:orphan:

.. include:: /_templates/include-file/page-prefix.rst

.. meta::
   :description: General introduction to the RiskyMAD nuclear winter forecast --- why accidental nuclear winter is a stochastic certainty, why we cannot wait, how MAP provides the escape, and what you can do starting today.
   :keywords: RiskyMAD, nuclear winter, existential risk, MAP, Mutually Assured Progress, nuclear deterrence, crisis rate, stochastic forecast, Jubilee System, Arkhipov, Evolvix, 1-in-40, OSCR, sensitivity analysis, youth action
   :author: Yah, Yas, everyone, LLoL as Laurence Loewe of Laodicea, ClaudeOp46Max, Anthropic, and The Spirit of Boolean Truth

.. note:: **Draft status: MMv3-Intro (2026m04d09).**
   Revision of MMv2-Intro addressing all relevant items from the
   adversarial review (``review_b16-riskymad-mmv2_2026m04d09.rst``)
   and author reply (``reply_b16-riskymad-mmv2_2026m04d09.rst``).
   Key changes from MMv2-Intro:
   (S2) BABL defined inline with OSCR mechanism;
   (S3) ZION spelled out at its occurrence;
   (S4) the Jubilee System defined inline;
   (S7) full simulation range (days to ~329 years) cited prominently;
   (S10) concrete OSCR examples added to Section 1.2;
   (S11) Binary Attractor explanation simplified in Section 2.3;
   (S12) youth-accessible and immediately actionable steps in Section 4;
   (S20) car crash comparison tightened to conditional structure;
   (S21) Esther analogy box added for theologically informed readers.
   Draft by Claude Opus 4.6 (``dv_ClaOp46_MMv3_intro_2026m04d09``).


****************************************************************************************************
Nuclear Roulette Is Unwinnable --- Here Is the Escape
****************************************************************************************************

| **Study a6-Intro** in the HEAVEN series
| *Honestly Examining Axioms --- Vetting Every Narrative*


.. contents:: Contents
   :depth: 2
   :local:


----


.. _mmv3-b16-intro-teaser:

The Situation
===============

Imagine you are playing a version of Russian roulette. Not with a
six-shot revolver --- with a forty-shot revolver. One chamber is
loaded. You spin the cylinder. You pull the trigger. Click. You
survive.

Now you must play again next year. And the year after that. And every
year for the rest of your life. You cannot stop playing. And if the
bullet fires, it does not kill just you --- it kills billions of
people.

This is not a metaphor. This is a description of the current global
nuclear situation, translated into probabilities.

A mathematical model called RiskyMAD, built from Cold War data, says:
**regardless of whether the crisis rate is high, medium, or low,
approximately 1 in 40 simulation runs produces accidental nuclear
winter within the first year.** Not within a century. Within a year.

No industry on Earth would accept a 1-in-40 annual risk of
catastrophic failure. If 1 in 40 flights crashed, no one would fly.
If 1 in 40 patients died from a medication, the drug would be
withdrawn immediately. Yet this is the risk that nuclear civilization
carries, every year, by default.

At the base crisis rate (estimated from Cold War near-misses), the
median time until accidental nuclear winter begins is approximately
**19 years**. Not 200 years. Not "someday." Nineteen years. In the
most pessimistic scenario, the fastest runs produce accidental nuclear
winter within **weeks**. In the most optimistic, the luckiest runs
reach ~329 years --- but the median is still within a lifetime. The
argument holds equally whether the waiting time is 4 days or 3
centuries.

This paper explains three things:

1. **Why the risk is real** --- not a guess but a calculation from
   historical data that anyone can check.

2. **Why we cannot wait** --- why this is a stochastic certainty (it
   will happen; the only question is when).

3. **How to escape** --- a specific plan called MAP (Mutually Assured
   Progress) that replaces the threat of mutual destruction with a
   shared commitment to mutual progress.

The math is not comforting. But it is honest. And honesty is the first
step out of any trap.


