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Beyond Nuclear Denial

Posted: 07/09/2012 10:22 am

How a World-Ending Weapon Disappeared From Our Lives, But Not Our World

Cross-posted with TomDispatch.com.

There was a time when nuclear weapons were a significant part of our national conversation.  Addressing the issue of potential atomic annihilation was once described by nuclear theorist Herman Kahn as “thinking about the unthinkable,” but that didn’t keep us from thinking, talking, fantasizing, worrying about it, or putting images of possible nuclear nightmares (often transmuted to invading aliens or outer space) endlessly on screen.

Now, on a planet still overstocked with city-busting, world-ending weaponry, in which almost 67 years have passed since a nuclear weapon was last used, the only nuke that Americans regularly hear about is one that doesn’t exist: Iran’s. The nearly 20,000 nuclear weapons on missiles, planes, and submarines possessed by Russia, the United States, France, the United Kingdom, China, Israel, Pakistan, India, and North Korea are barely mentioned in what passes for press coverage of the nuclear issue.

Today, nuclear destruction finds itself at the end of a long queue of anxieties about our planet and its fate.  For some reason, we trust ourselves, our allies, and even our former enemies with nuclear arms -- evidently so deeply that we don’t seem to think the staggering arsenals filled with weaponry that could put the devastation of Hiroshima to shame are worth covering or dealing with.  Even the disaster at Fukushima last year didn’t revive an interest in the weaponry that goes with the “peaceful” atom in our world.

Attending to the Bomb in a MAD World

Our views of the nuclear issue haven’t always been so shortsighted. In the 1950s, editor and essayist Norman Cousins was typical in frequently tackling nuclear weapons issues for the widely read magazine Saturday Review.  In the late 1950s and beyond, the Ban the Bomb movement forced the nuclear weapons issue onto the global agenda, gaining international attention when it was revealed that Strontium-90, a byproduct of nuclear testing, was making its way into mothers’ breast milk.  In those years, the nuclear issue became personal as well as political.

In the early 1960s, President John F. Kennedy responded to public pressure by signing a treaty with Russia that banned atmospheric nuclear testing (and so further Strontium-90 fallout).  He also gave a dramatic speech to the United Nations in which he spoke of the nuclear arms race as a “sword of Damocles” hanging over the human race, poised to destroy us at any moment. 

Popular films like Fail-Safe and Dr. Strangelove captured both the dangers and the absurdity of the superpower arms race.  And when, on the night of October 22, 1962, Kennedy took to the airwaves to warn the American people that a Cuban missile crisis was underway, that it was nuclear in nature, that a Soviet nuclear attack and a “full retaliatory strike on the Soviet Union” were possibilities -- arguably the closest we have come to a global nuclear war -- it certainly got everyone’s attention.

All things nuclear receded from public consciousness as the Vietnam War escalated and became the focus of antiwar activism and debate, but the nuclear issue came back with a vengeance in the Reagan years of the early 1980s when superpower confrontations once again were in the headlines.  A growing anti-nuclear movement first focused on a near-disaster at the Three Mile Island nuclear plant in Pennsylvania (the Fukushima of its moment) and then on the superpower nuclear stand-off that went by the name of “mutually assured destruction” or, appropriately enough, the acronym MAD.

The Nuclear Freeze Campaign generated scores of anti-nuclear resolutions in cities and towns around the country, and in June 1982, a record-breaking million people gathered in New York City’s Central Park to call for nuclear disarmament.  If anyone managed to miss this historic outpouring of anti-nuclear sentiment, ABC news aired a prime-time, made-for-TV movie, The Day After, that offered a remarkably graphic depiction of the missiles leaving their silos and the devastating consequences of a nuclear war.  It riveted a nation.

The collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of that planetary superpower rivalry less than a decade later took nuclear weapons out of the news.  After all, with the Cold War over and no other rivals to the United States, who needed such weaponry or a MAD world either?  The only problem was that the global nuclear landscape was left more or less intact, mission-less but largely untouched (with the proliferation of the weapons to other countries ongoing).  Unacknowledged as it may be, in some sense MAD still exists, even if we prefer to pretend that it doesn’t.

A MAD World That No One Cares to Notice

More than 20 years later, the only nuclear issue considered worth the bother is stopping the spread of the bomb to a couple of admittedly scary and problematic regimes: Iran and North Korea.  Their nuclear efforts make the news regularly and garner attention (to the point of obsession) in media and government circles.  But remind me: when was the last time you read about what should be the ultimate (and obvious) goal -- getting rid of nuclear weapons altogether?

This has been our reality, despite President Obama’s pledge in Prague back in 2009 to seek “the peace and security of a world without nuclear weapons,” and the passage of a modest but important New START arms reduction treaty between the United States and Russia in 2010.  It remains our reality, despite a dawning realization in budget-anxious Washington that we may no longer be able to afford to throw money (as presently planned) at nuclear projects ranging from new ballistic-missile submarines to new facilities for building nuclear warhead components -- all of which are slated to keep the secret global nuclear arms race alive and well decades into the future.

If Iran is worth talking about -- and it is, given the implications of an Iranian bomb for further nuclear proliferation in the Middle East -- what about the arsenals of the actual nuclear states? What about Pakistan, a destabilizing country which has at least 110 nuclear warheads and counting, and continues to view India as its primary adversary despite U.S. efforts to get it to focus on al-Qaeda and the Taliban?  What about India’s roughly 100 nuclear warheads, meant to send a message not just to Pakistan but to neighboring China as well?  And will China hold pat at 240 or so nuclear weapons in the face of U.S. nuclear modernization efforts and plans to surround it with missile defense systems that could, in theory if not practice, blunt China’s nuclear deterrent force? 

Will Israel continue to get a free pass on its officially unacknowledged possession of up to 200 nuclear warheads and its refusal to join the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty?  Who are France and the United Kingdom targeting with their forces of 300 and 225 nuclear warheads, respectively?  How long will it take North Korea to develop miniaturized nuclear bombs and deploy them on workable, long-range missiles?  And is New START the beginning or the end of mutual U.S. and Russian arms reductions?

Many of these questions are far more important than whether Iran gets the bomb, but they get, at best, only a tiny fraction of the attention that Tehran’s nuclear program is receiving.  Concern about Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal and a fear of loose nukes in a destabilizing country is certainly part of the subtext of U.S. policy towards Islamabad.  Little effort has been made of late, however, to encourage Pakistan and India to engage in talks aimed at reconciling their differences and opening the way for discussions on reducing their nuclear arsenals.

The last serious effort -- centered on the contentious issue of Kashmir -- reached its high point in 2007 under the regime of Pakistani autocrat Pervez Musharraf, and it went awry in the wake of political changes within his country and Pakistani-backed terrorist attacks on India.  If anything, the tensions now being generated by U.S. drone strikes in Pakistan’s tribal borderlands and other affronts, intended or not, to Pakistan’s sovereignty have undermined any possibility of Washington brokering a rapprochement between Pakistan and India.

In addition, starting in the Bush years, the U.S. has been selling India nuclear fuel and equipment.  This has been part of a controversial agreement that violates prior U.S. commitments to forgo nuclear trade with any nation that has refused to join the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (a pact India has not signed).  Although U.S. assistance is nominally directed towards India’s civilian nuclear program, it helps free up resources that India can use to expand its nuclear weapons arsenal.

The “tilt” towards India that began during the Bush administration has continued under Obama.  Only recently, for instance, a State Department official bragged about U.S. progress in selling advanced weaponry to New Delhi.  Meanwhile, F-16s that Washington supplied to the Pakistani military back in the heyday of the U.S.-Pakistan alliance may have already been adapted to serve as nuclear delivery vehicles in the event of a nuclear confrontation with India.

