your liking and that the browser can display. Google does it with (almost?) all PDF files referenced in their search results.

      The technology exists; all you have to do is use it.

      BECAUSE PDF IS FOR PRINTING, YOU JACKHOLES.

      My, such strong words for such a mis-understanding. The above referenced 'article' is a book - get it? It's not a web page, it's an online BOOK, Herr Jackhole. The author / publisher most likely wish it to remain in the same format / style as they so laboriously laid out for printing, therefore they use a stylistic medium that affords them this luxury. Comprende?

      And if you're of a differing opinion, any comment you post in responce is wrong. This is because I have here stated my opinion, and personal experience. So trying to combat this with your opinion or personal experience is.. see above for comment about you being a moron.

      Wow. It's so nice to see that offering a difference of opinion is "moronic" in a debate that centres around the freedoms and virtues of America.

      My, but it's nice to be able to state an opinion and be labelled a moron; all this before my second cup of coffee, no less.

      --
      BD Phone Home!

      Shameless plug. Like you weren't expecting it.

    11. Re:Ggrrrr PDF! by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 2

      Offering a difference of opinion isnt moronic. Trying to counter a difference of opinion is. You are hereby labeled a moron for trying so desperately to read that you have been labeled one. (Aren't I nice?)

      As for it being a book, I'm sorry but I was under the impression that digital information coming through my computer screen was not the same as it being printed.
      'cause it's NOT.
      All that labor going towards formatting something for media it isnt going to be displayed on is worthless, okay? It's nice and all that he spent so long trying to make it workable as a book, but then he decided to distribute it in Non-book form. "Oh no! If I convert these newspaper quotes to plain text for viewing on a scrolling sign, all the collums will be lost!"
      So your point about him having spent so long laying out their media in a certain format, and then being too idiotic or lazy or whateverthefuck to just give the fuck up and realize that people reading this online arent going to see this as being a book, well, you get the drift?

      And it's not a troll post, it's just blatantly off-topic while giving an honest opinion not to offend people but to cause those who are thinking of using PDF on the web to go "Oh, gee, that /IS/ one of the stupidest things a human is capable of doing!" and then put it into something better.

      I probably had more.

      --
      -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
  41. Expect this in a Made-for-Tv movie... by demo9orgon · · Score: 1

    where a protagonist has to give us a nakey moment as they show up in WWII America, prevent event "X" from ever taking place by blowing the hell out of Port Chicago, and then riding the shockwave back into the future while (supposedly) cleansing themselves from the timeline by erasing all the evidence(that was the plan)--but not before tittilating us all by pressing lips and bumping-uglies with someone they shouldn't have, forking a mutual process and irreperably horking the timeline forever...resulting in (Microsoft | TIA | Petrolum-Based-Economics | Silicone Breast implants | Barney) -- pick any two--and remember, the police state can work for you; so turn in a wrong-thinking family member today and preserve democracy for now and the future. Act now and we'll waive or discount the cost of the .357 round used to re-educate them. (DOH! There goes the timeline!)

    --
    Every new form of media has it's own Requirimento
    1. Re:Expect this in a Made-for-Tv movie... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Starring the greatest thinkers of our times, Martin Sheen, Kevin Kostner, Steven Segal, Woody Harlson, Barbara Steisand, and Jane Fonda. The voice of Jimmy Cater could be dubbed in as aa announcer trying to pronouce 'nuclear' and never quite getting it right. Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton could do the TV news circuit ginning up suport for the movie and extorting money from everyone in sight.

      Bwahahahahaha. Gotta go and write the screen play now which is sure to be a hit and rush it out to Hollywood, CA, population: 19500, total collective IQ: 57.

      BTW, this whole thing losses credibility because the great Right Wing Conspiracy behind it all was never mentioned.

  42. Some other kind of bomb? by caluml · · Score: 2

    Well, I must say that I've never heard of this at all. You learn something new every day.
    it doesn't sound like a nuclear device to me. But aren't there bombs that cause damage, but don't leave radioactivity? Neutron bombs? or something?
    Forgive me if I'm wrong - the body clock hasn't got used to waking up early after the Xmas holidays/parties/late nights.

    1. Re:Some other kind of bomb? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I recall correctly, neutron bombs are known for causing little damage but a lot of radioactivity.

    2. Re:Some other kind of bomb? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Neutron bomb are excellent for killing everyone but leaving the oil wells intact....erm...

    3. Re:Some other kind of bomb? by caluml · · Score: 2

      Hmm. -1, Incorrectly remembered by me then. Oh well.

  43. It's just H. Michael Sweeney. Ignore him. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He crossposts his insane rantings on Usenet incessantly. Nothing he says makes any sense. He once said on one of the conspiracy newsgroups that he thought the government was hacking his site because he was getting requests for 'robots.txt'.

    1. Re:It's just H. Michael Sweeney. Ignore him. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like this, for example:

      This answer is from the perspective of a Mac user living happily in a
      largely PC (abused) world...

      I fled an ISP because my high-placed friend who worked there admitted
      his boss regularly sampled email from his clients. My friend quit the
      post for the same reason. The ISP was a PC-based firm as most Web host
      outfits tend to be. We both moved to a MACintosh based ISP where it is,
      for whatever technical reason, apparently not possible for even the tech
      help to access our mail without our password. This is in keeping with
      the generally higher security levels of MAC platforms in network and Web
      hosting situations.

      This is not the same thing as capturing data on the fly, still a
      potential problem for anyone who is targeted by people with the right
      toys. Then there is the van outside with the TEMPEST capability. For
      each level of security you take, they have an alternative strategy that
      can defeat you, if they are willing to through enough resources at the
      matter. The secret then, is to be less productive and less inviting
      than considered fruitful. Always include a certain amount of horse
      radish in your lemonade (disinformation) and be a little off center with
      respect to reliability, and you may never have the wrong friends at all.

      On the other hand, some people think it amusing to attract such
      attentions, and to thus waste those resources. Ahem. No one ever sends
      me anything that sensitive, but they who watch and wait can always be
      encouraged to think it might happen, eventually. I don't get the good
      stuff via email, but do simulate the effort from time to time. Good
      lemonade!

      H. Michael Sweeney, Author, The Professional Paranoid - proparanoid.com

  44. But the silliest part of the nuke claim is . . . by SEE · · Score: 2

    . . . if the U.S. sucessfully tested a U-235 bomb in 1944, why did it test another U-235 bomb at White Sands in 1945? The U.S. could have had three bombs read for use in 1945 then, or at the very least, the U.S. could have tested the plutonium bomb at White Sands and had two bombs of known-good design to drop on Japan.

  45. He also thinks undeliverable mail == CIA Plot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  46. 10k ton nuke - radiation = 10k ton TNT by Repran · · Score: 0

    I have no reason to suspect that a 10k ton TNT explosion has any difference in appearance and destructive force then a 10k ton nuke. While this might seem simplistic, shouldn't some kind of elevated radiation levels be findable arround Port Chicago to make the nuke theorie plausibel? With the words of Siegmund Freud: "Sometimes a table is just a table." Move one guys - nothing to see here.

    --

    -- Contradictions only exist in thought - not in reality.

  47. Americans by hackwrench · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Waaiit... You're not an American are you? Because if you were, you'd know that Americans come in all varieties: those who think that "one world government" is generally a good thing and those who think it is the most horrible thing you could think of, those who think the government should get involved in the lives of its citizens for any number of reasons, and those who feel that the government should have a very hands off approach, and those who have no clue what the government should be doing. (and all those can be further subdivided, and there are sure to be plenty of other sub-divisions both having to do with government and without.) However it seems to me that the people running the government are pretty much a self-selecting bunch, narrowing down the people they deem worthy to join their ranks to one or two per position before the general populace has a chance to have a say in things.

    1. Re:Americans by SnowDog_2112 · · Score: 2

      However it seems to me that the people running the government are pretty much a self-selecting bunch, narrowing down the people they deem worthy to join their ranks to one or two per position before the general populace has a chance to have a say in things.
      If that's true, it's because we (or they, heh heh) let it be true. America is built on some great premises, and it's the apathy of the people (We The People, not "They the people," imaginary bad guys) that let it be anything less than that.

      --
      Not representing or approved by my company or anybody else.
  48. Is it me.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    or is Michael posting shit almost as wierd as Katz used to? First the "conservative science" article (I didn't know science had a political preference...) and now this.

    Who submitted this crackpot garbage? Junis?

    1. Re:Is it me.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you didn't fucking read the god damn conservative science article or you would fucking understand what that means. But i supposed the new york times is above your 8th grade reading level.

    2. Re:Is it me.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you don't understand how "science" can be manipulated for a number of ends then you are one naive puppy.

      Oh yes, big pharma loves your type haha...

    3. Re:Is it me.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you didn't fucking read the god damn conservative science article or you would fucking understand what that means. But i supposed the new york times is above your 8th grade reading level.

      Oh great. When someone has a difference of opinion, you have to resort to using vulgarity and insulting their reading ability. I guess the Gobbels School of Propaganda has taught you well.

    4. Re:Is it me.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only reason people are conservative is:

      1) Very Rich.

      2) Brainwashed by a Jesus Cult

      Neither of which should be allowed to taint science....

      I mean are you the CEO of Ford? Are you on Exxon-Mobil board of directors?

      Then what good does denying global warming do for you?

    5. Re:Is it me.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anyone who thinks global warming is a "liberal myth" obviously ain't the sharpest tool in the shed if you know what i mean...

      You talk of propoganda yet you are the one buying the party line...

    6. Re:Is it me.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope...I said the "Global Warming" thing is happening - the debate is over the matter of WHY? The earth does have it's own warming and cooling trends.

      Find me a definitive source that proves that man is the main reason...or even more than a tiny one. No...I mean it...go do it.

      Now go sod-off and troll elsewhere.

    7. Re:Is it me.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No...I was picked up by a ship of Aliens and they told me that Conservatism was the way to go, and all part of their master plan. Oh and cloning is bad...I am supposed to go smack up that Rael guy for them, for talking shit.

  49. What is the sound of one flamer flaming? by Hubert_Shrump · · Score: 2

    If I criticize this post, and then someone criticizes me, then can I recriticize them?

    What if I criticize myself pre-emptively by saying "recriticize" isn't a word?

    Then am I not myself?

    For all the soviet russia posts, I sure don't hear the "what a country!" punchline...

    --
    Keep your packets off my GNU/Girlfriend!
    1. Re:What is the sound of one flamer flaming? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Soviet Russia, joke tells punchline to YOU!

  50. I have but one thing to say: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You slashdotters are a bunch of fucking idiots!

    1. Re:I have but one thing to say: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's true they are morons.

      I hadn't read slashdot in months but as an excuse to avoid my family i ended up surfing the web a lot and ended reading some of this shit.

      It's so retarded.

      It's addictive though. You get stuck trying to show each moron why they are a moron and how they can stop being a moron but they don't fucking listen. Idiots around here are always so militant.

      The best thing to do is leave and never read it again. I mean any story worth reading is gonna show up on a real news service before it gets here and the crap, well, screw the crap. I don't want to read about some guy who made a robot dog with a gps stuck up it's ass out of legos or how the cia is training invisible ninjas to come and read your pointless assinine emails or whatever bull they manage to find around here...

      This site is actually embarrasing to read. I imagine it's about the same level as the crap you'd find on aol chatrooms or some other lame internet destination.

      Fuck this.

  51. Mod up as "Interesting"!!! (sigh) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Interesting interesting interesting.

    Interesting.

    Why is that modded up?

    Interesting.

  52. Re:This makes no sense. by __aatgod8309 · · Score: 1

    Ah, but are they anti-matter?

  53. A few kilo ton's missing ? by dirkx · · Score: 1
    All reports seem to agree on the rough amounth of explosives which went up in smoke. The numbers are not insanely far off the actual amounth of explosives available in the ships, trains and on the pier.

    Adding a 10+ kiloton nuclear device to the list would imply that there was a lot less conventional explosives present, at least a third. Which is hard to account for. Or that the conventional explosives did not give as big a bang due to burning first or other mitigational effects. Something well understood and accounted for at the time of the enquiries.

    Not a strong case.

