How best can I mutiny with the crew and overthrow our ship?Assume that the code to launch is already known.This is hypothetical, but how would you make it happen?
>Well comrade, did you really think i'd give you the real launch codes? Heh. How silly of you. Heh hehe he.
oh shit, nigga, what is you doin
>>34226604Leave me alone, glowie.Let people enjoy things.I don’t see why putin would want the world to end. He’s a good guy. What if the sub is russian?
You should read The Caine Mutiny and Mutiny on the Bounty by Nordhoff and Hall.
>>34226674Which one is better and why? I don’t read very often at all
>>34226691Mutiny on the Bounty because it’s based on a true story, and imo it’s still one of the most dramatic things that ever happened in history, from human angle
>>34226597Sorry, I don't understand the question. You get the crew on your side, you agree a moment to strike, and when the moment comes you either imprison or kill the captain and anyone loyal to him. What aspect of this do you need advice about?
>>34226597Mutiny is something you cannot conjure in an instant, it has to be something that grows over time like a tension or a stomach ache and then finally one big semi-planned revolt later you've got yourself a mutiny.
>>34226941I agree that it takes time and a baseline mood (that is pretty easy to generate) but it's more fomentable than you would assume
>>34226597Why are you larping?
>>34226597Since it's the navy your window of opportunity is during the gay sex orgy.
>>34226597There are stories about this kind of thing from the cold war era, but I imagine that every military today has too many safeguards to keep it from happening now. Stories I've heard from the modern era come down to:>the commanding officer, unfamiliar with the vessel they are captaining, gave an impossible order>the commanding officer gave an illegal order and the crew are legally obligated to disobey illegal orders
>>34228493I think it’s near because it’s a feasible way for the world to randomly end or be plunged into nuclear war.Like what if two bad guys were inoculated against some disease then released it.
>>34228519*neat
>>34228519During the cold war there were some close calls that are now well documented and you can find the stories online. I don't remember the details, but in one of the stories, there was a faulty missile detection system that reported a non-existent launch. Soviet silo crews had authorization to launch, but decided to confirm the order before pressing the button, and because of that choice, nuclear war did not occur.
>>34228581Thank you chatgpt
>>34228644fuck you fag
>>34226597Watch the movie CRIMSON TIDE