by gg3 » Fri 06 Apr 2007, 08:19:29
Yeah, here's the nanoweapon of the future.
When I started to write this posting, I wrote out some technical details, then edited them twice, and then decided to take them out entirely. So now we'll start from a different point with a different story.
In college, back in the early 1980s I wrote a paper, where I speculated on high-tech terrorist weapons. One idea in particular, that I had discovered quite by accident, took up most of the paper. I called it a "radiation dispersal device," or RDD for short. Last month I noticed that the Pentagon now uses that term for a dirty bomb.
The original concept for the RDD was an "area denial weapon" that would produce terror in the victims but probably not do actual harm beyond that point. For a cost I estimated at less than a thousand bucks, a terrorist could contaminate the ground floor lobby area of a highrise office tower, effectively putting the place out of business.
So with that in the background to demonstrate a prediction that was in one way on-target but in another way an underestimate, I offer you the following:
Bugs.
Germs.
Germs have an inherent advantage over radioactivity because they can do something radioactivity can't: multiply.
This is the topic about which I sat down to write this posting.
Suffice to say that one or two people, using commonly-available materials, could create something that, while not truly a weapon of mass destruction, could be used to take down a chunk or two of the economy at a time.
A more coordinated group of perhaps fifty or a hundred could do similar damage, with slightly different bugs via a different route, and never even be detected.
Think for a moment about the poisonous pet food recalls, and consider what would happen if something analogous occurred with the human food supply, but using bacteria rather than chemicals.
It's not a question of "if" but a question of "when." The best we can hope for is that it doesn't happen during the present Administration, or we might kiss goodbye an even larger chunk of the Constitution.
This is what happens when there are too many humans on a small planet with finite resources. Like rats in an overcrowded box, they eat each others' children.