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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.

704 comments
  • The people complaining about "tankies" should be relentlessly compared to the people that complain about the "woke". The behaviour is two sides of the same coin, one performed by conservatives-only while the other is performed by both of them in unity against the only anti-capitalists.

    Both are functionally meaningless, being undefined in any given situation so they can be thrown around in all places.

    The liberals saying "tankie" will not like being compared with the conservatives in this way, and they certainly will not like tankie + woke being compared as the same thing. The interesting thing here is that "to be awake" applies more to the people getting called tankies (and I mean that for all in the anti-imperialist left) than to the nato lovers saying it.

    I really feel inspired by this like it's exactly the right way to go about undermining it.

  • I read this blog post about a UKer's experience of blocking all American IP addresses, which made the Internet mostly unusable.

    https://www.nthbrock.com/posts/americaless-internet/

    Select quotes:

    Nine out of the ten most visited websites in the United Kingdom are those operated by US organisations. The same cannot be said for the flip side. There are zero UK-operated websites found in the US’s top 50.

    A large chunk of the Anglo-speaking sphere I experience originates and is operated by American organisations. Within this sphere, we all feel any disturbances or changes made by the major players. We are all affected when an AWS data centre goes down. Our combined productivity goes down when Google publishes an enticing doodle. Any dint to Facebook’s SLA and we all find out as it hits the mainstream media.

    One of the few constants in life is change. We can’t assume the internet as we use it today will last for the foreseeable future. The Internet is the most impressive distributed networks of our time. Yet its fragility isn’t in the technology itself but in the politics, geography and laws that encompass it. [...]

    (emphasis mine)

    The author's experience shows why the Great Firewall of China (GFW) is an essential economic protection measure. Without the GFW, the Chinese internet would be dominated by American websites, leading to Chinese social and economic dependence on American corporations and infrastructure. Mature American tech companies would occupy most of the space in the local market, stifling the development of an indigenous tech industry.

  • Mikhail Podolyak, adviser to the head of the office of the President of Ukraine, has said that the counteroffensive has not yet begun and all that has happened so far is probing attacks.

  • In more pleasant news from an on the ground perspective, I've heard scuttlebutt about how a whole platoon of Ukrainian soldiers, probably conscripts of their territorial guard militias, managed to defect to Russia because their platoon leader got in contact with the Russian unit commander closest to them and organize a surrender.

    Apparently the Ukrainian platoon had wounded men in it that their commanders refused to evacuate, or even supply field aid equipment with trained medical personnel to stabilize them.

    I can only hope that this story reaches more Ukrainian conscripts to let them know they still have a choice to avoid being pushed into slaughter houses by their fascist rulers.

  • I can sit around at work for 45 minutes doing nothing, and five seconds after I actually start doing something my phone will start blowing up.

    This is similar to my theory that if you're ever stranded in the wilderness, you can just fart and someone will walk behind you a few seconds later.

  • 🇷🇺🇨🇺🛢#oil

    Russia and Cuba are preparing an intergovernmental agreement to supply 1.64 million tons of oil and oil products annually, there is willingness from Rosneft, the Cuban prime minister said.

    A little bit of oil to Cuba...

  • WSJ: Chinese Parts Help Iran Supply Drones to Russia Quickly, Investigators Say

    Should have lumped more Bad Countries in there. "Chinese factories supplied with North Korean materials via Venezuelan ships are being sent to Iranian drone factories which have Cuban first aid kits and then AMLO gives the go-ahead to send them to Russia on Afghanistani railways"

    When Western researchers examined an Iranian drone brought down over Ukraine this spring, they said they made an important discovery: One Chinese-made part was manufactured this year.

    The revelation shows that Chinese parts have continued to flow to Iran, providing the building blocks for its drone program, despite increasing pressure from the U.S. to choke off the global supply chain. And it demonstrates how quickly Iran is able to help Russia with its war in Ukraine, needing just three months to make and supply Moscow with weapons that have terrorized Ukraine’s civilian population.

    mfw a Chinese component is a drone (we gave all our industry to China decades ago): :walter-breakdown:

  • Incredible Reddit analysis

    Not only does he ignore that the west has been begging the third world to sanction Russia, but it also suggests that only China is self serving unlike the west where everyone cooperates out of kindness

    Another one:

    Russia really overestimates its worth on the world stage.

    Anotha one:

    This is just a beginning of what will be decades is seizures when war reparations come due and Russia will vehemently deny. Of course Russians will bellow how unfair west is and blah blah. Shameless savages.

