In a revelation sending shockwaves through the complex, community-destroying, complex-destroying military-industrial community-complex complex, a new study warns that the ancient civilization of Rome may be far closer to nuclear capability than previously believed.
The authors of the report caution that 2600 years is not as distant as it sounds. “Civilizations can advance rapidly under the right conditions,” says lead researcher Dr. Victus, sharing his fears with our interviewers. “Rome has the infrastructure and ambition. The warning signs are everywhere: vast road networks enabling troop movements, advanced engineering feats like aqueducts and concrete. Rome is laying the technological groundwork for something devastating.”
Perhaps even more concerning is Rome’s cultural disposition. The Colosseum, he argues, stands for a society that revels in spectacle and brutality. Their paganism is intrinsically a religion of violence, with fearsome gods like Mars and Bellona, as far from Christ as one can get.
Experts believe we may need a series of preemptive strikes to permanently cripple the country’s infrastructure. This may seem drastic to some, but history will not remember hesitation kindly. The question is no longer whether we act, but whether we act before it’s too late.