China has long adhered to a de facto policy of minimum deterrence -- keeping just enough nuclear weapons to dissuade another nation from attacking it with nuclear arms.  But this posture has not prevented Beijing from seeking to improve the quality of its long-range ballistic missiles.  And if China feels threatened by continued targeting by the United States or by sea-based American interceptors deployed to the region, it could easily increase its arsenal to ensure the “safety” of its deterrent.  Beijing will also be keeping a watchful eye on India as its nuclear stockpile continues to grow.

Ever since Ronald Reagan -- egged on by mad scientists like Edward Teller and right-wing zealots like Lt. Gen. Daniel O. Graham -- pledged to build a perfect anti-nuclear shield that would render nuclear weapons “impotent and obsolete,” missile defense has had a powerful domestic constituency in the United States.  This has been the case despite the huge cost and high-profile failures of various iterations of the missile defense concept.

The only concrete achievement of three decades of missile defense research and development so far has been to make Russia suspicious of U.S. intentions.  Even now, rightly or not, Russia is extremely concerned about the planned installation of U.S. missile defenses in Europe that Washington insists will be focused on future Iranian nuclear weapons.  Moscow feels that they could just as easily be turned on Russia.  If President Obama wins a second term, he will undoubtedly hope to finesse this issue and open the door to further joint reductions in nuclear forces, or possibly even consider reducing this country’s nuclear arsenal significantly, whether or not Russia initially goes along.

Recent bellicose rhetoric from Moscow underscores its sensitivity to the missile defense issue, which may yet scuttle any plans for serious nuclear negotiations.  Given that the U.S. and Russia together possess more than 90% of the world’s nuclear weapons, an impasse between the two nuclear superpowers (even if they are not “super” in other respects) will undercut any leverage they might have to encourage other nations to embark on a path leading to global nuclear reductions.

In his 1960s ode to nuclear proliferation, “Who’s Next,” Tom Lehrer included the line “Israel’s getting tense, wants one in self-defense.”  In fact, Israel was the first -- and for now the only -- Middle Eastern nation to get the bomb, with reports that it can deliver a nuclear warhead not only from land-based missiles but also via cruise missiles launched from nuclear submarines.  Whatever it may say about Israel’s technical capabilities in the military field, Israel’s nuclear arsenal may also be undermining its defense, particularly if it helps spur Iran to build its own nukes.  And irresponsible talk by some Israeli officials about attacking Iran only increases the chance that Tehran will decide to go nuclear.

It is hard to handicap the grim, “unthinkable” but hardly inconceivable prospect that August 9, 1945, will not prove to be the last time that nuclear weapons are used on this planet.  Perhaps some of the loose nuclear materials or inadequately guarded nuclear weapons littering the globe -- particularly, but not solely, in the states of the former Soviet Union -- might fall into the hands of a terrorist group.  Perhaps an Islamic fundamentalist government will seize power in Pakistan and go a step too far in nuclear brinkmanship with India over Kashmir.  Maybe the Israeli leadership will strike out at Iran with nuclear weapons in an effort to keep Tehran from going nuclear.  Maybe there will be a miscommunication or false alarm that will result in the United States or Russia launching one of their nuclear weapons that are still in Cold War-style, hair-trigger mode.

Although none of these scenarios, including a terrorist nuclear attack, may be as likely as nuclear alarmists sometimes suggest, as long as the world remains massively stocked with nuclear weapons, one of them -- or some other scenario yet to be imagined -- is always possible.  The notion that Iran can’t be trusted with such a weapon obscures a larger point: given their power to destroy life on a monumental scale, no individual and no government can ultimately be trusted with the bomb.

The only way to be safe from nuclear weapons is to get rid of them -- not just the Iranian one that doesn’t yet exist, but all of them.  It’s a daunting task.  It’s also a subject that’s out of the news and off anyone’s agenda at the moment, but if it is ever to be achieved, we at least need to start talking about it. Soon.

