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I remember when this happened. I lived about 15 miles from where the bombs landed. When my Dad told me where it was, the description was, "It's in that empty field, just down the road from . . .," and I knew exactly where he was describing. Eventhough I was young, it was talked about, ALOT. And nothing that I have subsequently heard/read contradicted what I heard in the immediate aftermath of the incident. Which actually surprises me. You would think something like this would be TOP SECRET HUSH-HUSH. But it wasn't. Nothing I have read in the past 64 years has materially altered or contradicted my understanding of what happened from what I learned during the first few days after the "incident."On January 24, 1961
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'Fire every which way': B-52 carrying nuclear bombs crashed in field
63 years since the events of the Goldsboro Broken Arrow.spectrumlocalnews.com
Parts of the second bomb are still buried in the Faro field where it landed, but officials said there are no radiation leaks.
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'Fire every which way': B-52 carrying nuclear bombs crashed in field
63 years since the events of the Goldsboro Broken Arrow.spectrumlocalnews.com
The story at the time, which may or may not be true, was that the part not recovered was the plutonium "fission trigger." The "fission trigger" creates the environment in which the fusion part explodes. This always seemed unlikely to me. The plutonium trigger was an atomic bomb all by itself. The fusion part of the bomb was nothing without the fission trigger. So not recovering all the fusion part was a nothing burger. Not recovering the plutonium trigger would be an unacceptable risk.Parts of the second bomb are still buried in the Faro field where it landed, but officials said there are no radiation leaks.
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'Fire every which way': B-52 carrying nuclear bombs crashed in field
63 years since the events of the Goldsboro Broken Arrow.spectrumlocalnews.com
One of the most important moments of early U.S. history that doesn’t get nearly enough, if any, play in our public grade schools. But they’re bastions of radical leftism, right?
1945. In an effort to prevent tooth decay, Grand Rapids, Michigan, became the first U.S. city to add fluoride to its water system.
But we all know it's a commie plot still to this day.
I thought about posting this but decidedd it would get more exposure elsewhere and be more well-known a(s your post exemplifies) while the Lego thing is a bit more unknown as far as a date in history.Thought for sure when I clicked on this today, someone would have mentioned the Challenger exploding after liftoff in 1986. Damn, I can remember that almost like yesterday. And then a year or so later when they finally launched the next Shuttle, we all gathered in a large room at work to watch [and in a fairly literal sense] with held breath till it passed the 73 second mark.
I can't even begin to imagine the conspiracy bullshit we'd be put through had this happened today instead of 39 years ago.