• Biden's Legacy: Nuclear Bunker Sales Go Through the Roof

    From John Smyth@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 29 19:24:50 2024
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.republicans, talk.politics.guns

    'Biden’s Legacy: Nuclear Bunker Sales Go Through the Roof, Despite
    Expert Warnings'

    <https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2024/12/bidens-legacy-nuclear-bunker-sales-go-roof-despite/>

    'The world has gotten much less safe over the last four years,
    particularly under the purview of President Joe Biden.

    And that’s not just rhetoric.

    There are some cold, hard sales numbers to back that up.

    An ominous report from the Associated Press revealed that nuclear bunker shelter sales are going through the roof.


    “The world’s not becoming a safer place,” Californian Bernard Jones Jr. told the AP. “We wanted to be prepared.”

    Jones and his wife “built their dream home” not too long ago, that
    included a number of amenities the couple always wanted.

    And one they probably didn’t.

    “Under a nondescript metal hatch near the private basketball court,
    there’s a hidden staircase that leads down into rooms with beds for
    about 25 people, bathrooms, and two kitchens, all backed by a
    self-sufficient energy source,” the AP noted.

    The outlet added: “With water, electricity, clean air and food, they
    felt ready for any disaster, even a nuclear blast.”



    “If there was a nuclear strike, would you rather go into the living room
    or go into a bunker? If you had one, you’d go there, too,” Jones
    explained.

    (He no longer lives at that “dream home.”)

    “Global security leaders are warning nuclear threats are growing as
    weapons spending surged to $91.4 billion last year,” the AP reported.
    “At the same time, private bunker sales are on the rise globally, from
    small metal boxes to crawl inside of to extravagant underground
    mansions.”

    Citing market research, the AP noted that “buyers say bunkers offer a
    sense of security. The market for U.S. bomb and fallout shelters is
    forecast to grow from $137 million last year to $175 million by 2030.”

    “People are uneasy, and they want a safe place to put their family,”
    Atlas Survival Shelters CEO Ron Hubbard told the AP. “And they have this attitude that it’s better to have it and not need it then to need it and
    not have it.”

    But do people actually “need it”? Experts are a bit more mixed on the efficacy of this booming industry.

    The AP explained, “Critics warn these bunkers create a false perception
    that a nuclear war is survivable. They argue that people planning to
    live through an atomic blast aren’t focusing on the real and current
    dangers posed by nuclear threats and the critical need to stop the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.

    “Meanwhile, government disaster experts say bunkers aren’t necessary. A Federal Emergency Management Agency 100-page guidance on responding to a nuclear detonation focuses on having the public get inside and stay
    inside, ideally in a basement and away from outside walls for at least a
    day. Those existing spaces can provide protection from radioactive
    fallout, says FEMA.”


    Whether or not these bunkers work, the fact that they’re in demand
    currently says a lot about the current state of the world and how its
    covered in the news.


    Americans took notice when Biden approved Ukraine’s use of longer-range missiles in its ongoing conflict with Russia. And that’s not because the Ukrainian attack was particularly effective.

    No, Americans took notice because that Biden approval triggered the
    Russians to all but threaten a nuclear response.

    And that’s to say nothing about whatever it is that Iran, North Korea,
    and China are up to.

    The United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission offers guidance on what
    to do in the event of a nuclear disaster here

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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