    1. Re:A few kilo ton's missing ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the author is only claiming 1 Kilo ton, as a uranium hydride bomb (which produces very little radiation, but also a small blast).

  54. pendantry by MacAndrew · · Score: 1

    You make far too much of far too little.

    Hypocrisy is no bar to valid criticism, and to call someone a hypocrite is not a counterargument. Besides, who's being the petty scold here?

    Poor spelling is like ketchup on a tie -- not terribly important, but neither is it a good sign. If a writer didn't bother to go back and polish the little things, what else did they skimp on? Internet posts are far less formal and not worth extensive proofreading.

    Note that your second sentence is a fragment -- and, worse, is complete nonsense.

    1. Re:pendantry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However, I would think you could at least proofread the *title* of your post.

    2. Re:pendantry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're on fire and don't even realize it. Again, I point out the tragic nature of pedants.

    3. Re:pendantry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You make far too much of far too little.

      You are an admitted pedant. Isn't it obvious the above is probably beyond your ability to guage?

      Hypocrisy is no bar to valid criticism, and to call someone a hypocrite is not a counterargument. Besides, who's being the petty scold here?

      And I'll translate the rest of your post:

      "Even though I admit to being a hipocrite, my being a hypocrite does not effect the validity of my arguments. You are inferior. I am a pedant, and admit it. But that's not an issue, since pedantry is a valuable method for determining what is worth reading. Internet posts are far less formal, and thus fair game for pedantry. Again, I establish my pedantry, and refuse to concede yet another point on the basis that I don't want to."

  55. Oh, give me a break. by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 5, Informative
    On a clear day, I could probably see Port Chicago from the top of some nearby hills. I can also see the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory from said hills. The wind blows toward Port Chicago in the daytime, from it at night. Lots of radiation monitoring goes on around here. Nobody is finding residual fallout. Instead, they went nuts about a local tritium lab that might have leaked enough material to make a few watches glow. No, sorry, I don't buy it.

    Bruce

    1. Re:Oh, give me a break. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would there be residual fallout? It was 58 years ago...and it rains a lot in the bay area.

  56. Fermilab? by sheepab · · Score: 2

    Well, if the US wanted to take out Chicago (and the REST of Illinois) all they would have to do us blow up Fermilab. It would take out a sizeable chunk of the state. Good thing I live no more than 25 miles from it! :)

    1. Re:Fermilab? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where's my cluebat?

      One can only hope you were joking...

    2. Re:Fermilab? by Xzzy · · Score: 2

      That certainly explains why the security at fermilab walks around unarmed. I mean if they had explosives that large to protect that's exactly what I'd do, make sure my security team would be unable to fend off attackers!

      Nothing at fermi is classified, the closest they come is putting warning stickers up for areas that produce radiation.. which is simply a side effect of high energy physics.

  57. Hatchers' Notebook by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    has several accounts of gunpowder explosions which he (Gen. Julian S. Hatcher) investigated. One was the destruction of an U.S. Army magazine, the other was an explosion at a Navy magazine during a disposal "execise".

    The Navy accident involved several hundred tons of old gunpowder, dumped in a heap, with a "fuse" several hundred yards long. The resulting explosion left a deep crater, and was heard miles away. Apparently, the officer in charge decided to dispose of all the gunpowder at once, instead of in small batches. This was in the '30's.

    DISCLAIMER: I don't have the book with me, so I am going from memory. Any and all details may be wrong.

  58. The writing is terrible. by Wakko+Warner · · Score: 2

    The prose in this book would bore even the most strung-up of conspiracy theorists. I quit reading after a page and a half, because I thought I was proofreading my nephew's term paper.

    - A.P.

    --
    "Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
  59. Insulting by tuxlove · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think this article is insulting to those who were there. They complained about the unsafe conditions, and were severely reprimanded when they walked off the job. Those that did walk off the job lived. Those that didn't stand up to the man died. And a lot died. To claim that the accident was a planned test is an absurdity of the highest order. To say it was not an accident is tantamount to saying that the survivors were liars, and that their (admittedly incompetent) supervisors were suicidal/homicidal.

    Also, the belief that the US had the fissionable material to waste in an uncontrolled (and murderous) test is even more absurd. Especially so close to a highly populated area such as San Francisco. Port Chicago is VERY close to SF, especially in terms of a nuclear explosion. It's only something like 30 miles as the crow flies.

    This is one of the stupidest and most insulting conspiracy theories I've ever come across. It insults not only the survivors, but our intelligence as well. Right up there with the moonshot conspiracy "theory".

    1. Re:Insulting by gimple · · Score: 1

      I agree.

      A much more plausible conspiracy would be that those who protested the dangerous conditions and walked off the job caused the explosion to prove the danger.

      However, since the majority of those working the docks were Black, you could never get away with positing this theory.

    2. Re:Insulting by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 2

      I readily agree it wasn't a "nuclear test". But what about the possibility that it was a nuclear accident? As I remember, the ocean floor has a crater slightly bigger than it should for conventional explosives (by no means conclusive) and shows unusually high background radiation (again, the numbers weren't conclusive).

      I could belive that in a rush to get this weapon to the japanese front, that it was accidentally detonated. After all, these aren't modern nukes, where you have to enter long codes into the arming computer....

    3. Re:Insulting by Dun+Malg · · Score: 2
      A much more plausible conspiracy would be that those who protested the dangerous conditions and walked off the job caused the explosion to prove the danger.

      Unlikely. These were military personnel who refused to work. When you disobey orders in the military you don't just get fired, you get thrown in brig. Additionally, many of those who didn't walk off were killed. It's a rare individual who is willing to kill his coworkers (many of the probably friends) to prove a point.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    4. Re:Insulting by tuxlove · · Score: 1

      As I remember, the ocean floor has a crater slightly bigger than it should for conventional explosives (by no means conclusive) and shows unusually high background radiation (again, the numbers weren't conclusive).

      Don't know about the crater, but the radiation is easy to explain. If you dig, you find radiation. Period. The radiation below the surface of the earth is almost always higher than that on the surface. Generally not enough to be dangerous, but higher than normal.

      As for accidental detonation of a nuke, that's more than a little hard to believe. Even the most primitive of nuclear weapons has to be most deliberately and carefully prepared for explosion. To think they would traipse around in a ship with a nuclear bomb at the ready is laughable.

    5. Re:Insulting by gimple · · Score: 1

      I agree it is very unlikely, but it is more likely than a nuke test, which was my original point.

    6. Re:Insulting by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 2

      Well, while I'm sure the tests weren't the most exacting ever done, I did get the impression that they allowed for what would be normal radiation levels on the seabed, including for that particular region. Still, it IS easy to explain... any number of things that have happened since 1944 in that area could explain the increase.(The tests were done about 2 years ago, iirc) That's why it was inconclusive, being neither able to prove or disprove a nuclear detonation.

      Besides, I'm not sure I believe it either. Offering it as an alternative. Intentional detonation is so far off the fucknut straightjacket schizo scale, that I don't even consider it as anything other than poorly written fiction. Accidental detonation is somewhere closer to mildy/moderately unbelievable... not too bad when compared to the former.

      PS The crater is easy to explain too. Any big explosion, no matter the source, leaves a big crater. It's just that conservative figures for crater size for a primitive nuke, and crater size for the supposed amount of munitions on the ship is slightly different. What's the actual size? Almost exactly in the middle. Hell, even the eyewitness reports of a mushroom cloud don't help... with enough chemical explosives, you'll see that too...

    7. Re:Insulting by CaptainCap · · Score: 1

      I also do not understand the foppish tone of the original poster: "Say chaps, this might be old hat, but there's a fab site ..."

      Is this www or kkk? The whole thing is disgusting.

    8. Re:Insulting by Dun+Malg · · Score: 2
      I agree it is very unlikely, but it is more likely than a nuke test, which was my original point.

      Yeah, I'm with ya' there. With as little U-235 as they had, you KNOW they were being way too careful to accidentally let one of the bombs go off.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
  60. Germans not well on the way by harmonica · · Score: 2

    ..., and we knew that their scientists were well on the way there.

    Actually, they weren't. There was research, of course, but they never came very far on the long, complicated way of building a working bomb. First the Nazis were convinced to win the war easily by conventional means (in 1939 and 40 it looked pretty good for them). In 1942, there was a request by the military on a nuclear bomb. The scientists agreed that it could be done, but would need several more years. See this page on the Uran-Projekt if you can understand German. When the German scientists, already interned after Germany's defeat in May '45, learned about Hiroshima and Nagasaki, they refused to believe it.

    1. Re:Germans not well on the way by susano_otter · · Score: 2

      What I want to know is this: How much did the Allies know about the German bomb program? It's easy to go back and read documentation that would have been classified at the time the Allies were making their strategic decisions and say something like, "well, obviously the German bomb program was irrelevant, therefore the Allied plans were deliberately malicious and misleading". Hindsight yadda yadda yadda, but seriously--it seems much more likely that the Allies had every reason to believe they were still in a very close arms race with the Germans, and planned accordingly.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    2. Re:Germans not well on the way by plugger · · Score: 1

      Try this link, I just skimmed the article, but it seems to have the answer to your question:

      www.brown.edu/Students/Catalyst/pre2001/archive/sp ring98/articles/bomb.html

  61. um... but WHY?? by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 2

    er... I didn't RTFA either... but it just makes me wonder. Why suppose that it was a nuke - We have no shortage of desert, with nobody around, right? So why would we detonate a nuke in a populated area? A secret test, after all. Much more interesting to me is the theory that the chicago fire (and a disastrous fire hundreds of miles away that happened simultaneously) are the result of a glancing comet impact. THATs interesting.

    --
    This space available.
  62. Sure, and we all know Area 51 is full of Aliens... by Kinniken · · Score: 1

    ...please, this sort of articles is ridiculous. Especialy when submitted with "sly" remarks like "Would the US really blow up their own people for the sake of global military supremacy? Naaaah...". Oh, and I did not read the article, sue me. I can think of a lot of things to read which sound a lot more interesting.

    In particular, and dead on topic, may I suggest The Economist's article on conspiracy theories?

    --
    What do you know about World Politic? Find out in this quiz
  63. Similar like Pearl Harbor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Reading the facts about Pearl Harbor (Pear Harbor Conspiracy), I am starting to wonder whether the assumption that innocent people have been blown up is actually so far off...

  64. Re:This makes no sense. by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 2

    "Ah, but are they anti-matter?"

    Before or after the blast?

  65. Tenuous Al Quaeda link... by Snart+Barfunz · · Score: 1

    I discount the nuclear theory but the posts about the Halifax explosion have certainly clarified for me the Al Quaeda potential of oil tankers moored near large cities.

    --
    --- Yx3 = Delilah ---
  66. Ah... by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    When a disaster like this happens, I hope I'm able to say "What the hell was that?!"

  67. Re:But the silliest part of the nuke claim is . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The two atomic bombs used on Japan were of different designs. One was guaranteed to work, but the other wasn't known-good until it was tested out in New Mexico.

    The U-235 based "Little Boy" design was never tested prior to dropping it on Hiroshima. Little Boy's gun-type assembly method was a very conservative design, but very inefficient in terms of how much enriched uranium it required. Little Boy used up all of the available enriched uranium produced at Oak Ridge. The twist here is that the yield wasn't known, only estimated, so one of the other B-29s dropped pressure gauges ahead of the bomb to measure the shock wave.

    The Trinity test in June 1945 was a plutonium based bomb, using implosion to compress the plutonium into a supercritical mass. The only problem was achieving a nicely symmetrical implosion...this was the main reason for the test. Fat Man was a weaponized version of the Trinity device. No U-235 was used in its design, but natural uranium (which is over 99% U-238) was used as a tamper to reflect neutrons back into the core.

    Also, Trinity and Fat Man used up most of the available plutonium, but another Fat Man device was being prepared for use in late August 1945, assuming that the war was still on, and assuming that all of the "good" targets weren't firebombed by then.

  68. CORRECTION Re:Global military supremacy? by FearUncertaintyDoubt · · Score: 1
    According to John Kenneth Galbraith, who worked on an independent civilian commission appointed by President Roosevelt

    Sorry, I meant President Truman. That's what I get for posting at 3AM.

