YubNub Social YubNub Social
    #democrats #loonylibs #exodermin
    Advanced Search
  • Login
  • Register

  • Day mode
  • © 2026 YubNub Social
    About • Directory • Contact Us • Developers • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • shareasale • FB Webview Detected • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App

    Select Language

  • English
Night mode toggle
Featured Content
Community
New Posts (Home) ChatBox Popular Posts Reels Game Zone Top PodCasts
Explore
Explore
© 2026 YubNub Social
  • English
About • Directory • Contact Us • Developers • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • shareasale • FB Webview Detected • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App
Advertisement
Stop Seeing These Ads

Discover posts

Posts

Users

Pages

Blog

Market

Events

Games

Forum

cloudsandwind
cloudsandwind
29 m ·Youtube

YouTube
I am FED UP with AFRICAN Immigrants INSULTING ME and my HERITAGE !! BITE ME !!
Like
Comment
Share
Heroes In Uniform
Heroes In Uniform
40 m

Here’s what’s actually inside the nuclear football
Favicon 
www.wearethemighty.com

Here’s what’s actually inside the nuclear football

Somewhere near the President of the United States right now, a military aide is carrying a black leather briefcase that could end civilization. He’s not a cabinet member. He’s not a general. He’s a mid-grade officer selected for reliability, discretion, and the ability to keep up with the most powerful person on the planet. He’s with the Leader of the Free World at all times, in any country, under any circumstance.Also Read: These specialized soldiers train to neutralize enemy nuclear weaponsThat briefcase is the Presidential Emergency Satchel, but everyone calls it the “nuclear football.” And the story of how it came to exist is a story about how close we’ve come to blowing everything up and how that almost happened because a president lost a card in his pants pocket.Actually, it all really began because no one had a plan. Not a good one, anyway.When President Dwight D. Eisenhower took office, the United States had nuclear weapons, the Soviet Union had nuclear weapons, and there was no really reliable system for the president to actually use them on short notice. Eisenhower actually delegated the command decision to launch a nuke to military commanders—and even some individual pilots.John F. Kennedy inherited the mess in 1961 and was, not surprisingly, shocked at how many people were able to start a nuclear war. It was Kennedy’s decision to put Permissive Action Links (PAL), locks on all American nuclear weapons, that could only be released with a special code.It was just in time, too. Because in 1962, it was Kennedy’s patience that saw the United States and the Soviet Union through the Cuban Missile Crisis. If military commanders still had the authority to launch a nuclear attack, things might have ended a lot differently. After the crisis, President Kennedy established the means for the U.S. military to know that the president was ordering the strike. Kennedy was the first president to have the Presidential Emergency Satchel follow him everywhere. (National Archives) The Origin of the “Nuclear Football” Nickname The exact origins of the “football” nickname aren’t really known. But in 1965, Associated Press reporter Bob Horton wrote a story about how Kennedy changed the way the president authorizes a nuclear attack. Horton was writing about U.S. Army warrant officer Ira Gearhart.Gearhart “sat outside in the lobby unobtrusively guarding a brown leather briefcase someone had nicknamed the ‘football,'” wrote Horton.Some 40 years later, a 2005 AP report said the nickname came from America’s first nuclear war plan, the Single Integrated Operation Plan (SIOP). The SIOP’s code name was “dropkick.” The concept was that a “football” was necessary to execute “dropkick,” and Smithsonian Magazine attributed it to Kennedy’s Secretary of Defense, Robert McNamara. But it turns out that “dropkick” was actually from the movie “Dr. Strangelove,” and that the real SIOPs were called “dropshot” and “offtackle.” Since “off tackle” is actually a football term, that’s likely its origin. In 1986, Gen. Chester Clifton noted that it was called a football because Army warrant officers handed off their charge to the next person on shift to carry it. But, again, no one knows for sure. Military aides had long called it the nuclear football, and now the American public did, too. What’s Inside the Nuclear Football The exact contents of the nuclear football are classified, but we do know there’s no big red launch button. Sorry, Hollywood. The football is a communications terminal and decision support system, meaning it gives the president options and the tools to execute them, not