William D. Hartung is the director of the Arms and Security Project at the Center for International Policy, a TomDispatch regular, and the author of Prophets of War: Lockheed Martin and the Making of the Military-Industrial Complex. (To catch Timothy MacBain's latest Tomcast audio interview in which Hartung discusses the upside-down world of global nuclear politics, click here or download it to your iPod here.)

Follow TomDispatch on Twitter @TomDispatch and join us on Facebook, and check out the latest TD book, Terminator Planet: The First History of Drone Warfare, 2001-2050.

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How a World-Ending Weapon Disappeared From Our Lives, But Not Our World Cross-posted with TomDispatch.com. There was a time when nuclear weapons were a significant part of our national conversatio...
How a World-Ending Weapon Disappeared From Our Lives, But Not Our World Cross-posted with TomDispatch.com. There was a time when nuclear weapons were a significant part of our national conversatio...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Harley 2
05:08 AM on 07/14/2012
Oh, here is the official link to Nuke Pro which has real contractor quotes on solar, and energy calculations from a Certified Energy Manager showing solar at 3 cents per kWH.

What more do you need to know to put a nail in the coffin of nuke?

http://nukeprofessional.blogspot.com/p/renewable-and-energy-efficiency.html
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Harley 2
05:05 AM on 07/14/2012
The nuke power industry and the nuke bomb industry are linked in an incestuous manner to the industrial/political cartel that profits from nuke.

Lets get rid of the nuke power industry, solar is SO much cheaper, solar is now 3 cents
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dsws
No owning ideas. Limit only commercial use.
06:20 AM on 07/10/2012
To get rid of nuclear weapons, we need to get rid of the global order in which nation-states face each other in a Hobbesian "state of nature". We need a basis for peace within countries and regions, other than rivalry with (and fear of) an external common enemy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alientotech
Twilight Zoning on "Bermuda Grass"
12:08 AM on 07/10/2012
so ya were the mole in irans nuke plant, i musta missed ya
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
niumarmion
a temporary being
09:29 PM on 07/09/2012
"China has long adhered to a de facto policy of minimum deterrence -- keeping just enough nuclear weapons to dissuade another nation from attacking it with nuclear arms."

A reasonable policy which is a significant reason that their economy is doing so well.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Atoms4Peace1
Applying the atom peacefully since 1978
05:16 PM on 07/10/2012
I believe that is where everyone is headed.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Harley 2
11:25 PM on 07/13/2012
Most of that doing so well is an illusion waiting for a massive bubble burst.
08:51 PM on 07/09/2012
Nuclear power is something we don't need in our world especially when it takes only one idiot to set one off when they shouldn't have,bye world.
09:22 PM on 07/09/2012
you're somewhat mistaken. nuclear weapons we can do without. nuclear power is a different story. the sad fact though is that the genie is out of the bottle. just like hand guns, you will never be able to get rid of them all, and as long as someone else has one, there will be others that say the need to have one too
10:37 PM on 07/09/2012
Yes I agree all weapons are some thing we don't need an now we can't get rid of them
10:33 PM on 07/09/2012
Yes it is like having gun's too everyone wants one I agree we don't need them even if others think it's the only way they will get what they want.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
deminmo
just looking for answers
08:17 PM on 07/09/2012
The stockpile that we Russia, China, Pakistan, India and Israel have is
probably more dangerous because its so old than because it can mutually
destroy us.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Atoms4Peace1
Applying the atom peacefully since 1978
05:18 PM on 07/10/2012
That is why its important to refurbish the stockpile to ensure those products are reliable enough to act as a deterrent. If a country A knew that country B's stockpile was unreliable, they would have a security advantage.
ThatsTheTheWayItIs
religion, ideology, partisanship are delusional
03:19 PM on 07/09/2012
To understand the fear we Boomers grew up with, see the excellent documentary movie "Sputnik Mania". It's about the nuke race, started by the space race which created ICBMs.  Duck-and-cover, the Cuban missile crisis - all in "Sputnik Mania", like a bad flashback.