    Paul Nitze headed it in Japan, so there was hardly and bias in this matter.

    Should actually read "...so there was hardly any bias in this matter."

  69. Hiroshima? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People live there, they don't glow in the dark?
    The bomb did not explode on ground, but some hundreds of meters over it or something.

    1. Re:Hiroshima? by po8 · · Score: 2

      You are correct: Hiroshima and Nagasaki are no longer noticeably radioactive. The fact that the lifetime and power of a radioisotope are inversely proportional is probably a factor here as well as those cited.

      OTOH, it seems unlikely that those around at the time could fail to tell an air-burst explosion from an underground one, so simple Geiger Counter testing of ground samples should quickly settle the Port Chicago issue: some fission products are extremely long-lived, yet powerful enough to be easy to spot.

  70. A strange case of synchonicity.. by rufusdufus · · Score: 2

    While reading in the slashdot postings below about Raelean leader Rael, I hit a link to www.skepdic.com on rael, when i cycled through and found this page charles tart. It describes an anecdote by an apparently famous crackpot about a psycic experience about an explosion a woman had the night before Port Chicago blew up.

    I had never heard of Port Chicago before, and here I find it connected like Kevin Bacon to Slashdot.

  71. Next on FOX by Lord+Prox · · Score: 1

    I'm just wondering if FOX is going to turn this into a "when god attacks" or "alien autoposy" or "NASA faked the moon landings" TV spot. It sounds right up their alley.

    evil_grin
    I think I will email them about it...
    /evil_grin

    1. Re:Next on FOX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "when god attacks"

      That's the funniest thing I've seen all day. Thanks.

      (Yes, my day has been that boring, but it's funny in any case)

  72. Konqueror by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It can render PDF and PS inside the browser. But I still use Acrobat Reader 5. Anyway, I don't see the big "grrrr pdf" deal in setting up the mime type and then just opening the file, and it will end up to the reader automatically. Then just zoom to suitable size.

    But if PDF really bakes your noodle you could try setting the mime type application/pdf to go through pdftotext and display the results in less (or do some extra magic and make it a web page).

  73. Happened in the Gulf War by The+Tyro · · Score: 5, Insightful


    When the USAF was dropping Daisy Cutters during the Gulf war, a group of Brits thought the conflict had gone nuclear... easy mistake to make if you're close enough. The size of the explosion is pretty much unmatched among conventional ordinance.

    15000 lbs of blasting slurry in a big metal barrel... I can see where that might mimic a small nuclear explosion quite nicely.

    --
    Even if a man chops off your hand with a sword, you still have two nice, sharp bones to stick in his eyes.
  74. Re:This makes no sense. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I agree with this post!


    -Mode0x13

  75. More information, more succinct argument by interiot · · Score: 5, Informative
    Since no one has posted this, I'll do so. This is a teacher's aide to the Port Chciago explosion, and is a much more succinct introduction to the explosion that happened there. This is from that site:
    • Just before 10:20 p.m. on July 17th, 1944, the worst home front disaster of WWII, occurred at a Naval pier in the San Francisco Bay Area.
    • Five thousand tons of ammunition in ships being loaded by black sailors exploded, sending a blast more than 12,000 feet into the sky.

      The explosion destroyed the pier, a train, and both ships, instantly killing everyone aboard (some 320 men).

    That same site also lists several nuclear-conspiracy pages about Port Chicago, and almost all of them are more succinct than the one listed in the story. :)

    This page in particular is short, and has a quick list of bullet points that try to show that Port Chicago was nuclear. They may all be obviously BS (to someone more versed in its history...?), but they're not simply "the explosion was so big, it HAD to be nuclear!" as others has suggested.

    And lastly, when visiting this Amazon.com page for a Port Chicago book, am I the only one who sees "Customers who wear clothes also shop for: Clean Underwear"?? Maybe I'm delerious from being up in the middle of the night.

  76. the real truth is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The real truth is that this document is deliberate FUD planted by the CIA to overshadow the *real* story, which was the crash landing of an ET spacecraft from which we obtained the technology to build the first atomic bomb.

    Open your eyes people!!!!!

  77. Philadelphia Experiment is a reality by Xenomorpheus · · Score: 1

    it was an attempt to make a ship invisible to radar,, had some very interesting side effects,, like making it invisible

    1. Re:Philadelphia Experiment is a reality by RKloti · · Score: 1

      Please show some evidence to demonstrate your claim. I don't think the Philidelphia Experiment ever occured, at least not in the form described by eyewitnesses.

    2. Re:Philadelphia Experiment is a reality by Arcturax · · Score: 2

      Do you have reliable resources to back up that?

      You know, I've tried the local library and have found very few books on the subject and most of them full of speculation.

      Had such effects been observed, you know some nut would have had to have tried to reproduced it in his basement and had people witness his house vanishing or something. I mean, if people will build breeder reactors in their backyard and fusion reactors in their basement, then surely someone somewhere has tried to reproduce the Philadelphia experiment as its portrayed in movies and popular legend.

      --

      --Won't that be grand? Computers and the programs will start thinking and the people will stop. - Dr. Walter Gibbs
    3. Re:Philadelphia Experiment is a reality by Alien+Being · · Score: 2

      "Please show some evidence"

      Here! Can you see it? Well, that's because it's invisible.

    4. Re:Philadelphia Experiment is a reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God you fucking moron. I can't believe people like you still exist.

      If you liked the Philadelphia Experiment story so much, there's a few other ones I suggest you read. Humpty Dumpty, that's a good one..has kind of a sad ending. Pick up a copy of the Roman Catholic Bible too, while you're at it. Bit of a hefty read, and the ending was predictable, but I'm sure it'd be your cup of tea.

  78. small correction: picric acid by enkidu · · Score: 2
    Small correction. Picric acid IS an explosive, used in bombs and artillery shells mixed with parraffin to produce a stable effective mixture. picric acid by itself is very reactive and explosive. From a source:

    Picric acid is a yellow crystalline, high explosive bursting charge. It is initiated by lead azide or mercury fulminate. Picric acid has the same effectiveness as TNT. ... Picric acid in contact with lead produces lead picrate, a sensitive and violent explosive.

    The idea of 2300 tons of this stuff on any one ship give me the willies. If it all went up at once, which by the descriptions it did, it would be the equivalent of a modern day medium sized tactical nuke.

    Good examples BTW. Looks like just another crackpot theory filtering through the memepool. Nothing to see here folks, move along.

    EnkiduEOT

    --

    There is no trap so deadly as the trap you set for yourself
    -Raymond Chandler, The Long Goodbye
    1. Re:small correction: picric acid by arivanov · · Score: 3, Insightful
      The idea of 2300 tons of this stuff on any one ship give me the willies. If it all went up at once, which by the descriptions it did, it would be the equivalent of a modern day medium sized tactical nuke.

      That is not what should give you willies about this incident.

      What should give you willies is that someone's miltary (british to be exact) has had no doubts about bring a ship with this cargo manifest into the middle of a city instead of unloading it offshore.

      And methinks that there is a mistake in the reference. It was not benzol. It was nitrobenzol if I recall correctly. Which is also an explosive. All 35 tons of it. In barrels on the deck. They are actually what caught fire after the other ship (forgot the name) collided with the MonBlan. In other words there was not a single item of cargo on the manifest that was not explosive.

      And the most interesting of it all. The cretinous idiot in the military who OKed the manifest for loading as well as the cretinous idiot who OKed bringing the ship into harbour were not ever considered at fault. The criminal procedings concentrated on the captain of the ship (who survived the incident by running like hell the moment it went on fire).

      Back on the topic. It is possible that it was not a nuke in Chicago. Actually most likely that it was not. But knowing the military it might as well have been. They would have liked it to be. Good test. And good riddance to some pesky loading workers and privates ya know...

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    2. Re:small correction: picric acid by enkidu · · Score: 4, Insightful
      And methinks that there is a mistake in the reference. It was not benzol. It was nitrobenzol if I recall correctly. Which is also an explosive. All 35 tons of it. In barrels on the deck. They are actually what caught fire after the other ship (forgot the name) collided with the MonBlan. In other words there was not a single item of cargo on the manifest that was not explosive.

      And the most interesting of it all. The cretinous idiot in the military who OKed the manifest for loading as well as the cretinous idiot who OKed bringing the ship into harbour were not ever considered at fault. The criminal procedings concentrated on the captain of the ship (who survived the incident by running like hell the moment it went on fire).

      I kinda doubt if it was nitrobenzol (german for nitrobenzene) rather than benzene. (mono) nitrobenzene is volatile and VERY poisonous and can kill by being absorbed through the skin. It's sometimes used as a component of some explosives, but usually as a raw material of the preparation of other organic compounds. There would be practically no point in shipping it across the ocean. It may have been trinitrobenzene (or TNB) but then it would have been called TNB. Anyway, 35 tons of TNB is peanuts compared to 2300 tons of picric acid. In one ship. [shudder] On fire. [cringe] If the captain had had any idea of the explosive force on that ship, he would have steered her out of port under full power and then abandoned ship. He probably just thought that the ship and ajacent ships would get blown up, not the whole f'ing city.

      Your points regarding the criminal incompetence of the persons in charge of shipping are spot on. They should have been taken out, had 2 pounds each of picric acid wrapped around various points of their bodies and had them detonated at suitably random amounts of time.

      EnkiduEOT

      --

      There is no trap so deadly as the trap you set for yourself
      -Raymond Chandler, The Long Goodbye
  79. If i may step in on the grammar discussion... by lvdrproject · · Score: 2
    From dictionary.com:

    In fact, sentences beginning with because are quite common in written English. Another rule states that one should not use a clause beginning with because as the subject of a sentence, as in Just because he thinks it a good idea doesn't mean it's a good idea. This construction is perfectly acceptable, but it carries a colloquial flavor and may best be reserved for informal situations.

    If you have been paying attention for the last, i don't know, 30 years, you would know that using conjunctions to start a sentence is no longer considered incorrect. Even if you disagree, posting to a forum (such as Slashdot) is, usually, a form of dialogue. Dialogue does not require perfect grammar. Speaking in such a manner is often redundant, condescending, and/or time-consuming. English also holds the distinction of maintaining ridiculous (i.e. stupid and pointless) rules of grammar, capitalisation, and spelling. As such, many, including myself, take it upon themselves to slightly correct the syntax of the language.

    I guess... to put it into one "word"....

    STFU.

  80. Largest WWII conventional explosion... by cruachan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Wasn't in Port Chicago at all. Large explosions are quite common during war time, but don't get publicity at the time for obvious reasons. I'd never heard of the Port Chicago one before this post but it seems nothing unusual.

    In fact the biggest single conventional explosion of the second world war happened less than 10 miles from where I grew up in Burton-on-Trent, England. Only the Hirmoshima, Nagasaki and New Mexico tests were larger. It was 'common knowlege' at the time locally, and cracks in ceilings were regularly pointed out to me as a kid as having been caused by 'the dump blowing up', but few people outside the area have ever heard of it.

    The Fauld dump exploded in November 1944 taking 4,000 tons of bombs with it. There's good pages here (http://www.carolyn.topmum.net/tutbury/fauld/fauld crater.htm) and here (http://www.healeyhero.fsnet.co.uk/rescue/blew_up1 .htm). I remember seeing the crater being used as a motor cycling scrambling route in the late 1970's. The size was impressive to say the least.

    Theres's also a couple of earlier large naval explosion that may be of interest as similar forgotten tragedies. Bothe happened in Sheerness harbour in WWI - the HMS Bulwark and later the Princess Irene. The BBC did an program on these recently - http://www.bbc.co.uk/education/beyond/factsheets/m akhist/makhist6_prog8b.shtml

    1. Re:Largest WWII conventional explosion... by Juggle · · Score: 1

      So do you guys use a different kind of ton (or should I say tonne) over there? The Port Chicago explosion was explained to be at least 5,000 tons of bombs.