    And all that aside, the m’lady tier fawning over Canadians being “nice” is just so pathetic

  • Soldier it's 4 PM time to retake [NAME OF SETTLEMENT] in [NAME OF OBLAST]

    yes commander:yes-honey-left:

    • It's bizarre seeing western news sources trying to spin taking a handful of villages as a great start to the counter offensive. I just read an article that was just some guy coping that Ukraine losing half their Leopard based mine clearing vehicles in one mine field wasn't that big of a deal. I wonder how they'll spin it after it becomes obvious the counteroffensive has done nothing but churn a bunch of dudes into soup

      Edit: leopard based, not abrams

      • Reminds me of a joke soldiers were telling during the Battle of Stalingrad:

        Today our troops captured a two-room apartment with kitchen, toilet, and bathroom. They have succeeded in retaining two-thirds of it despite fierce counterattacks by the enemy.

  • We have joked about Ukraine sneaking around the back of Russian lines, or attacking at night when Russians are asleep, but that begs the question: why hasn’t Russia tried attacking when Americans are asleep?

  • 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.

  • ❗️The Ministry of Justice of the Russian Federation began checking the "Yeltsin Center" in Yekaterinburg for foreign agent activities, according to Deputy Minister of Justice Oleg Sviridenko.

    The center was opened in 2015 for the preservation, study and public presentation of the heritage of the first President of the Russian Federation "in the context of the recent history of the Fatherland, the development of democratic institutions and the rule of law" - according to Wikipedia

  • The wildcat strike at the Danish state railways' workshops has ended after workers were fined by the labour arbitration board. Although no official statement was made by the state railways, unions expects them to reach out to them in order to resume good faith negotiations on salaries.

    Edit: There are reports that the workers will give the state railways a deadline for when negotiations has to be resumed.

  • President Maduro: Trump Confessed Crime Against Venezuela

    "...the purpose of his administration and all the aggression and sanctions against Venezuela was to make the Venezuelan society collapse..."

    On Monday, after the signing of agreements with his Iranian counterpart, President Nicolás Maduro, during his statement, referred to the recent statements of former President Donald Trump where he acknowledged that the sanctions imposed on Venezuela sought to seize the wealth and Venezuelan oil.

    “There have been many campaigns against Venezuela, two days ago, former President of the United States, Donald Trump declared his crime, a crime against humanity, against the people of Venezuela; he declared that the purpose of his administration and all the aggression and sanctions against Venezuela was to make the Venezuelan society collapse so that the imperialist power of the United States were able to appropriate our oil and our wealth.”

    “A good lawyer would say: by confession of the parties, a change of power is due,” Maduro added.

    “Trump has confessed his guilt in the crime against humanity and the noble and peaceful people of Venezuela,” Maduro stated.

    I had a pleasant and important bilateral working meeting with Seyed Ebrahim Raisi, President of the Islamic Republic of Iran. The objective is to continue advancing along the path of shared development, cooperation, respect, peace and the well-being of our peoples.

    On Monday, Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi and First Lady Jamileh-Sadat Alamolhoda landed at the Simon Bolivar International Airport, where they were received by Venezuelan Foreign Affairs Minister Yvan Gil.

    During the visit, the two countries signed a memorandum of understanding expanding cooperation in petrochemicals with a view to carrying out joint projects, building on their already-close cooperation in oil.

    "We have decided to increase the cooperation between the two countries," Raisi said through translation in a statement.

  • Big Serge speculates that with the Kakhovka reservoir now essentially turned into a big mud flat, the intention behind the dam bursting - if it was intentionally done, which the jury is still out on - might have been to simplify the amphibious assault on the ZNPP by making it, well, less amphibious. Ukraine initially released a ton of water seemingly to exacerbate the flooding downstream, but is now totally holding it back, leading the reservoir to dry out.

    I think I'm swinging back in the direction of that Ukraine burst the dam. As Big Serge explains, it would make a lot of sense to have this situation be in place if the Ukrainian assault from Orikhiv towards Tokmak had been successful and they were currently setting up shop in the first or second defense lines, because you could do a pincer attack on the ZNPP. The time scale is just lining up too well. I think they're still holding out hope that a breakthrough can be made and are continuing to hold back the water, which correlates well if reports are true that they're amassing forces on the Orikhiv axis once again. But without that breakthrough, they'd have to drive and run across a mud flat - areas with a distinct lack of cover to put it mildly - in the face of dominant Russian artillery and aviation.

    It is a fascinatingly ambitious plan if it did/does work, but then I'm always fascinated when militaries bend and even break the environment to their advantage.