Example: in one year (1961?) the US and Soviets combined tested an H-bomb above ground an average of every two days. We Boomers drank milk full of radioactive iodine, from fallout. The Soviets tested a 100MT bomb. If dropped on NYC, everyone from there to Boston would be dead in a month - from one bomb. See the movie.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Atoms4Peace1
Applying the atom peacefully since 1978
05:19 PM on 07/10/2012
Yet we Boomers are still here. Even with Cs137 and Sr90 in the atmosphere. Kind of makes you wonder why all these antinuclear activists are saying the sky is falling due to a little thing called Fukushima, which is a blip on the radar of radiation.
11:01 PM on 07/10/2012
I've got some Cs137 and Sr90 fuzed in green glass. It's the first of it's kind. I traded a couple of the pieces to someone from INL for a piece of CP-1 graphite.
01:24 PM on 07/09/2012
"will China hold pat at 240 or so nuclear weapons in the face of U.S. nuclear modernization efforts and plans to surround it with missile defense systems that could, in theory if not practice, blunt China’s nuclear deterrent force? "
The Safeguard ABM system of the '70s, dismantled many years ago, defended the ICBM bases in middle America. The systems currently being developed & deployed protect cities. The missiles are in such small numbers that they could be overwhelmed by Chinese ICBMs, let alone the far more numerous Russian weapons.
2 broad principles from the Cold War still apply. 1 is that existing nuclear weapons arsenals might appear to be expensive, but are far less so than manning, maintaining & modernizing large non-nuclear forces. The other is that diplomacy has it's limits. Look at the lack of progress toward reversing global warming.
11:56 AM on 07/09/2012
Neocon lies about nuclear threats first on Iraq and now Iran should not be the only time the topic is raised.

Israel and China having nearly the same number of these weapons is a travesty with China more than a thousand times larger and more populous.

The corporate lobbying effort spending more than 100 million dollars to revive nuclear power despite risk and cost should not be determining policy.

The best and only moral approach for America and those concerned about proliferation is to phase out nuclear power AND weapons. Encouraging nuclear power while damning weapons is hypocritical nonsense.
02:22 PM on 07/09/2012
Nuclear power does not mean only uranium or plutonium reactors. Just so you know.

Incidentally, do you have a plan to replace the power generated by the reactors you want to shut down?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Harley 2
05:10 AM on 07/14/2012
Solar at 3 cents per kWH
Proof from the Nuke Pro is here

http://nukeprofessional.blogspot.com/p/renewable-and-energy-efficiency.html
ThatsTheTheWayItIs
religion, ideology, partisanship are delusional
03:22 PM on 07/09/2012
China is a far more power nuke power than Israel. Even Britain and France have more nuke power than Israel, who "only" has 1 MT yield H-bombs. And no real ability to deliver them far.

Great point on the nuclear power. If we renounce "peaceful" nuclear power, Iran would no longer have an excuse.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:41 AM on 07/09/2012
After spending nearly a decade in a place where every reason for being there turned out to be false, we're rapidly doing it again. Only this time, the new place is three times bigger than its neighbor, has a much bigger and richer industrial base, ans is located in far more hostile geography. And few are yelling, "Stop!"

The US Senate has already passed a resolution endorsing armed conflict in Iran. All in the name of preventing developments which cannot be halted from outside. If North Korea can develop both nuclear weapons and delivery missiles, what makes anyone think that they prevent Iran from doing the same?

