The U.S. National Nuclear Security Administration recently postponed its crucial program to rejuvenate quarter-century-old Trident missile warheads because no one can remember how to make a key component of the weapons (codenamed "Fogbank"), according to a March 2 report of the Government Accountability Office. The GAO found that, despite concern over the bombs' safety and reliability, NNSA could not replicate the manufacturing process because all knowledgeable personnel have left the agency and no written records were kept. Said one commentator, "This is like James Bond destroying his instructions as soon as he's read them." [Sunday Herald (Glasgow), 3-7-09]
The GAO report came two months after the German Interior Ministry reported to Parliament that over a 10-year period, it had lost 332 secret files that were in fact so secret that no one in the Ministry could recall what was in them.
Can we keep things such a secret that nobody remembers what the secret was?
yes i dont think its wise to let the public in on things like that. there shouldnt even be those missles in the first place but i certainly dont want any info about where they are or anything like that, just let me live my life without having to think about it thank you
It's like the Krabby Patty secret formulaarr, only a handfull of people know what it is. And I wouldn't like to have Joe Schmoe McBob know how to make a warhead so keeping some things secret is a good call.