a single trigger.The centerpiece is called the Black Book: a menu of pre-planned nuclear response options ranging from targeted strikes to full-scale retaliation. These plans aren’t improvised in the moment. Like the SIOP, they were designed by military planners, reviewed through layers of strategic command, and presented as structured choices the president can select under extreme pressure and time constraints.The football also carries secure communication gear linked to the National Military Command Center at the Pentagon, a list of hardened bunkers and emergency relocation sites, and Emergency Broadcast System instructions so the president can address the country if everything goes sideways—and if any broadcast stations are still standing. President Joe Biden about to board Marine One. The military aide at back-center is carrying the nuclear football. (Adam Schulz/The White House) The Biscuit The nuclear football doesn’t work alone. The president also carries a small plastic card called the “biscuit,” which contains the authentication codes to verify that the order is real and coming from the actual commander-in-chief. The president reads those codes to military command centers. They confirm the president’s identity. Then, and only then, does anything happen. Ronald Reagan almost demonstrated why this system exists when John Hinckley shot him outside the Washington Hilton in 1981. Reagan was rushed into emergency surgery, and his biscuit got separated from him in the chaos. Nobody knew where it was. It turned up later in a suit he left at the hospital. Think about that. For a window of time during a presidential assassination attempt, with the country on edge and the world watching, the authentication codes for U.S. nuclear weapons were in a suit jacket. But Reagan wasn’t the first and he certainly wasn’t the last. Jimmy Carter also left his Biscuit in a suit jacket, but he’d sent that jacket to the dry cleaners. Bill Clinton reportedly lost track of his biscuit for months during his two terms. Months. The codes that verify the president’s nuclear authority were… somewhere. The details are still classified, but that one likely kept some people at the Pentagon up at night. The Real Transfer of Power Every four to eight years, at exactly noon on January 20th, the nuclear football changes hands as an incoming president takes the oath of office. The outgoing president’s codes go dark. The incoming president’s codes go live. A new military aide steps forward with a new briefcase. The system is designed so there is never—not for one second—a president without nuclear authority.Even if the outgoing president isn’t present at the inauguration, a military aide stays with him until the moment his codes go dark, then returns to Washington. There are actually three nuclear footballs. The one that travels with the President of the United States, one with the vice president, and one stationed at the White House. If the president is incapacitated, authority transfers immediately. The chain of command doesn’t break. Do We Still Need a Football It’s not 1962 anymore. The Cold War is over. We have encrypted digital networks, satellites, and hardened command infrastructure. Why does a guy still need to walk around the president with a leather briefcase? The answer is redundancy.Redundancy isn’t paranoia, it’s doctrine. If the entire digital command network gets taken out in a first strike, that briefcase and those authentication codes still work. The physical football is the last stop, the thing that functions when nothing else works. More importantly, it’s a reminder. Every time someone sees a military aide trailing behind the president at a NATO summit or boarding Air Force One, it’s a reminder that the United States maintains the ability to end a nuclear conflict on its own terms, anywhere, on a moment’s notice. Don’t Miss the Best of We Are The Mighty • Eisenhower’s ‘Atoms for Peace’ program started Iran’s nuclear program• 32 times when the U.S. military screwed up with nukes• These are 10 of the longest-serving weapons in the US combat arsenal Nuclear Weapons History Here’s what’s actually inside the nuclear football By Daniel Tobias Flint Feature ‘Miss Atomic Bomb’ and America’s obsession with the Atomic Age By Daniel Tobias Flint Feature These specialized soldiers train to neutralize enemy nuclear weapons By Blake Stilwell History These Air Force ‘Rods from God’ could hit with the force of a nuclear weapon By Blake Stilwell History The US plan to nuke its interstate highways into existence By Daniel Tobias Flint The post Here’s what’s actually inside the nuclear football appeared first on We Are The Mighty.
Like
Comment
Share
Red White & True History
Red White & True History
41 m ·Youtube History