Is it ignorance or stupidity? Or just plain arrogance? Regardless, it promises to keep us at war with one of the sources of the world's oil for another decade. Won't that help us right our economy?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joffan
Time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so.
09:10 AM on 07/10/2012
The irrational attitude towards Iran is a symptom of "believing your own propaganda", a very dangerous mindset, especially for governments.
11:38 AM on 07/09/2012
Nuclear weapons have saved more lives than any invention in human history, except perhaps electricity and penicillin.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joffan
Time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so.
09:05 AM on 07/10/2012
Proper sewage treatment is also high on the list.
04:33 PM on 07/10/2012
Pasteurization? Vaccinations? Agriculture? Soap?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Atoms4Peace1
Applying the atom peacefully since 1978
10:51 PM on 07/10/2012
Nuclear weapons have saved billions of lives.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Briteleaf
11:25 AM on 07/09/2012
When a person's reaction to a perceived danger is life threatening while the the subject of the danger is not, they are diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic. Our specie is exactly that. The risk of nuclear devastation of the planet is far more serious that the threat the weapons are built to avoid.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Harley 2
05:12 AM on 07/14/2012
Well said. Ego, arrogance, ignorance, and denial. Put down the crack pipe (nuke)
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fredrdr
Let us dare to read, think, speak and write.
11:23 AM on 07/09/2012
The fact that nuclear weapons have been in existance since 1945 and have been used only twice, we have been very, very, lucky. It is very expensive to develope and maintain a nuclear strike force. It is only common scense that a way to eliminte them must be found.
ThatsTheTheWayItIs
religion, ideology, partisanship are delusional
03:23 PM on 07/09/2012
The nuclear strike force is cheaper to maintain, than to fight major wars that the nukes mostly prevent.
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fredrdr
Let us dare to read, think, speak and write.
04:27 PM on 07/09/2012
The Pentagon estimates war are going to be more frequent, more violent.  As for nucs, they hemmorage money.  Been there, done that.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dsws
No owning ideas. Limit only commercial use.
06:24 AM on 07/10/2012
Cheaper up front, yes. The real cost comes when the policy eventually fails.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
warmonkey
11:14 AM on 07/09/2012
"Will Israel continue to get a free pass on its officially unacknowledged possession of up to 200 nuclear warheads and its refusal to join the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty?"

Yes , of course they will- all the while crying foul if another nation would like to get some nuclear weapons of their own- even though there is no proof that Iran is making a nuclear weapon- Israel lobbies for war with them and threatens to attack them at the THOUGHT! What Hypocrites.
02:15 PM on 07/09/2012
Iran has threatened many times to destroy Israel. In public. With the mullahs nodding in agreement.

It would only take 2 or 3 nuclear explosions to utterly destroy Israel. Of course they have bombs...to convince anyone of the certain retaliation from nuking of Israel.

A pity those Jews won't just lie down and die quietly and stop bothering us. A darn shame.
09:36 PM on 07/09/2012
Not true! The western media has framed Iran's stance against Israel in the way you describe. However, Iran simply wants the state of Israel to be removed from the wolrd map- in the same way that the USSR is no longer on a world map. It does not recognize the legitimacy of the created state of Israel. The grossly manipulated translation of that stance to one of wanting to DESTROY Israel and all its inhabitants is being done in order to justify an attack on Iran. As Cheney said: The main goal of attacking Iraq was to be in a better position to capture the 'crown jewel' = Iran.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
warmonkey
10:27 PM on 07/09/2012
"Of course they have bombs...to convince anyone of the certain retaliation from nuking of Israel"
Well, it seems that it is only convincing Israels neighbors that they need some as well , for the same reason.....
So you don't see it as provocative at all for a Nation to possess nuclear weapons , which they do not acknowledge , and which are not inspected- and in addition to refuse to join the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty?
Israel doing this is ok, but Iran doing this ,[which they have NOT], would NOT be ok?
Israel is not my Country- the United States of America is my country. We declare our nuclear arsenal - and ALL others Nations should as well.......
''A pity those Jews won't just lie down and die quietly and stop bothering us. A darn shame". This is a shameful obfuscation of the issue. What are you trying to say here?