Evil Dead
Hail to the King baby
What books are you reading. its not for psyops. The fucking people we kill dont even know what helicopters are, let alone a form of munitions. And it is for piercing armor. We dont use it to scare people, but to tear through shit because its better than normal rounds. Come on down to Eglin AFB and you can chat with the people who develop and test depleted uranium munitions every day.
So where is it well known that it is used for what you stated? By people who do not use/manufacture it? Ah yeah ok thats right.
Sorry about the saccarine comment, I dont get readers digest so I am not savy to the new wave of sugar packet warning labels.
And my comparison between thorium, germanium and uranium is not off kilter. Kiowa scouts use germanium lenses on the flir which emit harmful radiation, depleted uranium munitions dont. We use far more harmful shit than depleted uranium.
So where is it well known that it is used for what you stated? By people who do not use/manufacture it? Ah yeah ok thats right.
Sorry about the saccarine comment, I dont get readers digest so I am not savy to the new wave of sugar packet warning labels.
And my comparison between thorium, germanium and uranium is not off kilter. Kiowa scouts use germanium lenses on the flir which emit harmful radiation, depleted uranium munitions dont. We use far more harmful shit than depleted uranium.
sknight said:Dude, Uranium in itself is a soft element. How would it help pierce armor? It's well known the shells are coated with it because it's used as not only an element of psychological warfare, but as something to cripple the other side in terms of medical care for future generations.
And get with the times: the warnings about saccharin have been removed as of like last year because there was no evidence or links in humans to cancer. The wanrings were simply because some rats developed cancer while on it, but no tests came back for humans.
And you're giving a poor explanation of other things being radioactive. Lots of things are radioactive, yes. Lower levels? Yes. Different rates and types of decay? Yes. Pick up a chemistry and physics book and read into it, this makes the impact of Uranium different.