Wednesday, January 23, 2013

California, Russia, Reach Arms Agreement



SANTA BARBARA, CA—In an attempt to reduce a budget deficit that threatens to bring state operations to a grinding halt, California today reached a preliminary agreement with Russia on the use of its less-desirable land as intercontinental ballistic missile fodder in exchange for monetary considerations.

The southern desert region, specifically Riverside and San Bernardino Counties, is first on the auction block.

"We expect the wasteland in these counties to be scooped up first," said Clover Simmons, director of Green Going Forward, an environmental think tank headquartered at a commune north of Santa Barbara. "At $100 an acre, the Russians can afford to dial in their targeting systems to their hearts' content."

If the Russians want to study the effects of nuclear annihilation in a more urban area, however, they're going to have to up the ante, Simmons intimated.

"We aren't getting too attached to some of our mid-sized Central Valley communities," she said with a laugh. "Some of the towns there range between 50,000 and 400,000 residents, so they're going to be prime real estate if and when our new partners decide they want to see firsthand the impact a nuclear explosion can have on a population center. We're talking $1000, maybe $1500 an acre. Modesto, Bakersfield, Merced. Places like that are a veritable gold mine."

Simmons went on to say that, yes, hundreds of thousands of lives would be lost, but, "there are still many, many wonderful towns in the Golden State that are not currently in an ICBM's cross-hairs."

Ms. Simmons estimates that the thermonuclear destruction and irradiation of vast swaths of California will generate upwards of $75 million, some of which will go toward the state's $9 billion budget shortfall. However, most of the money is slated to fund wind power and alternative fuel research.

"The benefits of this deal are twofold," Simmons said. "First and foremost, we'll raise money—after taxes, of course—for green energy. A secondary effect is that California will single-handedly reduce the world's nuclear stockpiles by upwards of 40 percent."