YouTube
Deliberate Disaster: The 1938 Yellow River Flood
Like
Comment
Share
Young Conservatives
Young Conservatives
42 m

Cal State Bakersfield Men’s Basketball Coach Allegedly Moonlighted as a Pimp
Favicon 
legalinsurrection.com

Cal State Bakersfield Men’s Basketball Coach Allegedly Moonlighted as a Pimp

"He also was charged with possession of automatic firearms and high-capacity magazines and possession of methamphetamine and marijuana with intent to sell." The post Cal State Bakersfield Men’s Basketball Coach Allegedly Moonlighted as a Pimp first appeared on Le·gal In·sur·rec·tion.
Like
Comment
Share
Nostalgia Machine
Nostalgia Machine
42 m

“Meanwhile Back In The 1999” — 45 Funny Nostalgia Memes You Really Had To Be Alive In The ’80s And ’90s To Get
Favicon 
pleated-jeans.com

“Meanwhile Back In The 1999” — 45 Funny Nostalgia Memes You Really Had To Be Alive In The ’80s And ’90s To Get

The post “Meanwhile Back In The 1999” — 45 Funny Nostalgia Memes You Really Had To Be Alive In The ’80s And ’90s To Get appeared first on Pleated Jeans.
Like
Comment
Share
Sons Of Liberty Media
Sons Of Liberty Media
44 m

G. Edward Griffin: I Warned About This 50 Years Ago – It’s Taking Place Today! (Video)
Favicon 
sonsoflibertymedia.com

G. Edward Griffin: I Warned About This 50 Years Ago – It’s Taking Place Today! (Video)

In 1968, author G. Edward Griffin warned of the agenda of Marxist-Leninists from their own writings. More than 50 years later, he joins me in this episode to remind people of what that agenda is and how it works. Even more fascinating is that he exposes what the two parties are doing to achieve this …
Like
Comment
Share
Clips and Trailers
Clips and Trailers
44 m ·Youtube Cool & Interesting

YouTube
"I have to go pull the heads off people" | Five Nights at Freddy's 2 | CLIP
Like
Comment
Share
Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
44 m

The Disturbing History of "Mary, Mary, Quite Contrary"
Favicon 
www.mentalfloss.com

The Disturbing History of "Mary, Mary, Quite Contrary"

The children's nursery rhyme has been connected to the reign of Queen Mary I—also known as "Bloody Mary."
Like
Comment
Share
Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
45 m News & Oppinion

rumbleBitchute
Mike Adams on War Room: Breaking Down the Truth About AI with Harrison Smith
Like
Comment
Share
Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 h

Cartoon of the Day: Orange Crush
Favicon 
conservativefiringline.com

Cartoon of the Day: Orange Crush

The following article, Cartoon of the Day: Orange Crush, was first published on Conservative Firing Line. Cartoon of the Day: Orange Crush.  A.F. Branco Cartoon – For too long, the Washington, D.C. establishment has kicked the dangerous can down the road, until Trump. WATCH LIVE: Pete Hegseth and Dan Caine Deliver Press Briefing on Day 5 of Operation Epic Fury in Iran – 8 AM ET By Jordan Conradson – The … Continue reading Cartoon of the Day: Orange Crush ...
Like
Comment
Share
Showing 1 out of 112747
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
  • 12
  • 13
  • 14
  • 15
  • 16
  • 17
  • 18
  • 19
  • 20
Advertisement
Stop Seeing These Ads

Edit Offer

Add tier








Select an image
Delete your tier
Are you sure you want to delete this tier?

Reviews

In order to sell your content and posts, start by creating a few packages. Monetization

Pay By Wallet

Payment Alert

You are about to purchase the items, do you want to proceed?

Request a Refund