      Oh uh...Maybe the first nuke was really in Fauld and not Port Chicago after all that's why 4,000 tons in england was a larger explosion than 5,000 tons in the states :)

      --
      --- Juggle juggle@hitesman.com
  81. HEY IDIOT by TracerJPN_USMC · · Score: 1

    a nuetron bomb is HIGH radiation, SMALL explosion. yah know, kill all the peoples and leave the buildings and oil fields intact for us to take over. ooh rah!

    --
    magnanomous.
    1. Re:HEY IDIOT by ender81b · · Score: 1

      Indeed. I was just pointing out that maybe a similar process occured. And a nuetron bomb has high initial radiation that dissipates quickly from what I understand so they would not have necassarily picked it up. Shrug it was just a thought.

  82. nuclear bomb in 1944 by schrottie · · Score: 2, Informative

    By 1944, all labs in the world together had produced less than one percent of enriched fissile material needed to build one single bomb. For this reason alone there can not have been a nuclear exposion before, say, may '45

    1. Re:nuclear bomb in 1944 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simply untrue. On what do you base this statement?

  83. It's a hoax, folks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They point it out on their own site! Congrats, GoneGaryT for this excellent troll! You made it to the Slashdot front page.

  84. umm ... by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 2

    Would the US really blow up their own people for the sake of global military supremacy? Naaaah...

    I hate to contaminate your anti-Americanism with some reality, Michael, but in 1944 the people who were desiring global military supremacy were German and Japanese.

    1. Re:umm ... by reflector · · Score: 2


      yes, of course. it's always those other guys that are evil. we, here in america, are all saints, and are incapable of such mass murder.

    2. Re:umm ... by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 2

      are incapable of such mass murder.

      We're one of the oldest countries in the world, and so far we haven't murdered anybody on the scale that various other countries have.
      -russ

      --
      Don't piss off The Angry Economist
    3. Re:umm ... by reflector · · Score: 1

      We're one of the oldest countries in the world,

      what world would that be? america is quite young.

      so far we haven't murdered anybody on the scale that various other countries have.

      you're right. for the most part, we've murdered people on a smaller scale.

  85. Matter - Energy conversion by Blancmange · · Score: 2, Informative
    Zemran:
    You mean like in Hiroshima? Hiroshima is a city again with lots of people living there and little radiation. You get more radiation on holiday in Cornwall. A nuclear bomb is the conversion of matter to energy and unlike an accident at a nuclear power plant, does not lead to lots of long term residual radiation. Einstins theory E=mc2...

    Only one gram of matter was converted to energy when the Hiroshima A-bomb exploded. Its charge was was about the critical mass of uranium (about 50-odd kilograms)

    That's not to say the A-bomb had a yeild of only 0.002% of its mass, though.

    I'm no expert on atomic physics, but I'd say the mass lost is somewhat like teensy bit of mass lost when two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom combine to form a H2O molecule plus some extra heat energy, except that for a fission reaction, some thingymajig is happening with nuclear particles rather than with 'bond energy'.

    --
    Blancmange
  86. Canadian Conspiracy by mumblestheclown · · Score: 5, Funny
    I have a more logical answer. Blame Canada. Could this all be coincidence?

    Consider the four major disasters:

    • SS Fort Stikine, the ship that blew up in Bombay, was Canadian built.
    • USS Maine - Maine borders Canada. Was it a message to the US from our northern "friends?"
    • Port Chicago - easy access by Canadian saboteurs with limpets, also sends that same "message"
    • Halifax - need I say more?
    Those dastardly canadians like to blow up ships. Please stay tuned for my 352 page pdf.
    1. Re:Canadian Conspiracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You think we would go around exploding ships and harbours?
      Pffffttt....

      We'd use the giant mutant beavers with lasers on their heads instead.
      C'mon...

    2. Re:Canadian Conspiracy by gimple · · Score: 1

      Shouldn't it be, "...with fricking lasers on their heads."

    3. Re:Canadian Conspiracy by Idarubicin · · Score: 2
      To be fair, the ship that exploded in Halifax harbour was actually a French vessel. Can we blame France, too?

      Please?

      --
      ~Idarubicin
    4. Re:Canadian Conspiracy by Darth_brooks · · Score: 2

      Ahhh my young friend, it's all part of the grand Canadian conspiracy. Part of their thinly veiled attempts to make us believe that they too hate the French. Blowing up a french ship, the prominant use of french on billboards, Quebec. It's all a clever ruse.

      --
      There are some people that if they don't know, you can't tell 'em.
    5. Re:Canadian Conspiracy by peterjm · · Score: 2

      you're stupid. port chicago is in San Francisco.

    6. Re:Canadian Conspiracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      you're stupid.

      You lack both a sense of humour and even the most elementary social graces. Charming.

    7. Re:Canadian Conspiracy by peterjm · · Score: 1

      no, what I lack is concern for karma whores who tell stupid jokes and reply anonymously.

      I could call you stupid in a much nicer tone of voice if you'd like.

  87. A famous train munitions explosion by cathyy · · Score: 1

    happened in Roseville, Ca in 1973, with that same mushroom cloud. Read about it here. I'm with the guys who need the residual radiation to even consider a nuclear disaster.

    1. Re:A famous train munitions explosion by chimpo13 · · Score: 1


      That one in RosEVILle was pretty good. Great big boom, and no one killed.

      They still find bombs from that and detonate them where they find them. Me and a friend went to the last one (98 I think), snuck past the safety line (but still plenty far back), and watched 'em go off. It was pretty neat seeing bombs that big go off. Much better than the bombs we'd make in high school with match heads.

      You'd see the flash of light and a second later hear the explosion.

      And it fits into the earliest memory thing. I turned 3 a month before and I remember riding out with my dad to evacuate my grandmother. Her house was fubared -- all the windows were busted.

  88. OMG! What a huge nuclear explosion! by Niscenus · · Score: 1

    NOT!

    I don't know what some people smoke, but I want some. One month BEFORE successful nuclear testing, a five megaton explosion occurs...when only a one megaton explosion drops down the next year on Hiroshima? Are we NOT all here?

    Let's go through the manifest of explosions, available at the PC website:

    "Involved in the explosion was a total of approximately 5080 tons of ammunition and high explosives...MK7 Incendiary Bombs in #1 Hold, MK47 Depth Bombs (Torpex loaded) in #2 Hold, Tail Vanes in #3 Hold, MK4 Fragmentation Bombs in #4 Hold, and 40mm in #5 Hold."

    I'm a very pro-conspiracy theory person (as some readers may know), and not even I could follow through on this!

    --
    "Yeah...it was the numbers that were irrational, not the murderous cult of vegetarians...." -- Hippasus of Metapontum
  89. Finally! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...a place where I can send my articles about additives being placed in foods meant for the Black market segment. Hey, how about these articles I have about the black military helicopters? Can I send those too?

  90. do not follow that link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just a heads up. Do NOT follow the above link, especially if you are eating or have a long memory. Just believe me, following that link ruined my morning.

  91. Mini-nukes are harder to build by KjetilK · · Score: 2
    Well, I didn't RTFA, but one thing struck me with this scenario: One of the reasons why the Hiroshima bomb was 12-kilotons is that that was the easiest to build. With that kind of explosion, you can make a simple uranium cannon, you get to the critical mass quite easily, but on the other hand, you keep the amount of weapon-grade uranium to the minimum. A 12-kiloton bomb is about the easiest you can make.

    5-kiloton or smaller bombs are a lot harder to build. In fact, they are talking about it now, because a bunch of rather moronic US politicians want to use nukes as regular battlefield weapons. They are referred to as mini-nukes.

    If this explosion was about 2-5 kilotons, I find it hard to believe it was a nuke. That's simply too small.

    --
    Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
    1. Re:Mini-nukes are harder to build by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We (the US) had nuclear-armed air-to-air missiles back in the late 50s that were about 1.5-2.5 kilotons. Over 1000 of them were reportedly produced between 1957 and 1963. Do a little search on "MB-1 Genie" to find more info.

  92. Oh great...another synopsis for a bad movie by Apostata · · Score: 2

    Just wait until Hollywood get their hands on this. You should know better, Slashdot!!

    Can't wait to see the monacled German doctor who secretly heads-up the nuclear program.

    "I vudent vurry about ze people in Chicago...de test is all dat matterz!"

    (yes, that isn't how Germans pronounce English, however Hollywood has convinced itself that Germans do pronounce English exactly like the Dutch)

    --

    This wasn't just plain terrible, this was fancy terrible. This was terrible with raisins in it. - Dorothy Parker
    1. Re:Oh great...another synopsis for a bad movie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eh no, the Dutch don't pronounce English like that at all.

      It would be more like "aay wood-unt wûrrie about de pee-pol in sjikago..."

      Oh well, Dutch is really just a german dialect anyway.

  93. Did you know....? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did you know that the US tested biological weapons on its own unaware citizens without them knowing (http://www.nbc-med.org/SiteContent/HomePage/Whats New/MedAspects/contents.html(don't remember where it was))? That people even died? So much for Saddam Hussein using biological weapons on his people. Going Nuclear is not so far from that.

  94. Re:If you step in it... by MacAndrew · · Score: 1

    I, too, wish people would read for content rather than details and distractions. All too often the meaning of what they're reading floats on by. Here, for example.

    When I remarked, "Note that your second sentence is a fragment -- and, worse, is complete nonsense," the first part was consciously snide, the second the point. See, it's mocking irony, in response to a patronizing post by a wannabe expert. You're now doing the same by assuming I'm unfamiliar with modern usage and require tedious correction on a tedious point.

    Got it? No, you didn't, because you fell victim to pendantry.

  95. Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by dpilot · · Score: 2

    Nope, we're still orders of magnitude off, even for the piddling little Hiroshima bomb. 15,000 lbs is just 7.5 tons, almost 3 orders of magnitude off of the 10 kiloton estimate in the parent post. Even if blasting slurry is more powerful than TNT, I suspect we're still 2 or more orders of magnitude between a Daisy Cutter and a nuke.

    IMHO the Nuke is kind of like Space... It's BIG, so BIG that the ordinary human mind just doesn't take it in. Unfortunately the world seems to be losing its fear of nuclear weapons - I guess the memory of Hiroshima and Nagasaki are fading. I suspect someone is going to have to lose another city to re-vaccinate the human race with proper fear of nuclear weapons.

    Also IMHO, as bad as Hiroshima and Nagasaki were, in the larger view of history, it may be a good thing that nuclear weapons were used in war when only one side had them, and there was no chance of an escalation. No head of state could have left such a potent weapon unused for so long had it not be demonstrated to be that terrible.

    --
    The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    1. Re:Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      there was no chance of an escalation

      Escalation? Don't you mean retaliation? There are not many things to escalate to once nuclear weapons have been used.

    2. Re:Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by crawling_chaos · · Score: 2
      Uh, no. There were no dynanometers at the Port Chicago explosion, so we are relying on perceived damage. If that is the only measure we are allowed to use, then the Nagasaki bomb would be considered a weaker bomb than the Hiroshima one. Tall Boy did considerably more damage than Fat Man, despite the fact that Fat Man had 50% more yield.

      Fuel-air explosions are also extremely powerful. Due to the way that the fireball forms, they are also incredibly destructive for their nominal explosive yield. It would not be surprising to find a fast analysis mistaking a fuel-air detontation for a low-yield nuke, particularly if the observation was made from orbit.

      As an example of what a small fuel-air explosion can do, see if you can find a reference to the loss of the carrier Taiho during the Battle of the Phillipine Sea. It was lost to fuel-air explosion triggered by poor damage control. I also remember an account of a liquid propane traincar derailment someplace in the South that essentially wiped a town off the map, a la Hiroshima. Unfortunately, I don't remember enough detail to find it in Google. I used it an example in a high school debate on nuclear power safety many moons ago.

      --
      You can only drink 30 or 40 glasses of beer a day, no matter how rich you are.
      -- Colonel Adolphus Busch
    3. Re:Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by afidel · · Score: 2

      They may have thought is was a Davy Crocket sized weapon, these shoulder launched nukes have yields in the 10-20 ton range, while the BLU-82 12,600lb fuel-air bomb has an effective tnt rating of 30 tons. The overpressure from these large fuel-air weapons is similar in effect to nuclear explosions so it is an easy mistake to make. Also it was during operation dessert storm that the troops saw the BLU-82 detonate and so the chances of a nuclear exchange were quite a bit higher than during any other semi-modern conflict.

