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Full Version: The strange plan to fight nuclear bombs with giant rubber fortresses
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https://bigthink.com/strange-maps/rubber...lear-bomb/

EXCERPTS: . . . Here’s one suggestion from the mid-20th century on how to prepare for nuclear conflict and emerge victorious. In the April 1950 issue of Mechanix Illustrated, Frank Tinsley wrote an article titled: “Rubber Fortresses for A-Bomb Defense.”

[...] Mechanix Illustrated (1928-1984) was one among many magazines in mid-20th-century America where science met fiction, on the condition that the meeting of those two produced something wildly exciting. Truthfulness and feasibility were secondary concerns.

So, while the article and illustrations strongly imply that these rubber bubbles were being considered as the first line of defense against an atomic sneak attack, nothing suggests that America’s military was ever serious about building a string of rubber fortresses across the northern edge of the continent.

Unless they just went ahead and did it, of course. How would we ever have known about them, cleverly hidden as they are below all those inflatable rocks? (MORE - missing details)
A big stretch to label them 'rubber fortresses', and the notion made sense at the time, when Soviet nuclear armed bomber attacks were the near-term concern.
Interesting to speculate how much such articles may have influenced the scenarios in the mid 1950s cold-war themed Jet Jackson TV series:
https://www.youtube.com/results?search_q...on+tv+show
They don't make em like that anymore. And just as well.