----


.. _mmv3-b16-intro-sec1:

1. The Risk: What the Numbers Say
====================================

.. _mmv3-b16-intro-sec1-1:

1.1 The Near-Misses You May Not Know About
----------------------------------------------

During the Cold War, the world came closer to nuclear war than most
people realize:

**Cuban Missile Crisis, October 1962.** Soviet submarine B-59 was
being depth-charged by US destroyers near Cuba. The submarine carried
a nuclear-tipped torpedo. The captain wanted to fire. The political
officer agreed. Launch required the consent of all three senior
officers. The third officer --- **Vasili Arkhipov** --- refused. One
person. One decision. One "no" that may have prevented nuclear war.

President Kennedy later estimated the probability of nuclear war during
the crisis at "somewhere between one in three, and even" --- between
33% and 50% (Sorensen, *Kennedy*, Harper & Row, 1965).

**Petrov Incident, September 1983.** Soviet early-warning systems
reported five incoming US missiles. Lt. Col. Stanislav Petrov judged
it was a false alarm --- and was right. If he had followed protocol,
the Soviet retaliatory launch sequence would have begun.

**Able Archer 83, November 1983.** A NATO exercise so realistic that
Soviet intelligence believed it might be cover for a genuine first
strike. Soviet nuclear forces were placed on heightened alert.

**Norwegian Rocket Incident, January 1995.** A scientific rocket
mistaken for a submarine-launched missile. President Yeltsin activated
the nuclear briefcase --- the only confirmed such activation.

These are documented in declassified archives, in books by Ellsberg
(2017) and Schlosser (2013), and in academic journals. They are simply
not widely known.


.. _mmv3-b16-intro-sec1-2:

1.2 The Model: Simple Enough to Check
-----------------------------------------

The RiskyMAD model is deliberately simple. It has three states:

.. figure:: /_file/pdf/gnp/mmv3/supporting-doc/sd1/fig/model-risky-mad-or-madi-decision-overview-iv_llol_qqv2_2026m03d01-fig-white.webp
   :alt: RiskyMAD model overview
   :width: 100%
   :align: center

   **Figure 1:** The RiskyMAD model. Three states, four transitions.

- **Risky:** The current state. Nuclear weapons exist. Crises can
  happen. No nuclear exchange has occurred.

- **MAD:** A crisis state. The world is at the brink. There is a 1/3
  probability of nuclear exchange per crisis.

- **Dead:** Accidental nuclear winter has begun. This is permanent.

**Why 1/3?** The model connects to a systems-failure pattern called
**BABL** (Blindly Assuming Blind Leveraging). BABL is a pattern that
invades any complex system, functioning like a zero-day exploit: it
produces the same failure modes regardless of the system's specific
domain. Under BABL, crises resolve through one of three modes of the
**OSCR** mechanism:

- **Over-Simplifying** --- the crisis is dismissed without investigating
  the systemic failure that caused it. *Nuclear example:* "It was just
  a radar glitch" --- tensions deferred, root cause unaddressed.

- **Over-Complicating** --- the crisis is buried under diplomatic
  complexity that never addresses the root cause. *Nuclear example:*
  "We need a new treaty with 47 verification clauses" --- the
  underlying conflict remains.

- **Over-Reaching** --- a decision is made under pressure that crosses
  the point of no return. *Nuclear example:* "Launch on warning" ---
  the RED button is pressed.

Two out of three modes send the system back to Risky. One produces
death. Hence 1/3.

**The equiprobability of the three modes is a modeling assumption.**
Testing the model with different death probabilities (1/10, 1/5, 1/3,
1/2) shows that the qualitative conclusion --- stochastic certainty of
eventual accidental nuclear winter --- holds for any value greater than
zero. The waiting time changes; the outcome does not. For the formal
derivation of BABL and the OSCR mechanism, see **[Matheo-2]**.