      The Air Force dropped 11 daisy cutters in the Gulf Conflict, and British SAS troops who saw one of the explosions from miles away thought it was a tactical nuclear weapon. Indeed, there is no practical difference between nuclear and thermobaric weapons.
      from Here
      Although I think his conclusions are wrong (for instance there is a large difference between the aftereffects of nuclear devices and conventional explosives) he seems to be well researched.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    4. Re:Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by Dun+Malg · · Score: 4, Funny
      ...during operation dessert storm ...

      mmmmm.....dessert storm. The rain of custard pies made it all worthwhile.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    5. Re:Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BLU-82 is NOT a Fuel-Air Explosive. It is just one big-ass 15,000 lb bomb, dragged out of a C-130 cargo plane on a pallet.

      If you got the 12,600 lb of explosive content from the FAS website, you should have also read in the big letters that the BLU-82 is not a FAE.

    6. Re:Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by Alsee · · Score: 2

      IMHO the Nuke is kind of like Space... It's BIG, so BIG that the ordinary human mind just doesn't take it in.

      Chuckle. "Big" is extremely relative :)
      You just reminded me of a recent post I made to someone explaining exactly how unimaginably SMALL nukes were LOL.

      They can vaporize a few buildings or flatten a few square miles, but they are totally useless for melting large volumes of rock.

      He was toying with the idea of using nukes to melt the core of mars (for terrafoming). I ran the math, if you use the earth's entire stockpile of nukes (about 5 gigatons yeild) you would merely warm up a 50 mile cube of rock by 1 degree F (or a 45 Km cube by 1 degree C.) ONE whopping degree! LOL

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    7. Re:Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tall Boy did considerably more damage than Fat Man

      It was Little Boy, you drunken sod! :-P

    8. Re:Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      They may have thought is was a Davy Crocket sized weapon, these shoulder launched nukes have yields in the....

      Shoulder-launched nukes???!?!

      In say 50 or 100 years, garage terrorists will probably have such technology. The top military technology always trickles down or gets reinvented by those lower on the totem pole eventually. Today's Speak-And-Spell has more computing power than they had to design H-bombs.

      Scotty, beam me outta here now!

    9. Re:Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Three's Company reruns.

    10. Re:Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by AndroidCat · · Score: 2

      Ever tried to kick out a sawdust fire? Woohoo, you only make that mistake once! (Your life or your eyebrows, pick at least one.)

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    11. Re:Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by Cramer · · Score: 1

      Heh. Who needs nukes when you have a 1000 gallons of gasoline? If you can find footage of a true (non-hollywood "Outbreak") fuel-air explosion, they are very impressive. And in many respects, they are more destructive than nukes.

    12. Re:Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by LardLadPA · · Score: 1

      http://www.bismarck-class.dk/tirpitz/miscellaneous /tallboy/tallboy.html Tall Boy was a British 11,000lb conventional bomb, used to sink the German battleship Tirpitz. The British also used Grand Slam, a 22,000lber, the largest conventional bomb used in WWII.

    13. Re:Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by dpilot · · Score: 2

      My cousin had a different way of putting it. For sheer earthmoving power, he once read that we had enough nukes to physically remove the island of Madagascar. (or whatever they call that big island East of Africa, these days.)

      --
      The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    14. Re:Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by afidel · · Score: 2

      Since the Davy Crocket was first produced in 1956, nearly 50 years ago and yet not one of the ~1200 produced is unaccounted for and they are all destoryed no one is going to get their hands on a physical device. As far as designing them goes it is doubtfull that anyone would bother with it as the yield is fairly low and it is much harder to design a small weapon then a large one. The most likely senario is someone buying enough plutonium to build a ~20Kton weapon which would be about the size of a washer or dryer.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    15. Re:Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by elfkicker · · Score: 2

      By no means an expert, but the Daisy Cutter does have an effective blast up to 3 miles from what I've read. Hiroshima's damage was a simialar radius. Anything that big could easily be confused for a tactical nuke.

      I completely with your second and last paragraphs.

    16. Re:Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, compared to space, big is in fact extremely tiny.

    17. Re:Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I once read that the moon landings were faked by Nasa, and that the Port Chicago explosion was actually a nuclear test.

      Oh wait...

    18. Re:Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, bullshit. A properly deployed nuke easily beats the living crap out of a properly deployed fuel-air cloud. With H bombs, you're talking multi warhead, fast deployment, excellent and optimized blast radius and height of deployemnt, and can take out an area from Philadelphia to DC in a flash.

      You don't have to worry about fuqin weather conditions. It IS the weather condition.

      I know they call fuel-air explosions and clouds, esp. the aluminum derived variety, a la the "poor man's atom bomb", impressive, but it's no where near the totallity of nukes.

      1000 gallons of gasoline? Bah. Maybe take out a good portion of a city. If the wind behaves.

    19. Re:Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right, you are by no means an expert.

      The Daisy Cutter doesn't have an "effective blast" up to 3 miles.

      Idiots abound.

      No wonder people's impression of nukes is so skewed.

    20. Re:Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by Fishstick · · Score: 1

      >The most likely senario is someone buying enough plutonium to build a ~20Kton weapon which would be about the size of a washer or dryer.

      or a pop machine?

      --

      There is much cruelty in the universe, John.
      Yeah, we seem to have the tour map.

    21. Re:Daisy Cutters ... 15000 lbs of blasting slurry by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Space? How about a single cubic mile of dirt? A 40 kiloton nuke is only enough to warm it by 1 degree.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  96. Re:pe[n]dantry by MacAndrew · · Score: 1

    Good one! :) But you see, my point was to criticize a critic, not be a pedant or set an example. And I was successful, on the second half anyway.

  97. Conspiracy theorists who can't stomach the truth! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Do you feel the same about links that tell you that yes, Lee Harvey Oswald did kill JFK all by himself. Do you feel the same about links that tell you that Roswell was actually a weatherballoon, and about links that tell you that yes, we did land on the moon?

    Moron!

  98. Wow, a conspiracy theorist with mod points... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Long live metamoderation!

    1. Re:Wow, a conspiracy theorist with mod points... by plugger · · Score: 1

      Nope, original moderation was reasonable. Post contains a goatse.cx link.

  99. Unclear on the PDF concept, are we? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Man, one chapter at a time is WAY too much of an investment of time and effort. If someone wants to break this down into something reasonable, like one file for every two pages (preferably one file = one page), I'll be happy to look it over.

    (Here it is, the 21st century, the greatest democratization of the written word in history is in the house, and street-corner ding-a-lings STILL manage to discredit themselves with their presentation. Wow!)

  100. MOD PARENT UP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Very interesting link. Should put all discussions about whether this is real or not to a stop.

  101. MOD PARENT UP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Looks like the Slashdot editors swallowed the hoax hook, line and sinker! <grin>

  102. Re:If you step in it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Concede, you fool.

  103. A version with pictures! by FourDegreez · · Score: 1

    Trinity Info, this one with the pics not annoyingly removed.

  104. Definitely not a nuclear explosion by RayChuang · · Score: 2

    I am sure that the infamous Port Chicago blast was not caused by a nuclear explosion.

    I mean, when investigators looked at the blast, there were NO signs of a nuclear explosion at ground level: a circular yawning crater, people blinded by the initial nuclear fireball, and definitely NO strong background radiation at the center of the explosion. A ground-level nuclear explosion of even a low-yield device would throw up a lot of highly-radioactive fallout particles, but there wasn't any downwind from Port Chicago, so....

    This conspiracy crowd definitely needs to be passed tinfoil hats, that's to be sure.

    --
    Raymond in Mountain View, CA
    1. Re:Definitely not a nuclear explosion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I mean, when investigators looked at the blast, there were NO signs of a nuclear explosion at ground level: a circular yawning crater, people blinded by the initial nuclear fireball, and definitely NO strong background radiation at the center of the explosion. A ground-level nuclear explosion of even a low-yield device would throw up a lot of highly-radioactive fallout particles, but there wasn't any downwind from Port Chicago, so...."

      Why would investigators look for radiation before anyone knew of the existance of nuclear bombs? As to the crater, it existed, and exists, under the water in the harbor. And finally, not all nuclear bombs produce "highly-radioactive fallout particles". Some produce very little radiation, with a half-life that has it dispersed in under 6 days. In the article referenced, the author does account for the current lack of radiation, and posits exactly what type of nuclear bomb it was, and how it exploded, in detail. Without reading any of this, you use some partially accurate yet incomplete general knolwedge about what you imagine a nuclear blast ought to look like, and then laught him off without reading the article. Perhaps this is why slashdot posts have such a high reputation for accuracy.

  105. Re:It's a deliberate hoax! by gughunter · · Score: 1

    Warning: goatse.cx link.

  106. It's all A Conspiracy! (TM, Pat. Pending) by watchful.babbler · · Score: 1
    It's interesting to note that the writer, Peter Vogel (not, I think, the XML guru), bases his theory around a document he bought for $0.25 at a rummage sale. Personally, I distrust serendipity as the basis of a research project.

    Also probative is that Vogel wrote up his initial theory in The Black Scholar, (emphasis theirs) a journal that is famous for some of its early black power works, and has in more recent times relegated itself to cheerleading for Iraq, Hamas, Cuba, and domestic criminal organizations like MOVE.

    I expect that we'll see a lot more of this kind of conspiracymongering over the next few years. Secrecy breeds mistrust, and the current Administration cherishes its secrecy indeed.

    --
    "Freedom is kind of a hobby with me, and I have disposable income that I'll spend to find out how to get people more."
  107. tactical nukes by dpilot · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm obviously unfamiliar with tactical nukes, and had no idea that there was stuff with yields that low.

    The existence of such low-yield nukes makes the whole issue even more frightening. As long as the yields were up in the kiloton-and-higher range, nukes were a boolean issue. You nuke or you don't nuke, and there's no in-between.

    Low-yield tactical nukes and well as high-yield conventional weapons blur the line. Once you cross that line, and now it may be hard to know exactly when that happened, then it may be "easier" to simply escalate the yield than it would have been to begin with a old-fashioned tens-of-kilotons nuclear device.

    --
    The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    1. Re:tactical nukes by mesocyclone · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Tactical nukes indeed do get down to about that size. Some of them are "dial-a-yield."

      Tactical nukes were intended for all sorts of uses. For example, the anti-aircraft batteries around the US during the early cold war had nuclear warheads in the missiles. The Navy had nuclear warheads in the anti-aircraft missiles on almost all of their combat ships. I was an aircrewman in a P-3 Orion (submarine hunter) and we carried nuclear depth charges. Submarines carried nuclear torpedos.

      I believe the only reason that tactical nukes are not used in the NMD anti-missile systems is political. Although there is one other possibility (exo-atmospheric burst caused EMP), the advantages of nuclear warheads for anti-ballistic missile defense seem immense - the problems of hitting the target go away - you just need to get close. (I would love to hear from anyone who *knows* why these difficult "hit-to-kill" vehicles are being used instead of nukes, if it is not political).

      As far as conventional explosives go... I once watched a demonstration (and test) at Sandia Labs (Albuquerque, NM - where they did most nuclear weapons design). They set off around 1 kiloton equivalent of high explosive a few miles from where we were watching at an Armed Forces Day demonstration. It certainly produced a very nice mushroom cloud and a heck of a bang!

      As a kid, I set off a small explosive in the back yard (my parents were not amused). It was about an ounce of Sodium Chlorate mixed with Sugar and a little Sulfur, with an electrical detonator (single strand of wire shorting an extension cord). I also made a very small, but distinct, mushroom cloud :-)

      For more info on nukes, see This Site.

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

    2. Re:tactical nukes by MacAndrew · · Score: 2

      Yeah, I was surprised at the low-yield nukes, too, used in nuclear artillery and, my favorite, the nuclear land mine (intended to destroy tunnels, not to be run over). The Brookings Institute did a recent study of the total cost of the nuclear weapons program from Manhattan to now (~$5+ trillion?) and details the number and types of weapons and tests at different times. Look for it on their site.

