The Tupolev Tu-95 is a turboprop aircraft which the USSR introduced in 1956. Laughable huh? The aircraft's four engines have contra-rotating propellers that move faster than the speed of sound, which in itself is interesting. Two of these venerable turboprop aircraft alone may be able to launch more than twelve nuclear missiles at targets in the United States. Every state in the union has military targets; the MIC set it up that way, for jobs you know.
The attempt to encircle and eventually conquer Russia, their most successful boogeyman-creation, will never cease. 'It will be a walk in the park to defeat The Russian military. The war will be over in a week and would pay for itself. The frightened browbeat browbeaten Russians would put flowers in their cannon barrels and cheer our arriving Freedom Forces.'
The Russians have thousands of nuclear weapons, thousands of multiple rocket launch systems, advanced military aircraft, submarines as well as other naval assets, ICBMs, a powerful army, and so on. They will not be watching the war, a war of survival for them, from the sidelines.
Of course, this is nothing compared to the military power our side possesses. We have politicians who believe we could survive a first strike, and go on to 'win' the war. These people are patently insane, the only word needed to describe them.
We know Obama follows the Green Wind. He is smart in the way a preacher or door-to-door tonic salesman knows how to work the crowd. As an intellectual, as a thinker, he simply is not all that bright. He circles the globe in his hermetically sealed air castle, observing life as it exists in world-wide 5-Star American hotels. His advisors are selected using the new-fashioned American measurement--net $ worth.
This nation cannot survive even a limited nuclear war, because the masses are too far removed from reality to handle the aftermath, in any case. I'm sure some survivalist types will still be active and 'our key government people' will likely be stored underground for a while. Lucky them.
As the GE guy on TV used to say, "Progress is our most important product."
Until it isn't.
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