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UK Bookstores Found Selling Banned US Bomb-Making Handbooks (engadget.com)

Three major online retailers in the UK have been listing a number of bomb-making manuals on their websites. Engadget adds:These books were originally made back in the 1960s for US military personnel and include titles like Improvised Munitions Handbook, Boobytraps, and Explosives and Demolitions. But since the end of the Vietnam War, these books have become popular resources for terrorists of all stripes. Thomas Mair, the man who assassinated Labour MP Jo Cox, reportedly owned a copy of Improvised Munitions, for example. The surfacing of these books for sale on the WH Smith, Amazon UK and Waterstones websites, has at least one of the companies scrambling to scrub the listings. WH Smith shut down its entire website for more than four hours on Thursday to eliminate the offending material, however it appears they are still available on Amazon and Waterstones.

7 of 108 comments (clear)

  1. And? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Nothing makes me want to learn more about something than having someone tell me I can't be trusted with knowledge.

    1. Re:And? by tsotha · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yep. Andy Grove famously did just that back when people didn't take it so seriously.

      For decades I've wondered how many more top-notch chemists we'd have if you were still allowed to have that kind of fun.

  2. It gets worse! by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Just wait until someone reminds the UK that their own government designed(and widely disseminated both the hardware and the schematics); for a low cost, easy to build submachine gun perfectly suited to the requirements of irregular warfare, guerrilla activity, and abundantly lethal anywhere close range and high rate of fire is an advantage.

    There are all kinds of dangerous radicals out there, irresponsibly popularizing implements of mayhem; whatever shall we do?

  3. available free all over the frigging internet... by Lumpy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Non story, non issue. Anyone with an IQ above 80 can find a copy for free on the internet as a PDF.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  4. Re:time to invade england by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I was a Marine, and participated in some of those invasions, and I have read the manuals. Everything in these books is also on the web, and much of what is in them is not very useful to a terrorist because the books often assume that you have access to military supplies like blasting caps and C4. There are far better online resources for terrorists. Terrorists focus on killing people. Military booby traps are more focused on area denial, slowing enemy movement, and causing non-ambulatory casualties that drain resources: some shrapnel in a leg takes out both the wounded man, and the guys who have to carry him.

  5. Re:"banned" - oh you mean in UK by tsotha · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There's a big difference between looking up highly exothermic reactions in a textbook and having step-by-step instructions for creating a bomb from readily available materials. For one thing, if you don't know what you're doing there's a good chance you'll blow yourself up.

  6. Re:Bookburning socialists by david_thornley · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'd bet that there are places with certain freedoms, like the freedom to not have a SWAT team break into my house at night and shoot my dogs and terrify my family and break my stuff because somebody else wanted to play a prank. How about the freedom to fly without worrying if someone with my name (at least it's not a common one) is on a secret government list somewhere? How about the freedom to not be shot dead if some police officer panics? The US isn't as free as some people think.

    --
    "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes