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Bulletins and News Discussion from June 12th to June 18th - Hex(anitrohexaazaisowurtzitane)bear

Image is a ball-and-stick model of a molecule of CL-20, alternatively known as hexanitrohexaazaisowurtzitane, taken from Wikipedia.


Much of this preamble is taken from this article.

CL-20 is the most deadly non-nuclear explosive that humanity has yet discovered, capable of generating detonation velocities and pressures higher than other military explosives like TNT, RDX, and HMX. If you have a more powerful explosive, you can make your missiles travel further and/or make them smaller. It also helps the creation of nuclear missiles, as to start the nuclear chain reaction, you need a powerful shockwave to get all the atoms in there to mingle. The problem is that it's a little too explosive, making it exceedingly difficult to not only manufacture, but transport. I mean, America can hardly transport some chemicals across the country without poisoning entire towns. Thus, it isn't really used in many known military applications.

In 1994, in China, Professor Yu Yongzhong synthesized the first CL-20 compound in his laboratory. America came along and said 'Actually, we did it first, in 1987.' The US team said that despite it being such a powerful explosive, the cost of making and testing it was too high, and the collapse of the Soviet Union meant that there wasn't really much interest in that kind of weapons arms race anymore. Production therefore fell to the wayside, while China kept at it, investing in its production and testing.

China has recently found a way to synthesize it to make it five times as shock-resistant. This shock resistance is essentially measured by dropping an object onto it and measuring the height you need to drop it from to make it explode. The previous record was 13 cm / 5 inches, whereas now it is 68 cm, or about 27 inches. US military experts already fear that China has designed its weaponry to use CL-20 and thus this will give them an advantage in missile technology.

(Also, fun fact, CL-20 is called that because it was developed in the China Lake facility in California.)


Here is the map of the Ukraine conflict, courtesy of Wikipedia.

Here is the archive of important pieces of analysis from throughout the war that we've collected.

This week's first update is here in the comments.

This week's second update is here in the comments.

This week's third update is here in the comments.

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704 comments
  • Just an excerpt that caught my eye from Putin's meeting with correspondants that MoreAmphibians linked to. All of it is interesting and worth reading though.

    Putin:

    Moreover, they put bastards like Bandera on a pedestal. They don’t want communism. Fine, who wants that today?

    :I-was-saying:

    They are throwing the founder of Ukraine – Lenin – off his pedestal.

    :lenin-rage:

    Okay, this is up to them, but they are putting Bandera up there instead, and he is a fascist. I am totally surprised at how a person with Jewish blood, the head of the state of Ukraine, can support neo-Nazis. It simply beats me.

    :concerned-confusion:

    After they basically annihilated the civilian Jewish population, Bandera and his supporters have been elevated to the rank of national heroes. Now they are marching with those posters.

    :posting:

    So, we will never accept historically what is happening there.

    • Putin has major brainworms, but it's also so cool to see how growing up under a real communist system shaped his thinking and made him way more analytical of history and its effect on today's events. I have noticed that while the Ukrainian/Western narratives about the war are all about the uncivilised asiatic orcs invading European Ukraine, Russian narratives on the other hand are somewhat "mourning" the fall of a brotherly nation into Nazi hands. The conflict is almost treated like a civil war, where Russia felt compelled to protect the honor of the sacrifices of the Great Patriotic War by once again confronting the Nazis on Soviet land. Modern Russia lacks the correct ideological orientation, but there's an underlying pride and nostalgia for a time where Russians, Ukrainians and other peoples of USSR stood together for a shared destiny under an optimistic system. I have said this before, but Europeans and especially Americans can't understand the concept of a brotherly people, which is why the Russian narrative was never properly understood in the West.

704 comments