The Biden administration is urging U.S. citizens in Belarus to depart the country immediately and warned against travel there in a statement published Monday.

The updated travel warning comes after bordering countries Lithuania, Latvia and Poland have stepped up security along the border over concerns about Russian Wagner mercenary forces exiled in the country.

The State Department, in its warning, encouraged Americans still in Belarus to depart the country immediately and categorized the country as a Level 4 risk, the highest security warning.

  • @blue_zephyr
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    1 year ago

    I have nuke fatigue. I can’t be bothered to be afraid of them. Go ahead and throw them, whoever was brazen enough to do so will have their country wiped from the face of the earth faster than you can say “Enola Gay”. There’s no one self-destructive enough to seriously consider pushing that button.

    And even if there was, it’s not like I’m going to change their mind. Just sit back and enjoy the mushroom clouds.

    • Buelldozer
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      171 year ago

      I have nuke fatigue. I can’t be bothered to be afraid of them.

      Me as a GenX looking over at you… “First time?”

      • @Isthisreddit
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        51 year ago

        Boomers got you beat for sure, anyone that lived through the cold war.

        I also suspect many people don’t truly appreciate just how devastating a nuke is - in the sense that hearing “blah blah destruction, mushroom cloud” a hundred times over seems to numb people to the concept. I did a deep dive into nuclear blast videos some time ago, just watching how destructive they are really made me realize I was one of these people who knew, but didn’t really “know”

        • BOMBS
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          31 year ago

          i did a 2-3 week-long dive into nukes. if one is dropped on my city, i want to be at ground zero. very few people understand how devastating they are and no country on Earth is prepared for the ensuing crisis.

        • Buelldozer
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          1 year ago

          I also suspect many people don’t truly appreciate just how devastating a nuke is

          I spent more than 20 years living with the Cold War. I grew up next to Strategic Air Command, did the C.A.P. thing in the '80s, then did further NBC training as I got older. I’ve been on bases and in bunkers all over the place, including the one that Bush Jr hunkered in on 9/11. (Although not the Presidential Level.)

          What I learned is that they have immense destruction of their immediate area. Depending on event factors though it’s quite possible to survive one going off in the next town over. The mega-bitch is the societal collapse that follows a nuclear exchange; most people will die from lack of food, water, necessary medications and diseases that were previously preventable.

          Peons like us don’t get a choice in whether it happens or not, so there’s no point in worrying about it.

    • @Philolurker
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      131 year ago

      “How I stopped worrying and learned to love the bomb.”

      • @Aliendelarge
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        1 year ago

        Well, now I’m worried about the mineshaft gap.

    • @thelongshot93
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      61 year ago

      I hate that this is where I’m at in life too. Hell, at least the mushroom cloud would be a quick death if you’re close enough! Better than dying in the Water Wars or Mother Nature saying we fucked up.