Corpse Evaporators? ─ Sandhurst Ain't Graduating Their Best
Feb 26, 2022 11:48:45 GMT
been_there likes this
Post by 𝐒𝐜𝐨𝐭𝐭 on Feb 26, 2022 11:48:45 GMT
Wow. Just. Wow.
I got a big kick out of the idiot who says that mobile disinfection incinerators implied that the Russians were intending to commit mass-murder in Ukraine.
Or, to be fair, they were specifically claiming that this meant you could "evaporate" corpses, apparently to hide casualty counts.
And, apart from Holocaust La-La Land, this literally makes no sense.
Furthermore, given that until modern times most wartime deaths were actually caused by disease and infections, it goes to show how clueless most journos really are if they really think that preparations like this would not be normal or necessary, for the Russians or anybody else.
Modern militaries have been greatly concerned with sanitation engineering since nurse Florence Nightingale was gathering statistics that showed soldiers had a greater chance dying in garrison than campaigning in Crimea. Easily ten times the number of soldiers died from typhus, typhoid, cholera and dysentery than from battle wounds.
As far as morale, when it comes to closed-coffin deaths, is a box of ashes really worse than body bags jetting out daily on the cold casket express?
But wait ─ this quote about the mobile "evaporation" ovens is not from some dumb journo. It is from the UK Defence Secretary, Ben Wallace.
And he's a graduate of the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. Wow, they ain't graduating their best anymore!
I got a big kick out of the idiot who says that mobile disinfection incinerators implied that the Russians were intending to commit mass-murder in Ukraine.
Or, to be fair, they were specifically claiming that this meant you could "evaporate" corpses, apparently to hide casualty counts.
And, apart from Holocaust La-La Land, this literally makes no sense.
Furthermore, given that until modern times most wartime deaths were actually caused by disease and infections, it goes to show how clueless most journos really are if they really think that preparations like this would not be normal or necessary, for the Russians or anybody else.
Modern militaries have been greatly concerned with sanitation engineering since nurse Florence Nightingale was gathering statistics that showed soldiers had a greater chance dying in garrison than campaigning in Crimea. Easily ten times the number of soldiers died from typhus, typhoid, cholera and dysentery than from battle wounds.
As far as morale, when it comes to closed-coffin deaths, is a box of ashes really worse than body bags jetting out daily on the cold casket express?
But wait ─ this quote about the mobile "evaporation" ovens is not from some dumb journo. It is from the UK Defence Secretary, Ben Wallace.
And he's a graduate of the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. Wow, they ain't graduating their best anymore!
“If I was a soldier and knew that my generals had so little faith in me that they followed me around the battlefield with a mobile crematorium, or I was the mother or father of a son, potentially deployed into a combat zone, and my government thought that the way to cover up losses was a mobile crematorium, I’d be deeply, deeply worried,” UK Defence Secretary Ben Wallace told the paper.
“It’s a very chilling side effect of how the Russians view their forces,” he said of the footage first posted back in 2013.
nypost.com/2022/02/24/russia-has-mobile-crematoriums-that-evaporate-the-dead-report/
“It’s a very chilling side effect of how the Russians view their forces,” he said of the footage first posted back in 2013.
nypost.com/2022/02/24/russia-has-mobile-crematoriums-that-evaporate-the-dead-report/
