witpqs
Posts: 26087
Joined: 10/4/2004 From: Argleton Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Anthropoid LOL! You know what that makes me think of, the concept of "Weapons of Mass Destruction." I don't know if it was an article I read, or one that I should be writing, but it seems to me that the concept of WMDs is _COMPLETE_ balogna. Biological and chemical weapons, nukes, even big bombs (IIRC) do not account for most deaths in most conflicts in which they have been used, thus the concept of them being weapons of mass destruction is fundamentally flawed. But because they somehow represent an even further step away from a more 'honorable' form of killing (e.g., imagine gallant knight on horseback) they are somehow more 'repugnant.' I seem to recall that in WWI it was artillery that accounted for a disproportionate amount of casualties . . . well that when combined with infectious disease. WWII was it small arms fire? Certainly in modern conflicts small arms fire and perhaps small explosive devices seem to account for the largest fraction of casualties. . . . But there I go again totally tangentializing a perfectly good thread with way too much deep analytical thinking As far as I know John is quite right. Artillery is the big killer by a wide margin. In fact artillery is called 'The King of the Battlefield', whereas the rifle is called 'The Queen of the battlefield'. Super important as the rifle is, artillery is king. With the different dynamics of what the US is involved in today air-dropped bombs might be causing most casualties among enemy (I simply don't know), but I think overall in serious conflicts it is still arty. There's a couple/three different ways of looking at WMD. One is big effect. Nukes on a city - ouch. Hence major league avoidance. If they were used in quantity, even on 'military' targets, they would likely still make a huge difference. Artillery is king because we don't use nukes. Another way to look at WMD is discrimination. All area weapons are indiscriminate to some degree. Nukes in a big way, gas to a lesser degree (because the area of effect is smaller) but still a lot if used in a big way. Things like bio weapons - anthrax, killer flu, etc. - are thought of differently because they can take off and spread beyond a target area and certainly beyond actual desired targets themselves. A third way is that repugnance or revulsion factor you mentioned. Gas, bio, etc. give people the creeps partly because they feel like they are helpless against them. Looking purely at what does the most damage or the most frequent damage is never the whole story. For example, how many people are killed every year in auto accidents around the world? A lot (depending on your point of view). How many people are killed by meteorites every year around the world? Not many, eh? I have seen various estimates of a person's chances of being killed by a meteorite during their lifetime. I just did a search to grab 'any' number, and found "1 in 700,000" chance of being killed by a meteorite during the average persons entire lifetime (as opposed to every year). Pretty low. The problem is that includes all (expected) events that might happen. A few small events where 1 or a small number die, even fewer where millions die, and a meaningful chance that EVERYBODY dies. Kind of the same with WMD. We shouldn't fixate on them or exaggerate their importance. But if (for example) the nukes do get thrown around...
< Message edited by witpqs -- 4/27/2009 9:45:29 PM >
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