@metal-brain saidWhy would you need an IED to be sticky?
I don't have an RPG.
You act as if I can go into a store and buy one like buying a time bomb on that old movie "Airplane". This is about IEDs, not publicly banned military weapons. Besides, a sticky bomb would make for a better movie. People would have to jump out of the moving vehicle to live. Better suspense.
The Taliban and IS IED’s aren’t sticky… they blew up enough US vehicles…
@metal-brain saidIt sounds like you actually want a sticky bomb.
I don't have an RPG.
You act as if I can go into a store and buy one like buying a time bomb on that old movie "Airplane". This is about IEDs, not publicly banned military weapons. Besides, a sticky bomb would make for a better movie. People would have to jump out of the moving vehicle to live. Better suspense.
Why don’t you join the army if you want to blow things up?
Get the anarchists cookbook, online, and it explains everthing you need.
Or, simply, when making a molotov cocktail (which was invented by the Finns to fight the Russians), add sugar. That makes it stickier and adhesive.
There you go. I have your IP address, so the next terrorist attack in the US, I’m sending your details to the FBI.
@shavixmir saidAHEM invented by the Spanish to fight tanks
It sounds like you actually want a sticky bomb.
Why don’t you join the army if you want to blow things up?
Get the anarchists cookbook, online, and it explains everthing you need.
Or, simply, when making a molotov cocktail (which was invented by the Finns to fight the Russians), add sugar. That makes it stickier and adhesive.
There you go. I have your IP address, so the next terrorist attack in the US, I’m sending your details to the FBI.
2 edits
@athousandyoung saidFinnish.
AHEM invented by the Spanish to fight tanks
The name "Molotov cocktail" was coined by the Finns during the Winter War,[1] called Molotovin koktaili in Finnish. The name was a pejorative reference to Soviet foreign minister Vyacheslav Molotov, who was one of the architects of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact signed in late August 1939.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molotov_cocktail
Of course you can argue that petrol-esque fire bombs were used prior to WW2, but when exactly?
Greek fire was probabaly something similar.
@metal-brain saidThe whole idea of an anti vehicular ied is that your not standing next to it when it goes off. If you use a sticky ied you would need to not be seen planting it on the vehicle and then have a timer built in to it or a remote detonator. Are you saying you could do all that but not know how to make it sticky because Hollywood is in cahoots or controlled by the CIA?
I don't have an RPG.
You act as if I can go into a store and buy one like buying a time bomb on that old movie "Airplane". This is about IEDs, not publicly banned military weapons. Besides, a sticky bomb would make for a better movie. People would have to jump out of the moving vehicle to live. Better suspense.
Remember that chat we had about the problem with most conspiracy theories being their lack of internal logic.
@kevcvs57 saidNah metal juju is an intel mole laying traps for unsuspecting hostiles.
The whole idea of an anti vehicular ied is that your not standing next to it when it goes off. If you use a sticky ied you would need to not be seen planting it on the vehicle and then have a timer built in to it or a remote detonator. Are you saying you could do all that but not know how to make it sticky because Hollywood is in cahoots or controlled by the CIA?
Remember that chat we had about the problem with most conspiracy theories being their lack of internal logic.
@shavixmir said
Finnish.
The name "Molotov cocktail" was coined by the Finns during the Winter War,[1] called Molotovin koktaili in Finnish. The name was a pejorative reference to Soviet foreign minister Vyacheslav Molotov, who was one of the architects of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact signed in late August 1939.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molotov_cocktail
Of course you can arg ...[text shortened]... ue fire bombs were used prior to WW2, but when exactly?
Greek fire was probabaly something similar.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molotov_cocktail
Improvised incendiary devices of this type were used in warfare for the first time in the Spanish Civil War between July 1936 and April 1939,[6] before they became known as "Molotov cocktails". In 1936, General Francisco Franco ordered Spanish Nationalist forces to use the weapon against Soviet T-26 tanks supporting the Spanish Republicans in a failed assault on the Nationalist stronghold of Seseña, near Toledo, 40 km (25 mi) south of Madrid.[7]
@shavixmir saidThe information is already here for anybody to see. Even if you did have my IP address it would not do any good for you. Anybody that reads this could do it. That makes you a suspect quite frankly. Especially since everybody knows you read it.
It sounds like you actually want a sticky bomb.
Why don’t you join the army if you want to blow things up?
Get the anarchists cookbook, online, and it explains everthing you need.
Or, simply, when making a molotov cocktail (which was invented by the Finns to fight the Russians), add sugar. That makes it stickier and adhesive.
There you go. I have your IP address, so the next terrorist attack in the US, I’m sending your details to the FBI.
The NSA already have this information. You will not be telling them anything they do not already know. Don't you know why Snowden is in exile? He revealed the NSA collects metadata based on certain keywords in disregard to the 4th constitutional ammendment. I used every keyword that would alert the NSA. They already know you simpleton.
Do you really think I would be stupid enough to carry out a terrorist attack knowing the NSA has already red flagged this thread? I'm just making them do extra work. That is all. They know I am a mere information spreader and nothing more. I just like poking at their unconstitutional ways to let them know I don't like them. As long as they crap on the bill of rights I will keep doing this to keep them unnecessarily busy.
Go ahead and tell them what they already know.
@kevcvs57 saidYou obviously lack creativity. So do the people posting on here that think you can go to the local RPG store to buy one. You could make a sticky bomb rocket propelled if you really wanted. Have you ever heard of a catapult? A big crossbow could work. Sticky bomb on a stick.
The whole idea of an anti vehicular ied is that your not standing next to it when it goes off. If you use a sticky ied you would need to not be seen planting it on the vehicle and then have a timer built in to it or a remote detonator. Are you saying you could do all that but not know how to make it sticky because Hollywood is in cahoots or controlled by the CIA?
Remember that chat we had about the problem with most conspiracy theories being their lack of internal logic.
How about call it a silly putty bomb? I'll bet modifying silly putty to be sticky could work. The beauty of this idea is once it is used it will become common knowledge to politicians and other habitual liars. After that anything that sticks on their car will scare them into bailing out of a fast moving vehicle. That alone could kill them, especially the elderly habitual liars. All because of a dud sticky thing.
What did the USSR say about Rocky 4?
https://sputniknews.com/us/201708181056586360-us-military-hollywood-cia/
https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2016/07/operation-tinseltown-how-the-cia-manipulates-hollywood/491138/
@metal-brain saidSo your using this site to promote terrorist activity then and the BS about stickiness and how it works being covered up by Hollywood was just a ruse to get your thread past the mods 🤔
You obviously lack creativity. So do the people posting on here that think you can go to the local RPG store to buy one. You could make a sticky bomb rocket propelled if you really wanted. Have you ever heard of a catapult? A big crossbow could work. Sticky bomb on a stick.
How about call it a silly putty bomb? I'll bet modifying silly putty to be sticky could work. Th ...[text shortened]... tic.com/entertainment/archive/2016/07/operation-tinseltown-how-the-cia-manipulates-hollywood/491138/