Oh you are right...
Nevermind, I was just doing my daily scheduled embarrassment quota.
"sigh"
Welp, here I go yet again having to put a "I am an idiot" label on my own comments.
Which I already did yesterday on some other failed debate of mine. I am gonna just stick to silly joke comments from now on, I suck at this debating stuff.
mood.
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Mitsune mentions it's like living next to a bomb as if people haven't been doing that for over a century, at least in Europe.
As context for our less history inclined fellows: After WW1 and 2 there are unknown tons of unexploded munitions, bombs and explosives buried all over Europe that people are still finding to this day, sometimes safely and other time in a very final way.
There are mortar shells, artillery shells, grenades, bombs even mines all over, one big issue at this point though is some
missing stockpiles of bombs and bunker busters that no one remembers where are anymore, literal piles of explosives that can turn a large, well defended and fortified hill fort into nothing more than a massive crater in the earth, the main issue in all of this is the fact that explosives don't stop blowing up over time, they get more volatile and explode easier, it's why they mostly stopped searching for the stockpiles, if they find them by digging in the wrong place or try using construction equipment the vibrations may be enough to detonate it and there goes your entire workforce, red mist in the stratosphere.