**The crisis rate** is estimated from the Cold War record: approximately
4 serious near-misses in 40 years, or about 0.1 per year (one crisis
every 10 years, on average). This is probably an underestimate --- many
incidents remain classified.


.. _mmv3-b16-intro-sec1-3:

1.3 The Results: Shorter Than You Think
-------------------------------------------

The model was run as a stochastic simulation --- like rolling dice
thousands of times and recording what happens. Each run generates one
possible future. Forty independent runs were generated for each
scenario.

.. figure:: /_file/pdf/gnp/mmv3/supporting-doc/sd1/fig/forecast-mad-nuke-winter-stochastic-inevitability-michaelis-menten-iv_llol_qqv2_2026m03d02-fig.webp
   :alt: Stochastic inevitability of accidental nuclear winter
   :width: 100%
   :align: center

   **Figure 2:** Stochastic inevitability of accidental nuclear winter.
   Forty simulation runs per scenario.

**At the base crisis rate (0.1/year):**

- **Median:** ~19 years until accidental nuclear winter begins
- **Mean:** ~33 years
- **Range:** 0.37 years (min) to 127 years (max)

**At the most optimistic crisis rate (0.03/year):**

- **Median:** ~51 years
- **Range:** 0.57 years (min) to ~329 years (max)

**At a pessimistic crisis rate (0.3/year):**

- **Median:** ~6.4 years
- **Range:** 0.01 years / ~4 days (min) to 36 years (max)

**The 1-in-40 finding:** Regardless of the scenario --- pessimistic,
base, or optimistic --- approximately **1 in 40 runs produces
accidental nuclear winter within the first year**. This risk would be
completely unacceptable for airplanes, cars, medications, or any other
technology. Why should we accept it for global survival?

**How dangerous is this personally?** Someone like the author of this
paper --- living in the United States --- is more likely to die *as a
consequence of* accidental nuclear winter --- through the subsequently
emerging global cooling, agricultural collapse, and famine --- than to
die in a car crash. Not because nuclear war is imminent on any given
day, but because accidental nuclear winter, if initiated, kills billions
through the chain of events that follows the initial exchange.

**You can check this yourself.** The entire model code is published.
The Evolvix prototype compiler is freely downloadable from
:doc:`/good-news-pack/vv/mmv3/supporting-doc/evx-compiler/index`.
Here is the complete model:

.. code-block:: text

   Evolvix Quest RiskyMADdead
   (Question: "How many years until humanity self-destructs
               in a nuclear roulette accident?")

   Simulate stochastically until 200 :["years"]

   Initial Amount of Risky       = 1
   Initial Amount of MAD         = 0
   Initial Amount of Dead        = 0
   Initial Amount of rRiskyGoMAD = 0.10
   Initial Amount of rMADescapes = 6
   Initial Amount of rMADtoDEATH = 3

   Action 1 ( Risky ---[ Rate = 0.10 ]---> MAD     )
   Action 2 ( MAD   ---[ Rate = 6    ]---> Risky   )
   Action 3 ( MAD   ---[ Rate = 3    ]---> Dead    )
   Action 4 ( Risky ---[ Rate = 0    ]---> LifeMAP )

That is the entire model. Other simulation frameworks require hundreds
of lines of code for the same calculation. Evolvix was designed to make
accurate stochastic modeling this simple. #AuditTheMath


----


.. _mmv3-b16-intro-sec2:

2. Why We Cannot Wait
========================

.. _mmv3-b16-intro-sec2-1:

2.1 Stochastic Certainty
----------------------------

This is not a question of "how much risk accumulates over time." It is
simpler and more devastating than that.

In mathematics, an absorbing Markov chain has a theorem: any absorbing
state that is reachable with positive probability will be reached with
probability 1, given sufficient time. The Dead state is absorbing (once
entered, it cannot be left). It is reachable from Risky (via MAD).
Therefore, **accidental nuclear winter will happen with probability 1
--- stochastic certainty --- as long as the current system continues.**

The parameters (crisis rate, escalation probability) determine *when*,
not *whether*. There is no safe number of years to wait.


