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your pen is so shortThe pen is the asian length.
No. He was mentally ill. You only referenced that he was Muslim because you are a racist, Islamaphobe, xenomorphic, germaphobe, Nazi, Imperialist, gun-loving, keep-your-insurance, God-fearing, .....umm did I forget something?That pretty much sums it up.
You might be thinking of Saturday night happy ending.Haha! Those are great too!
RE: the button
It's pretty easy to send out public alerts. A lot of agencies have the capability. Police, weather, hurricane, tsunami, etc etc.
It would be erroneous to think that only that one guy in HEMA is responsible for public alerts.
With that many people having the capability to push the button, it's easy to understand that human error can happen.
In fact it has happened before. Not that long ago.
In recent years, CD sirens were triggered by malfunction. Some sirens din't even work.
The state just installed brand new sirens across the street from my house last week.
Now having said that, let's think about what the politicians and the general public is screaming for.
Do we really want or need to have more safeguards in place?
In a dire emergency such as a missile launch, or offshore earthquake/tsunami, or Amber Alert, or tornado, seconds do matter.
Additional safety authentication procedures can only slow down the delivery process.
As it is with many things in life, there is always a balance between speed and accuracy. This is a lesson that IPSC shooters learn very early.
A combat shooter can score all A zone hits but it takes too long....you lose
A combat shooter can blaze away at 100 MPH and get poor hits....you lose again
A pocket knife can be honed to a razor edge, but a little error will slice you...you lose
There is no perfect system that works 100% flawlessly. It's always going to be a balance of speed and accuracy.