      One reason for the baby nukes suggested was the Army's desire for a piece of the nuclear pie; the armed services can be very competitive. The Army can't use the big yields very well, so little weapons were developed less than one kiloton. I think they backed off a while ago. Ground nukes also offered a risk of escalation in the face of advancing troops, when a use-it-or-lose-it situation could appear. Similar criticisms were made of forward placement of the Pershing missile in Western Europe IIRC.

  108. That's not the only ammunition ship to blow up by RNLockwood · · Score: 1

    The USS Mt. Hood (AE 11) blew up in November of 1944 with great loss of life to her crew (all aboard will killed) and the crew of surrounding ships. Eyewitness accounts describe a fireball that rose to 7,000 feet.

    I served on an ammunition ship home ported at Port Chicago in 1962-63 and talked to two survivors of the explosion. One was in the wheelhouse of a ship in the channel and the other in a car driving away from the docks. Neither thought that it was a nuclear explosion and neither suffered radiation or thermal burns that might be expected.

    In the complete absence of the fingerprints of a nuclear detonation such as residual radiation, really intense heat, and a really intense shockwave coupled with survivors who were only a few hundred meters away who didn't have radiation burns, etc. it's a no-brainer to conclude there is nothing to the book.

    Also, if a device were being tested why would they deliberately confound the effects of the device with the other explosives present?

    --
    Nate
  109. Re:OMG! What a huge nuclear explosion! by swordgeek · · Score: 2

    Good thing you put that disclaimer in there.

    Port Chicago was a 5 KILOton explosion. Hiroshima was about a 12 kiloton explosion. Neither were anywhere near a megaton, and Hiroshima _was_ bigger than Port Chicago.

    Which isn't to say that the conspiracy has even a slight bit of validity.

    --

    "People who do stupid things with hazardous materials often die." -- Jim Davidson on alt.folklore.urban
  110. Some first person accounts by Jeff+Fohl · · Score: 1

    The excellent radio show, This American Life has an episode which features the Port Chicago disaster. The story involves the interview of five survivors of the blast. You can hear the Real Audio recording of the broadcast here.

  111. True or not... by buysse · · Score: 2

    The guy who wrote this is now officially nominated to join the Order of the Tinfoil Hat.

    --
    -30-
  112. Movie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mutiny, a movie based on the accident from 1999.

    http://www.apolloguide.com/mov_revtemp.asp?CId=2 07 0

    -t

  113. Parent contains Goatse.cx link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Once again I've had my retinas burned by that disgusting picture. Here's what I put in my junkbuster blockfile to kill the shorl.com bullshit: /*.*shorl

  114. Yeah, what about residual cancer? by zrk · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Surely the survivors of the blast should have a cancer rate much higher than the normal population!

    Where are those statistics???

    1. Re:Yeah, what about residual cancer? by azimir · · Score: 2

      I'm 75% sure they may have been lost, not taken or doctored.

      This statistic has a margin of error +/- 50% depending on how I feel at any given time.

    2. Re:Yeah, what about residual cancer? by ikluft · · Score: 2

      We in the Bay Area had always assumed that northern Contra Costa County's infamously high cancer rates were entirely because of the oil refineries in that area. But to answer your question, I'll refer you to a Google search and let you sift through all the references...

  115. niggers ruin everything. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First they screw up the south, then this shipment of explosives...

    Most recently, the Challenger incident ("Hey, move over, the nigger wants to drive")--THIS is actually on the classified excerpts of the challenger audio tapes just before the explosion!

    Oh the humanity...

  116. Trying to read the pdf... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My GOD! I was hoping for some kind of explanation as to what this disaster was about in the first chapter...nothing too involved...just SOMETHING! Instead I was treated to a rather dry introduction to Port Chicago--location, population, history. What a PAGE TURNER that was!

    So, taking a recommendation to skip ahead to chapter 8 for the detailed account, I'm treated to...a DETAILED account. CHRIST! ANSI draft documents aren't this dull!

    It looks like this guy did some serious research. He needs to go back and learn some presentation skills!

  117. Re:It's a deliberate hoax! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Greatest. Troll. Ever.

    Yes, that was a troll, but Good Lord, the creativity the author used to craft it was just magnificent. Bravo, sir, bravo!

  118. biologics by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Worse in my mind.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  119. Drivel Just To Boost Ad Revenue by reallocate · · Score: 2

    Thanks, Michael. That'll certainly pump up the ad impressions today. Maybe a link to a flat earth site can be next?

    --
    -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
  120. No F)(*( Ordinance Involved. by nweaver · · Score: 2

    There was no "Ordinance" involved. The two ships (there were two explosions) were carrying Ammonium Nitrate fertilizer.

    Although it is true that Ammonium Nitrate + Fuel Oil was used for the Oaklahoma City bombing, Ammonium Nitrate is not military ordinance.

    --
    Test your net with Netalyzr
  121. OOPS, got confused... by nweaver · · Score: 2

    Ammonium Nitrate was Texas City, not port Chicago.

    --
    Test your net with Netalyzr
  122. I know someone who was there by azpenguin · · Score: 1

    My grandfather was actually stationed very near there during WWII, and he actually saw the blast. He was with some buddies a few miles away when they saw and heard it. He says that wasn't a nuke. He does remember seeing those who were getting court-martialed being walked right past where he was working every day.

    This was the type of thing that scared the crap out of him. He was on an ammunition ship in the Pacific, and he was well aware of what could happen if the wrong thing was dropped in the wrong place. He might not be an expert, but considering that he was handling the same stuff, I'd trust his judgement on it. Working on what was basically a floating bomb, coming under constant Japanese attck, including kamikaze bombers - for years he'd wake up in the middle of the night screaming. Always freaked out the family when he did...

  123. Do some research... by tgd · · Score: 2

    While I think you are right -- there would've been radiation in this case, there are a lot of references that do everything but directly state (from the individuals involved, directly -- people like Ted Taylor) that the US developed the ability back in the mid 60's to build low and medium yield nuclear fission devices that produced virtually no radiation and no fallout (using materials around the core to absorb the emitted neutrons, and using a very small amount of fissionable material, so the fuel is fully spent, and none is blown out by the shockwave).

    Now, it seems unlikely that that would happen in this case, but if they were (from things I've inferred) to have stored large amounts of coal or something around too large of an amount of processed uranium, and it *accidently* went supercritical and produced a low yield explosion, you could potentially get very little emitted radiaion.

    Don't forget, early on in the development of nuclear capabilities, the stuff that had been learned in New Mexico wasn't properly communicated to facilities in other places. Its been well documented that communication problems between those who were researching the physics involved and those building the hardware for processing it (ie, at Oak Ridge) almost led to very bad design decisions that could've resulted in accidental "events".

    1. Re:Do some research... by js7a · · Score: 2
      Its been well documented that communication problems between those who were researching the physics involved and those building the hardware for processing it (ie, at Oak Ridge) almost led to very bad design decisions that could've resulted in accidental "events".

      Who needs Oak Ridge when you've got Pakistan, North Korea, China, and Iran? All are much farther along than Iraq.

      When a surge in natural nuclear decomposition heat sets off Pakistan's bomb, how are they not going to think it was the Indians?

  124. Bomb at Port Charles by apt142 · · Score: 1
    The bomb at Port Charles was aweful. Just accidently glimpsing it has made me want to claw my eyes out.

    Oh wait, we were talking about Chicago.

  125. Another thing by rebelcool · · Score: 2
    Many people working on the bomb project were fearful of what would happen when the bomb was exploded - there was a very real fear among some of them that the fireball would stretch out for hundreds of miles, truly catching the atmosphere on fire.

    I find it highly unlikely anyone at this stage in development would advocate blowing anything up so near a major, and very important city.

    --

    -

  126. Keep in mind, 10 kiloton is about *TNT* by tgd · · Score: 2

    C4 is about 1.4 times more powerful than TNT, but more importantly its got substantially more intial "kick" than TNT... and its that kick that causes the damage in explosive ordinance.

    My point is that you don't even need 1000 B29's since weapons have been using much more advanced chemical explosives since well before WWII. Google couldn't find any good references for differences in power between a particular class of conventional explosive and the more commonly used "kilo/mega"ton ratings used in nuclear devices... although I'm sure a little more looking would've turned something up.

    1. Re:Keep in mind, 10 kiloton is about *TNT* by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Google couldn't find any good references for differences in power between a particular class of conventional explosive and the more commonly used "kilo/mega"ton ratings used in nuclear devices... although I'm sure a little more looking would've turned something up.

      The FBI might be paying you a little visit if you search too hard :-)

    2. Re:Keep in mind, 10 kiloton is about *TNT* by Risc_0 · · Score: 1

      I believe the term for the shattering force is 'brisance.'

      [FP]

    3. Re:Keep in mind, 10 kiloton is about *TNT* by MacAndrew · · Score: 2

      Good point. I really don't know what was in most WWII bombs, though I assumed they were relatively primitive. Any thoughts on how TNT was chosen as the yardstick for nuclear bombs?

    4. Re:Keep in mind, 10 kiloton is about *TNT* by EmagGeek · · Score: 1

      Because it was what was cheap enough to stack 1000 tons of on a big pile and detonate to make said yardstick...

      Anyone ever see that documentary? It's been a while for me - but if anyone has a link, I'd love to see it/order it again....

  127. This is just silly. by Slartibartfast · · Score: 1

    His entire premise is summed up thusly:

    1) The military wanted to see what exploding a nuclear bomb was like.
    2) Exploding one in the middle of nowhere would have shown the "typcial" [sic] fission cloud, thus letting our enemies know we had the means.
    3) Therefore, we killed three hundred people to prove it.

    Okay. I'll take number one as a given.
    Number two: if no fission bombs had previously been exploded, how would anyone know what was "typical"?!?! That's just freakin' stuuuupid.
    Furthermore (for both two and three) what? The middle of (say) the Atlantic isn't far enough away? The middle of Nevada? It's not like they had spy satallites, guys. I don't see -any- reason why we "needed" to kill a whole big ol bunch of folks, and blow up a bunch of add'l munitions that would no doubt muddy any results the military might have inteded to get in the first place. Hello?! Just because something -might- be feasible doesn't mean it -had- to occur. Especially, might I add, if the rationale is just plain dumb.

    That's my two cents.

  128. The Texas City monument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's pretty cool. It's several miles inland, and there's this giant fucking boat anchor standing in the middle of it. It came off of one of the ships nearby when the nitrate blew... the monument is where it landed.

  129. Re:OMG! What a huge nuclear explosion! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You just changed your sig to fit the article, didn't you? :P

  130. Re:PEPCON explosion anyone? by lugonn · · Score: 2

    Anybody remember the explosion that happened in Las Vegas in 1988? It was a couple megaton blast produced by conventional explosives...well solid rocket fuel anyway. It is recorded as one of the largest explosions of all time.

  131. Was it a Dot Bomb? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Somebody hit the Bay Area with an economic nuke.

  132. Re:If you step in it... by lvdrproject · · Score: 2
    I agree. I've read this guy's posts (the fifteen he makes to each article). While some of them admittedly do contain good content, many of them appear to contain showy philosophy, pedantry, or accounts of his many, many, many, many fields of expertise.

    As for his reply:

    When I remarked, "Note that your second sentence is a fragment -- and, worse, is complete nonsense," the first part was consciously snide, the second the point. See, it's mocking irony, in response to a patronizing post by a wannabe expert. You're now doing the same by assuming I'm unfamiliar with modern usage and require tedious correction on a tedious point.

    If, guy, you were so familiar with modern grammar usage, why did you comment? You were the one who started the "pedantry" thread; you can't just stand back and act the victim now. Some guy made a spelling error, you discredited him because of that (i.e. you didn't "read for content rather than details and distractions"). Obviously it was an important enough detail to you that you felt the need to point it out. You, as well, made an error in your writing, and you fell back on some lame excuse for why it's ok for you to do it, but not him.

    I quite got the meaning of your (initial) post. The spelling error (made by the author of the Webpage) was only one small point of the whole post; there were others. What got me going was the fact that you couldn't accept your mistake, but rather you fell back on lame excuses (as i said above). I rarely point out spelling/grammar mistakes in posts, but when doing so is an integral part, for any reason, i make damned sure that i didn't misspell anything in my post. If i want to sound condescending, i should do a good job of it.

