Aswad
Posts: 9374
Joined: 4/4/2007 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: deathtothepixies Just out of interest when does a bomb or similar device become a weapon of mass destruction? 9/11 was just laidback fireworks but thousands died. I know it wasn't on the same scale as Japan but...... just wondering? I answered this in my post: it becomes a weapon of mass destruction when it exceeds the capacity of any single human to comprehend (or even approximate) the scope and depth of the destruction. At the moment, the only weapons that qualify are thermobaric bombs, nuclear bombs, the largest scale chemical warheads and some of he worst biological agents. The US remains the only nation to have deployed a WMD against a civilian population (though the USSR was willing to do so in Afghanistan; they just decided it wasn't possible to win, which GWB's advisors knew when the US moved in there). 9/11 was a big tragedy, but by no means beyond comprehension. That disqualifies it as mass destruction. Let me use another point for comparison: water. You can have a drop of water (Boston), a cup of water (Sandy Hook), or a pitcher of water (9/11), but none of these are a river (Afghanistan), let alone an ocean (Hiroshima or Nagasaki). There's also the rock comparison. You can have a pebble, a rock, a mountain, an asteroid or a planet (e.g. Earth). We have very different words for them, because there is a difference that is qualitative in nature, not just quantitative. So, too, we have a seperate term for mass destruction (or, rather, weapons of mass destruction), because it's not just a matter of scale. The Aztec sacrifices were on par with the Holocaust, on a day by day death toll basis, but lasted a lot shorter, and had more unpleasant deaths by far. Yet, there's a qualitative difference. The Armenian Holocaust is a case which resembles the German Holocaust. The German Holocaust exceeded Hiroshima in casualties, but as an ongoing thing. Hiroshima and Nagasaki stand alone in the annals of history as man-made events of mass destruction. Each day throughout the Holocaust, we can comprehend, as too can we comprehend the conditions in the camp and the eventual scope. We cannot, however, comprehend the scale and depth of the destruction unleashed in those two flashes we call Little Boy and Fat Man. It just sweeps humanity off the table altogether, in one brief instant. I hope that delineates the difference between massive (adjective) destruction and mass destruction (compound noun). IWYW, — Aswad.
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"If God saw what any of us did that night, he didn't seem to mind. From then on I knew: God doesn't make the world this way. We do." -- Rorschack, Watchmen.
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