
Behind the Bastards Part Five: The Men Who Might Have Killed Us All
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Dec 11, 2025 Margaret Killjoy, a writer and cultural commentator, joins the discussion on the chilling realities of nuclear command-and-control systems. They explore the Minuteman launch paradox and how technical faults could accidentally trigger mass launches. Automation’s role in early launches and the morally abhorrent plans for civilian targets spark intense debate. Despite bureaucratic silence, voices like General Shoup’s challenge the status quo. As discussions turn to AI and crisis pressures for presidents, the looming threat of nuclear mishaps hangs in the air.
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Rubel's Campaign To Fix Doomsday Flaws
- Rubel spent years pushing the Air Force and DoD to fix launch-control flaws and was stonewalled repeatedly.
- His efforts triggered a 1960s commission that forced costly retrofits before silos went active in 1961.
Simple Power Glitches Could Trigger Apocalypse
- The Minuteman's electronic pulse gates could advance counts from simple power blips, creating accidental launches.
- Engineers found power outages or zero-minute timers could effectively automate a squadron's firing.
SIOP-62 Mapped Mass Civilian Deaths
- The first Single Integrated Operational Plan (SIOP-62) mapped strikes that deliberately targeted hundreds of millions of civilians.
- Rubel attended presentations where planners casually plotted killing 300 million Chinese and other mass-casualty scenarios.








