Elmarnieh wrote:
A gun type nuke is huge and relatively simple.
You take two masses of fissile material that are independently less than critical mass. You then smash them together so they are critical mass. Then boom.
If it were that simple the North Koreans would not have had as many problems as they have had. The Manhatten project would not have been necessary. It's relatively
simple compared to an implosion weapon - it is not simple at all in any absolute sense, not the least because fissile material in sufficient quantity is not a given.
The only thing you have succeeded in doing is oversimplifying the weapon in a conceptual sense in a single sentence. The fact remains that conceptually understanding a machine of any kind does not mean you can build one. I can conceptually tell you what a computer does, but that does not make me able to build so much as a pocket calculator. I understand how s team locomotive works conceptually; I could not build one or even design one if asked to do so.
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Iran and North Korea can make nuclear weapons - don't kid yourselves. What they cannot make is a modern stable nuke that can fit on a modern missile.
no, North Korea has succeeded in making a single unweaponizable nuclear
device. A nuclear device is not a weapon until you can fit it into a bomb, missile, artillery shell, or something like that - at a minimum, and even if they could their chances of penetrating the defenses of a modern opponent are questionable at best.
Iran is probably ahead of North Korea in terms of ability to produce
everything butQuote:
You keep inserting all these qualifiers which are not what I stated. It would hardly do North Korea or Iran much good in developing a nuke that needs to be carried by a conventional heavy bomber so they don't develop one.
It doesn't matter what you stated. You don't know what you are talking about. You are simply pretending that people are immoral for not following your philosophy, and yet claiming morality would be served by giving you, personally, the ability to vaporize thousands in defense of "morality". You defend this with internet-quality rhetoric that presents a facade of "consistency", and which gains sympathy only because it plays to people's frusterations with governmental excess and ineptitude.
This would make you just another political troll, until you claim to be able to produce your own nuclear bomb, and to sum up questions that took incredible resources and the minds of the most brilliant physicists of their time to solve in single sentences about "smashing" and "boom". This says nothing of the national effort of North Korea or Iran, which, while pathetic in comparison to American resources represent far more education and experience than you can have in that tiny brain of yours, and vastly more resources than you can summon as a "hobbyist". You commit the typical amateur mistake of thinking understanding broad concepts eliminates technical issues and complexities of which you are not aware. The colossal arrogance of this is astounding. Of course, you continue to claim you "could" build a nuke "if you wanted to". "I could do it if I wanted to" is the battle cry of every teenage loser that ever got his *** kicked at one-on-one.
So quite frankly, I don't care about whether you have or have not stated any qualifiers because I don't particularly care about the technical semantic accuracy of your inane prattling. The fact is that you can't make a gun nuke or any other nuke. If you want to make a dirty bomb, please, by all means, proceed. Then we can have your *** thrown in jail for the rest of your life and wash our hands of you. In the meantime (since I know perfectly well you are not going to make a dirty bomb, because you'd really rather live in the comfort you are accustomed to and talk trash about killing people on the internet) we'll be quite secure int he knowledge that you ain't gonna nuke ****, and all the complaining in the world about childish ideas of "inconsistency" or "immorality" will not change the fact that people are still not being vaporized so that your ideas of inherent rights can proceed.