    Anyway, the point is that you do, indeed, fall into the jurisdiction of the "people in glass houses..." thing. Next time you attempt to discredit/ridicule/condescend upon a person, please make sure that either a.) you don't do something along the same lines as your "target", and/or b.) you admit your mistake, if you do make one. Otherwise, expect a thread of flames like this and the above posts.

  133. Inside the ship's hold? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From what I remember from reading the article, if the bomb detonated in the ship's hold below the waterline, there may not be a lot of extra fallout-like material.

    trinity was sand, flat, and maybe the size of the detonation and vortex/whatever sucked material into the ball? Beats me. I doubt there's a lot of stuff left at the trinity site, since from what I remember people go there all the time to pick up fused sand.

  134. Re:An enormous wanker by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "As for purposely detonating a device to test its effects on a populated area? Please. I can only stretch my incredulity so far. Yes, the US government has done some terrible things in the past, but it would take a great deal of very compelling evidence to make me believe they would do something that blatant."

    Well, gee, it's not like it hasn't happened before. How about the radiation tests on soldiers exposed to the blasts? Or the other exciting things are govt has fessed up to, like all the CIA things back in the pre-70s (Greece, Iran, Guatemala, Chile, Peru, etc)? Sounds like you're in denial about what the government can or will do, if it wants to.

  135. RE interesting theory by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

    http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2002/09/26/10327342 28354.html

    "Since the United States obtained uranium for its first atom bombs from a mine in the Kivu region, foreign governments have vied for Congo's uranium. In 1998 North Korea sent military trainers to Shinkolobe under an agreement with the country's former president, Laurent Kabila. They were swiftly withdrawn under US pressure after it was alleged they had reopened a uranium mine."

    http://www.nuclearfiles.org/docs/1941/41-maud.ht ml
    There it talks about Canada and the Congo.

    http://history.acusd.edu/gen/WW2Timeline/Pacific 07 .html

    Phase 2 1942
    "bought 1250 tons uranium from Congo"

    Canada U

    http://www.ccnr.org/uranium_events.html

    "The US Government orders 60 tons of Canadian uranium from Eldorado; as a result, Eldorado decides to re-open the mine at Great Bear Lake -- in secrecy -- with special permission from the Canadian government."

    "At this point over 220 tons of uranium from Great Bear Lake have already been delivered. From this point on, uranium from the Congo, refined at Port Hope, will dominate the Manhattan Project."

    Congo Uranium during WW2.

    1. Re:RE interesting theory by AndroidCat · · Score: 2
      Quite right from the sites that I've browsed.

      Pass me the teriyaki sauce. Crow just isn't tasty without that teriyaki sauce, mmm-mmm! :^)

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  136. Residual Radiation Redux by mveloso · · Score: 1

    Apparently we're all wrong when it comes to the common ideas about residual radiation. Here are two links that seem appropriate:

    [In regards to the radiation at Hiroshima and Nagasaki]
    "At present, more than 50 years after the bombings, one needs ultrasensitive equipment to measure the induced radioactivity"

    http://www.rerf.or.jp/eigo/radefx/dosereco/resid ua l.htm

    "an hour spent at the site of 113 nuclear explosions over a 40-year period ending in l989 has about the same negative health effects from radiation as a trip from San Francisco to New York in an ordinary jet airliner"

    http://www.newaus.com.au/news4c.html

  137. Re:But the silliest part of the nuke claim is . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ahem. The Trinity test in 1945 was of a plutonium weapon. The full-scale U-235 gun design (Little Boy) was never tested before it was dropped on Hiroshima, mainly because the principle had been tested sufficiently that there was no way for it not to work. (Mostly through the "Dragon" experiments at Los Alamos, with momentarily-critical masses.)

    The plutonium weapon design required testing because it relied on an elaborate and uncertain spherical arrangement of explosives to evenly implode a sphere of plutonium to critical density. A gun design was not possible with plutonium because it has a higher rate of spontaneous fission than U235, meaning that by the time a gun brought two pieces of plutonium together, a random fission might have already started the chain reaction and resulted in a fizzle. (I.e., the energy released would have blown the weapon apart and stopped the chain reaction before sufficient energy had been produced.)

  138. No radiation sickness/death by slouie · · Score: 1
    If you've read about Hiroshima and Nagasaki, then you know of the tremendous radiation sickness and death caused after the nuclear explosion. A large number of those who weren't killed in the initial blast died within the next two years to extreme exposure to radiation. There were a huge number of wounded at Port Chicago and no evidence or stories similar to those that came from Japan.

    The whole nuclear theory is fairly bogus and insulting to the real tragedy. For a more historical view, try the Port Chicago Mutiny website.

    --

    "I may be Love's bitch, but at least I'm man enough to admit it."
  139. a first hand account by lsd4all · · Score: 1

    A few months ago I found this site and forwarded it on to my friend who sent it to his dad (who is 80+ years old now and has lived in the SF East Bay his whole life). I also thought this might have been a nuclear explosion. here are his comments:

    Your friend (lsd4all) presents an interesting 'supposition', but in my judgement has little practical possibility. Of course both of your sets of grandparents heard and felt the blasts at the time in Richmond & Albany - It shook up those areas plenty, and with great noise. Per the loading records of ammunition & H.E., put on the Bryan as cited, plus the tonnage still on the dock to be loaded, there was an approximate total of 10 million pounds of explosives. These would be in many forms - some shock sensitive, most heat sensitive, and probably ALL sensitive to minor sources of flame or static electrical discharges that might be generated by unsafe handling. That is a tremendous poundage of explosives in a concentrated area! I would say the timing of this occurence was way off considering that it was considerably later before the first atomic bomb was put together and exploded in SW desert which occured about early June 1945. Don't forget, our people were rushing like hell to get this into a useable form and produced. We, (all service personnel in the States) were secretly shown the films of the test explosion shortly after it was test fired, sworn to not comment on it. Probably as a morale booster, as we all were anticipating early orders to participate in the invasion of Japan's islands. Another point - if the Port Chicago was an U-235 bomb, radiation contamination and poisoning would have been prompt and spreaded throughout the central Calif area, and persisted, with multiple radiation burns & residuals. That didn't happen. I lost a good local schoolmate in the explosion. Ensign Charles Riley - an Albany boy about 6 months or so older than me, and who lived on Albany Terrace - a 1 block long street off of the 1000 block of Neilson St. - a block & 1/2 East of Mom's house. He was on duty on the dock helping supervise the all black enlisted crew doing the loading. They never found him. Another much larger ammunition ship blew up during the war while at anchor in the South Pacific port - in '43 or '44 - as I recall at Ulithi harbor . It vaporized the ship and sank or blew up 5 or 6 other vessels anchored nearby. There were probably a hundred or more vessel in the huge harbor including fighting naval ships as well as supply ships. This was fairly near (by south pacific distances) to where my brother , Ed, was stationed in the Admiralty Islands. The black enlisted men in the navy at Port Chicago did get a raw deal there with their court martial. Blatant segregation - Navy was infamous for this - and they got all the dirty , dangerous, physical work of loading. They also got little or no consideration for the shock and stress and emotional harm done them by the explosion and subsequent events. Signs of the times. Also, Navy probably wanted to set an example against any type of actions that could lead to other areas experiencing mutinies or low morale of troops, or or giving any welcome news to the enemy. These were strange times.

  140. It has to be said by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. Blow up own port in the middle of a war 2. ? 3. Victory!!!

  141. Re:PEPCON explosion anyone? by terrymr · · Score: 2

    Yes - the footage i saw of the shockwave travelling through the ground looked unnervingly similar to an underground nuclear test.

  142. Ordinance v. ordnance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    An ordinance is a law. Ordnance is war materiel. NOT "material." Oh, never mind...don't bother trying to remember it.

    Just repeat to yourself "What kind of dumbass doesn't know the difference between a hacker and a cracker" until you feel better.

  143. Re:Examples of fuel air explosions by nickname1 · · Score: 1

    Some good examples of fuel air explosions come from the petroleum industry. Russia suffered a big explosion in 1994, when a trans-siberian train was damaged/derailed by an explosion originating in a leaking natural gas pipeline about half a mile away. The USA has experienced similar (but smaller?) incidents - see http://216.239.39.100/search?q=cache:YFVoiJs2EtYC: www.geo.arizona.edu/researchers/kkoper/for_cases.h tml+Russian+gas+pipeline+explosion&hl=en&ie=UT F-8
    My points are (1)that non nuclear explosions can be big & bad, even if they only superficially resemble nuclear explosions, and (2)even if a bomb is designed to deliver a 10Kt yield it is possible to detune it (inadvertantly or otherwise) to produce a smaller one eg UK Trident based nuclear warheads which can deliver 0.3KT - 100+Kt bangs depending on programming.

  144. A conspiracy within a conspiracy! by Arthur+Dent+'99 · · Score: 1

    As you said, the middle of WWII was probably the worst time for us to destroy badly needed war materiel, if in fact we did nuke Port Chicago. What if, however, Port Chicago was indeed exposed to a very small, primitive nuclear explosion, but not by us?

    During World War II, the United States was in a race with the Germans to develop the first nuclear bomb. What if the Germans blew up Port Chicago with a primitive test device? Perhaps our intelligence community learned of this after the fact, and informed Los Alamos that a working prototype had successfully been detonated by the Germans. That would also explain why our scientists went straight for large scale nuclear fission without first testing small scale nuclear fission, and why Paul Masters referred to the resulting explosion as being in "typical Port Chicago fashion", having already been told about the German device.

    Or, if you're super-paranoid, perhaps it really WAS our own government, who knew that if any nuclear explosion was detected, they could blame it on the Germans, because surely no one would believe that we would blow up our own munitions depot in the middle of a war. It just wouldn't make sense, would it?

    Conspiracy theories can be so much fun! They themselves can keep "blowing up" out of proportion!

    1. Re:A conspiracy within a conspiracy! by susano_otter · · Score: 2
      Interesting question. As far as I know, though, the Germans turned out to be laughably far behind us in nuclear bomb technology. By the time Germany was defeated, Heisenberg and his team had barely managed to get a simple fission reactor working, and had no viable bomb program at all.

      However, my main source for this is Copenhagen, an excellent play by Michael Frayn. I get the impression his research was thorough and honest, so I believe that Germany or its allies didn't have a suitable device to test at Port Chicago. YMMV, natch.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

  145. Re:PEPCON explosion anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sheesh, you'd think people would read the articles they link to.

    The blast at PEPCON was barely an effective kiloton. And that ranks as a very small explosion.

    However, that is still nothing to laugh at. I was ~5 miles from the blast when it happened and I was nearly knocked off my feet.

  146. Re:If you step in it... by MacAndrew · · Score: 2

    Well, thanks for taking the time to explain yourself at length, and sign your name to it.

    Yes, I made a mistake, I thought I conceded that. Too subtle. Yes, the Manhatten Project guy made a mistake, which I commented on in a throwaway joking line in a comment that went on to talk about the stuff I really thought interesting. Someone else mentioned the spelling error several posts earlier. As you perceive, I really wanted to talk about explosive yield, but it took several posts before interesting comments on that emerged; so I wish I'd left the first line out.

    Reread my note. Of course I was saying typos in a post aren't very important. They're not, and I wasn't commenting on a post in the first place, but someone's splash page for a serious, official website.

    This discussion really got going because I played along with the critics, and they didn't get it, even when I stuck in one of those smileys. I don't feel like a victim, I feel bad for getting a bunch of people stirred up over something I don't even care about. I can also be as stubborn as anyone.

    While some of them admittedly do contain good content, many of them appear to contain showy philosophy, pedantry, or accounts of his many, many, many, many fields of expertise.

    FWIW, I don't make stuff up, and do have an unusual resume -- only three manys, though. Thanks for the partial compliment, and I'll try not to be showy or pedantic -- or chatty. Peace?

  147. Re:But the silliest part of the nuke claim is . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, the author is claiming it was a uranium hydride bomb, which produced a very small ( 1 kilo ton) blast and very little radiation. Similar devices were tested in 1953 and 1954, and the radiation dissapated in days. The bomb was too small to be militarily significant, and so the Manhattan project focused on plutonium.

  148. Re:Would the US blow up its own people by sowellfan · · Score: 1

    The nuclear bombing of Japan was not a war crime by any means. It's a shame that it had to happen, but the US had already lost far too many soldiers in their island hopping campaign in the Pacific. Remember, the Japanese tended to fight to the death of the last man.

    From what I've read, Japanese authorities were training the civilian population to fight in the streets, which would've increased the potential US casualties even more. If the Americans had been forced to land on the beaches of Japan and take it by force, many more Japanese civilians and military would have died, in good part because of the cultural unwillingness to give up.

    The US didn't start the conflict. Germany and Japan did. They could've quit at any time. I know many won't agree with this, but I believe that during wartime, the lives of one's allies count more than the lives of the enemy. Japan was the country that took this principal to a criminal level, with their treatment of Allied POW's (Bataan Death March, summary executions, a bit of cannibalism, etc.), the Rape of Nanking (which *is* a good example of unnecessary targeting of the civilian population), and the taking of Korean 'comfort girls' for the pleasure of Japanese soldiers.

    Individual soldiers on all sides engaged in atrocities, I'm sure, but the Japanese were the ones that had total disdain for human life at the heart of their culture.

    Here's a final thought. If the situation were reversed and Japan had nuclear weapons and the capability to deliver them to targets in the United States, I believe wholeheartedly that they would have used them without any hesitation, whether they expected surrender to result or not. If you think that Japan wouldn't have taken advantage of that capability, I'd like to hear your thoughts (and justification for them).

  149. ..."Strong Evidence" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Indeed, from the pages you reference:
    http://www.sonic.net/sentinel/usa5.htm l ...STRONG EVIDENCE
    There is very strong circumstantial evidence to indicate that a nuclear weapon was aboard one of two ships that blew up at Port Chicago on the evening of Monday, July 17. What makes the evidence so strong, is not only written documentation concerning the blast, but also the itinerary of key people in the nuclear community after the blast. A Los Alamos document that describes the testing of an atomic device - and all its parameters - clearly states in Step 11. "Ball of fire mushroom out at 18,000 ft. in typical Port Chicago fashion." The Los Alamos document, prepared a short time after the Port Chicago explosion, History of 10,000 Ton Gadget, provides 11 steps of a nuclear explosion: (Though you do not have to understand nuclear physics, follow the steps to the end.)

    1. Detonation.

    2. Detonation wave reaches temper 18,5 x 2,54 over 7 x 10.

    3. Temp and active fully compressed.

    4. Neutrons multiply and shock wave hits temper 18/2 x 10.

    5. Shock wave passes through H.E. and case to reach air 74/2 x 10.

    6. Radiation squirts out, temperature drops and isothermal sphere formed.

    7. Strong blast wave expands.

    8. Ball of fire fully expands.

    9. Blast wave reaches damage area.

    10. In a test, blast wave would reach installation and observers at 10,000 yards. Also ball of fire reached height of 2000 ft. and completely disintegrated into turbulent convection currents.

    11. Ball of fire mushroom out at 18,000 ft in typical Port Chicago fashion.

    The fact that this classified document on the testing of an atomic bomb came from Los Alamos and specifically refers to Port Chicago, is clear evidence of a nuclear device. But that is not all the evidence available. ... and it continues...

    1. Re:..."Strong Evidence" by CharlesEGrant · · Score: 1
      We'll just skip over the fact that the document cited is of pretty dubious provenance:
      Vogel was at a rummage sale conducted by the Christ Evangelical Lutheran Church. At the bottom of a box of equipment, which had been donated to the church, he found a photocopied document taken from Los Alamos Laboratories in the Autumn of 1944 - a few months after the Port Chicago explosion. The document is entitled, "History of 10,000 ton gadget."

      In what sense is a list of steps in a nuclear explosion evidence, let alone strong evidence, that the Port Chicago blast was caused by an atomic bomb? The only marginally relevant item is number 11, which states that a nuclear blast would form a mushroom cloud like the Port Chicago blast did. As many posters have noted large detonations of conventional explosions produce musroom clouds. Saying that a looks like b does not imply that b is a. At the time the memo was purported to have been written, nobody had seen a nuclear explosion, so it hardly seems sinister to me that they would compare the expected results to a recent, well-observed event.

      The source article draws all sorts of sinister implications from the fact that figures from Los Alamos were involved in the investigation of the Port Chicago disaster. A simpler alternative hypothesis is that Los Alamos had sucked up a good number of the allies' experts on high explosives. Since they were desperately trying to build a novel explosive to use as a weapon, don't you think they might have had more then a passing interest in examples of really large explosions?

      This article and the one last week claiming that we are all going to be killed by audio compression algorithms make me wonder if Slashdot is angling to take over Art Bell's niche supplying boogeyman stories.
  150. The McCollum Memo and Station H by lanner · · Score: 2


    This is not a troll. The validity of these statements, however, is in question, but would not surprise me if true. History, like all reality, is always interpreted. At least this is one more major conspiracy theory.

    The attack upon Pearl Harbor, which triggered the United States to enter World War II, was quite possibly provocated by the United States. The Unites States knew that an attacking force was headed towards Pearl Harbor and let them attack. It is likely that this was done in order to enrage American citizens and encourage American Involvement in World War II.

    The United States government at the time allowed many military and non military citizens to be killed, willingly.

    In 1940, Arthur McCollum of the Office of Naval Intelligence submitted a memo to Navy Captains Walter Anderson and Dudley Knox which detailed an 8 step plan to provoke Japan into attacking the United States.

    President Roosevelt, over the course of 1941, implemented all 8 of the recommendations contained in the McCollum memo.

    Following the eighth provocation, Japan attacked. The public was told that it was a complete surprise, an "intelligence failure", and America entered World War II.

    The McCollum Memo, authored 1940, was not publicly released until 1994, 54 years later.

    Washington D.C. intelligence apparently knew of the impending attack long before, but did not inform Hawaii local intelligence. They even moved most valuable military assets away from Pearl Harbor before the attack and left old ships there to take the damage.

    References;

    The McCollum Memo: The Smoking Gun of Pearl Harbor
    http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/McCollum /

    Pearl Harbor, Internment, and Hiroshima: Historical Lessons
    http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Civil_L iberties/ Pearl%20Harbor_Internment.html

    Documentary, Sacrifice at Pearl Harbor The Government Knew!
    http://www.indybay.org/news/2002/09/144578. php

    The McCollum Memo
    http://salc.wsu.edu/fair_s02/fs7/(pearl%20ha rbor%2 0group)/mccollum.htm

    Day of Deceit: The Truth About FDR and Pearl Harbor
    http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detai l/-/0743 201299/qid=1041294781/sr=1-1/ref=sr_1_1/104-445305 1-6449521?v=glance&s=books

  151. Howto make a Mushroom Cloud - Easy by quanta · · Score: 1

    1. Make a nice campfire.
    2. Place a can of your favorite beverage in the middle of the fire.
    3. Retreat to a safe distance.
    4. Enjoy the effects.

    For a real thrill, try using a can of Starter Fluid (ether).

  152. ABM nukes under study by MacAndrew · · Score: 2

    The lightest portable identified in the Brookings survey and your link was the "Davy Crockett" (51 lbs.). It does seem they had a nuke for every occasion. Perhaps there is an undisclosed weapon even more portable.

    I wanted to say that the idea of nuclear interceptors for ABM was long dead, but it's not at all true. In April 2002 the WP published this op-ed re the Pentagon's Defense Science Board studying the option. Congress overrode the Pentagon in October and forbade research into the topic. I read somewhere that the Board intends to complete its study nonetheless.

    EMP and danger to U.S. satellites are mentioned as hazards, aside from political fallout. So I guess despite misgivings the nuclear interceptor concept is still live, at least in the minds of some planners.

  153. Non-nuclear free Madison, Wisconsin by Latent+Heat · · Score: 2

    Dane County Airport (MSN) still has the concrete shelters that once housed pairs of F-106's -- they were supposed to greet Russian bombers over Canada with a nuclear-tipped Genie rocket. Northbrook, Illinois was home to the nuclear-armed Nike Hercules. When the National Guard toted nukes -- oooh, that was a scary thought. I don't think those nukes were that small either -- I believe they were in the 10 kiloton range.

  154. Re:If you step in it... by lvdrproject · · Score: 2

    Very well, suh, peace it is. Sorry for the cheap shot. :p

  155. Old minds by Niscenus · · Score: 1

    Still, however:

    5000 tons
    500 decatons
    50 hectatons
    5 kilotons

    I believe it's called a "brain fart."

    --
    "Yeah...it was the numbers that were irrational, not the murderous cult of vegetarians...." -- Hippasus of Metapontum
  156. bombs away by MacAndrew · · Score: 2

    They're devestating weapons, to be sure, but they do not vaporize whole cities in a single blow.

    Yep, although with MIRV's and ICBM's they do have pushbutton convenience and 30-minute delivery with no risk to anyone on the delivery end. At our peak in the 60's the U.S. owned 30,000+ warheads -- and never used even one after the first two. No one did. That's the really remarkable statistic to me. On the other hand, how much tonnage of boring bombs did the U.S. drop on Vietnam and surroundings? Several times all of WWII?

    The Russians did test a 50-megaton device nicknamed "Tsar Bomba" that was prototyped to yield as much as 100+ megatons. That thing could be characterized as a city-killer. It looks like around 1960 both superpowers began to retire the big H-bombs in favor of smaller, lighter, more precise weapon in the 50-100 kiloton range. The Tsar Bomba weighed about 30 tons.

    Re Japan, according to some reports what really demoralized the leaders was that the bomb would make unnecessary an Allied invasion of the island, which was hoped to produce a confrontation bloody enough to spur a negotiated peace with Japan retaining some of its conquests. The Allies did assume an invasion was necessary with conventional bombing, and apparantly were assumed it might be necessary even with nuclear bombing. Debate about all this will continue for years, but has recently become more interesting with the declassification of U.S. WWII intelligence documents, esp. decrypted MAGIC/ULTRA Japanese communications. Fascinating stuff.

  157. Some of this bears a closer look... by ikluft · · Score: 2
    A friend mentioned this story to me this week. I first reacted as skeptical as others here have. We're both natives of the Bay Area who were superficially aware of the history of the 1944 Port Chicago accident. But the stuff I read in Vogel's own text, I want independent verification and won't accept anything else in his text for that purpose. The research by the Napa Sentinel seems to fit that enough not to drop the story yet.

    I don't buy Vogel's theory that such a thing could have been intentional. But it's hard to ignore the optical scans of reports of nuclear tests referring to them as a "mushroom to 18,000 feet in typical Port Chicago fashion". Or the fact that the same guy (USN Capt William Parsons) who wrote the initial report on the effects of Port Chicago's blast was a year later aboard the Enola Gay as the Manhattan Project scientist on the crew that attacked Hiroshima. The Napa Sentinel found that the ship's destination was Tinian, which was where the atomic attacks did actually originate a year later. And the atomic bombs were shipped through the rebuilt Port Chicago.

    So what about the radiation? Well, it immediately struck me in the talk with my friend that we in the Bay Area "always thought the massively high cancer rates in Contra Costa County were due to the oil refineries." Since they have that problem there, once again I see logic pointing at checking it further, not dismissing it.

    There seems to be disagreement over the presence of radiation at the scene of the explosion, since no one knew to watch for it. And the site remains under military control today. But this whole thing can be tested one way or the other by checking for elevated background radiation levels in the uninhabited areas of the Sacramento/San Joaquin River Delta to the northeast of the Concord Naval Weapons Center (formerly known as Port Chicago) which would have been downwind of the explosion in 1944 and where the fallout would have settled.

    (In that part of California in July, overnight winds are always inland from San Francisco Bay into the Central Valley. And online info indicates that night in 1944 winds were out of the WSW as would be expected.)

  158. Last Post! by alpg · · Score: 1

    The more pretentious a corporate name, the smaller the organization. (For
    instance, The Murphy Center for Codification of Human and Organizational Law,
    contrasted to IBM, GM, AT&T ...)

    - this post brought to you by the Automated Last Post Generator...