This morning, I read about how close we came to total destruction during the Cuban missile crisis, where we randomly survived because some Russian planes were inaccurate and also separately several Russian nuclear sub commanders didn’t launch their missiles even though they were being harassed by US destroyers. The men were in 130 DEGREE HEAT for hours and passing out due to carbon dioxide poisoning, and still somehow they had enough restraint to not hit back.
And and
I just started crying. I am so grateful to those people. And to Khrushchev, for ridiculing his party members for caring about Russia’s honor over the deaths of 500 million people. and Kennedy for being fairly careful and averse to ending the world.
This morning, I read about how close we came to total destruction during the Cuban missile crisis, where we randomly survived because some Russian planes were inaccurate and also separately several Russian nuclear sub commanders didn’t launch their missiles even though they were being harassed by US destroyers. The men were in 130 DEGREE HEAT for hours and passing out due to carbon dioxide poisoning, and still somehow they had enough restraint to not hit back.
And and
I just started crying. I am so grateful to those people. And to Khrushchev, for ridiculing his party members for caring about Russia’s honor over the deaths of 500 million people. and Kennedy for being fairly careful and averse to ending the world.
If they had done anything differently...
Do you think we can infer from this (and the history of other close calls) that most human history timelines end in nuclear war?
I lean not, mostly because of arguments that nuclear war doesn’t actually cause extinction (although it might still have some impact on number-of-observers-in-our-era? Not sure how to think about that)