  • Danish rail wildcat strike update: Station attendants and train drivers are back at work after a day of striking. To the surprise of union bureaucrats 600 metalworkers and electricians at the rail workshops continue the strike despite being fined by the labour arbitration board for the "illegal" strike. Workers are striking to protest the state railways' unilateral decision to give a 2.7 percent raise following a breakdown of yearly salary negotiations managed by the union contract and are demanding that the state railways resumes good faith negotiations with unions.

    The state railways continue to refuse negotiations, opting to pearl-clutch over "the Danish model" and over the strike being "illegal" instead. When asked whether dictating the pay instead of negotiating it with unions as specified in the contract is respecting the Danish model, the state railways' spokesperson gives this weasely response:

    We're willing to have a dialogue with our colleagues at the workshops but not under or in immediate extension of illegal work stoppages.

    Passenger services on mainlines are expected to be affected for days to come.

    Edit:

    Currently 58 of 96 trainsets are standing still as they cannot receive necessary inspections and maintenance to be operated safely. Three more are expected to be out of service by the end of today. On a normal day the state railways operates 84 trainsets.

  • Medvedev is talking big game again. This time about cutting communications cables in retaliation for Nordstream.

    🇷🇺🇺🇦 Dmitry Medvedev believes that the time has come for the West to pay for undermining the Nord Stream

    “If we proceed from the proven complicity of Western countries in undermining the Nord Streams, then we have no, even moral, restrictions left to refrain from destroying the cable communications of our enemies, laid along the ocean floor .”

  • The Swedish NATO shenanigans goes on:

    🇺🇸 🇭🇺 US blocked HIMARS sale for Hungary

    The sale of the $735 million stake was blocked by the top Republican on the US Committee on Foreign Relations, Senator James E. Rish.

    ✅ He stated that Hungary must support Sweden's entry into NATO in order to obtain weapons. The package includes 24 batteries of HIMARS rocket launchers, as well as over 100 missiles.

    Democracy in action: if you don't look into the hegemon's mouth, you end up in the camp of enemies 🤷

  • The evil empire does not, in fact, want to unleash a nuclear apocalypse by officially expanding NATO into Ukraine.

    ⚡️🇺🇦🇫🇲 The Guardian: Ukraine will not receive an algorithm for joining NATO at the summit in Vilnius

    Instead of a specific plan, Kiev will receive promises of a "shorter route" to the alliance.

    NATO members who are not part of official structures will offer some kind of security guarantees to Kiev. They will promise to continue to supply ammunition and help Ukraine move closer to NATO.

    🇺🇸 In the meantime, the United States is discussing a program of military support for Kiev according to the “Israeli model”.

  • A wildcat strike among repair workers and station attendants at the Danish state railways has severely affected passenger rail operations in the country. Workers are striking following a breakdown in yearly salary negotiations between the state railways and unions, leading to an unilateral decision by management to give a 2.7 percent raise including pension. Last year inflation was 11 percent.

    Workers point out that workers doing similar work at other rail operators are paid more, that the state railways are already having trouble recruiting workers, that the workers in question has had their responsibilities increased and that workers doing similar tasks are getting paid more by other rail operators.

    Relations between management and labour has been fraught since the state railways cancelled existing contracts in 2017 and joined the Confederation of Danish Industry, leading to new negotiations resulting in worse contracts.

    The strike has been labelled "illegal" by the labour arbitration board and striking workers will be fined DKK 80 (USD 11.59) each for every hour they strike. Harsher penalties can be used if workers continue striking. As the strike is "illegal", official union bureaucracy are not supporting the strike, rather they are calling for workers to go back to work.

    The state railways are refusing to negotiate with workers, claiming that they are "not in the middle of contract negotiations" and claiming that they "obviously can't negotiate" since the strike is "illegal".

    Freight rail operations were privatised in 2000 and are not affected, nor are passenger rail operations on privatized branch lines.

  • Warning for huge amounts of copium, with thankfully one or two realistic comments and people seeing the light

    https://lemmy.ml/post/1215755

    I understand this is a positive news in the first week of the counter offensive, but to me - it makes me feel depressed.

    It makes me look at the size of Ukraine and the occupied areas. There are thousands or probably ten thousands of occupied settlements and villages. Reporting 5 of e.g. 18.000 liberated… it is positive, it is a news, it makes me depressed looking at the scaled of what lies ahead in this war to get Russia out of Ukraine.

    30 upvotes

    Finally someone that lives in the real world, and liberals recognising reality. Maybe the tide is turning? Though there are still a ton of pie in the sky pro Ukraine comments.

704 comments