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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

Welcome to the Neno's Place!

Neno's Place Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality


Neno

I can be reached by phone or text 8am-7pm cst 972-768-9772 or, once joining the board I can be reached by a (PM) Private Message.

Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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    Where will Trump go in the event of a nuclear attack?

    Rocky
    Rocky
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    Where will Trump go in the event of a nuclear attack? Empty Where will Trump go in the event of a nuclear attack?

    Post by Rocky Tue 13 Feb 2018, 1:17 am

    [ltr]Where will Trump go in the event of a nuclear attack?[/ltr]
    [ltr]Arab and international[/ltr]
     Since 2018-02-13 at 09:27 (Baghdad time)
    [ltr]Where will Trump go in the event of a nuclear attack? Dfhgru[/ltr]
    [ltr]Follow - up[/ltr]
    [ltr]In mid-January, a wrong warning came to Hawaiian residents near a nuclear attack, but what if a nuclear attack actually took place in America, and what if it targeted US President Donald Trump? 
    The president will immediately move to a safe place, the so-called "bomb shelters" or "caches" against nuclear strikes, according to the BBC.[/ltr]

    [ltr]The US House of Representatives has ready-made shelters at its disposal, one of which is directly under the White House, built in the 1950s, while another refuge in Virginia is in the Blue Ridge Mountains.[/ltr]
    [ltr]The US president has a crude nuclear haven in Florida at the Mar Lago resort on Palm Beach, West Palm Beach.[/ltr]
    [ltr]Trump bought the nuclear shelter at the Mar Lago Resort in 1985. It is a building grounded in steel and concrete.[/ltr]
    [ltr]The Tramb nuclear sanctuary is characterized by a low, dark ceiling, with fold-up beds on the wall and a toilet.[/ltr]
    [ltr]According to the BBC, presidential shelters were built in several places in the United States, such as mountains and islands, during the Cold War.[/ltr]
    [ltr]The story of the president's nuclear bomb shelters reflects the way Americans deal with the prospect of a possible nuclear war. While no one imagines how a nuclear war could erupt if it ignites in the country, some are planning it.[/ltr]
    [ltr]Kenneth Rose, author of "One Nation Below: Emerging Shelters in American Culture," says that the massive nuclear explosion and heat have no defensive buffer, in reference to the interpretation of the existence of shelters in America.[/ltr]
    [ltr]If there is a nuclear attack on the country, and the president survives, he needs to be in a safe place, so that he can lead his nation, as well as his personal survival, according to the BBC.[/ltr]
    [ltr]Robert Darling, a US Marine who spent time in an American hideout during the September 11 attacks, said officials in the country had made arrangements to secure the arrival of the then US president, along with a group of important individuals in government, to those shelters.[/ltr]
    [ltr]Darling pointed out that very few groups around the president are allowed access to those shelters.[/ltr]
    [ltr]Historians have pointed out that the construction of nuclear shelters is part of the government's work.[/ltr]
    [ltr]The emergence of nuclear shelters has come to the fore because of the crisis between the United States and North Korea, which has reached mutual statements between Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.[/ltr]

    [ltr]On a street in Manhattan, in America, is the wall of a building built in 1936 with a painting called "Nuclear Refuge," a temporary shelter for fear of any Soviet nuclear power attack in the 1950s.[/ltr]
    [ltr]US President Harry Truman (who took power from 1945 to 1953) oversaw the construction of shelters for the first time in the United States in the 1950s.[/ltr]
    [ltr]A statistic found that 30 percent of those killed in the US nuclear attack on the Japanese city of Nagasaki would have survived if nuclear shelters were found at the time.[/ltr]
    [ltr]Contrary to what is expected, talking about nuclear shelters is a way for the country, even if there is a nuclear attack that civilians can adapt to, or what Christian Abe, a professor of history at the University of Massachusetts, called "nuclear citizenship."[/ltr]
    [ltr]The US government built shelters nationwide for government officials and members of the public. US officials oversaw the construction of nuclear shelters in the 1960s in California.[/ltr]



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