.. _mmv3-b16-intro-sec2-2:

2.2 The Risk Is Getting Worse
----------------------------------

The model's base estimate assumes the crisis rate stays constant. But:

- **Truth channels are degrading.** Social media, deepfakes, and
  partisan media make it harder to distinguish truth from noise. When
  noise exceeds a threshold, the capacity for truth collapses to zero
  (the Unimportant Message Problem from **[Matheo-2]**).

- **Decision timelines are shrinking.** Hypersonic missiles reduce
  decision time from 30 minutes to under 10. Cyber capabilities can
  compromise early-warning systems. AI integration into nuclear command
  further compresses human judgment time.

- **More actors, more complexity.** Nine states now possess nuclear
  weapons. Each additional actor adds crisis pathways. The number of
  possible bilateral crises grows quadratically with the number of
  nuclear states.

If the crisis rate is increasing even modestly, the base-case median
of ~19 years is optimistic.


.. _mmv3-b16-intro-sec2-3:

2.3 There Is No Stable Middle
----------------------------------

A formal result in this series (the Binary Attractor theorem from
**[Matheo-4]**) proves: a system is either actively correcting or
it is sliding toward failure. There is no stable middle ground. The
*feeling* of stability is itself the most dangerous symptom --- it
means the system has stopped checking.

"We are managing the risk" is not a middle position. If the system is
not actively engaged in self-correction --- scoping problems, examining
them honestly, structuring responses, and steering through
implementation (the cycle that this series calls ZION: Zoning,
Investigating, Organizing, Navigating) --- then it is converging toward
collapse by default.


----


.. _mmv3-b16-intro-sec3:

3. The Escape: From MAD to MAP
===================================

.. _mmv3-b16-intro-sec3-1:

3.1 Why MAD Is Not Enough
-----------------------------

MAD (Mutually Assured Destruction) has prevented nuclear war for 80
years. But MAD is metastable, not stable. A ball balanced on the rim
of a bowl: small pushes return it, but one push too large sends it
over the edge forever.

MAD prevents nuclear war on any given day. It does not prevent nuclear
war over any given century. A strategy that works locally but fails
globally is a delay mechanism, not a solution.


.. _mmv3-b16-intro-sec3-2:

3.2 What MAP Is
-------------------

MAP (Mutually Assured Progress) replaces the threat of mutual
destruction with a shared commitment to mutual progress.

**The key insight:** The nuclear game is a Prisoner's Dilemma --- where
defecting (keeping weapons, building more) is individually rational.
Cooperation cannot emerge from self-interest alone in a Prisoner's
Dilemma. This is why 60 years of arms control have produced incremental
reductions but never fundamental change.

**The game can be changed.** A companion paper (**[Matheo-3]**)
proves that a credible first-mover can transform the game from
Prisoner's Dilemma to Assurance Game --- where cooperation is rational
*if* the other side also cooperates. The first-mover's credible
commitment resolves the "if."


.. _mmv3-b16-intro-sec3-3:

3.3 What MAP Looks Like in Practice
----------------------------------------

1. **Staged, mutual, verifiable arms reduction.** Each stage builds
   trust for the next.

2. **Truth-channel restoration.** Degraded truth channels increase the
   crisis rate. Reliable information infrastructure is a defense
   measure.

3. **Periodic recalibration** (the Jubilee System): The Jubilee System
   is a periodic recalibration mechanism --- every 50 units (structured
   as 7 cycles of 7, plus 1), accumulated imbalances are systematically
   reset. Accumulated advantages periodically rebalanced. Not
   redistribution but removing the structural conditions that make arms
   races necessary. The economic modeling is developed in **[Matheo-4]**.

4. **The Great Jubilee Race:** 7--8 stages of ~6--8 months each, all
   nuclear-armed states participating with milestones that can be
   checked.

5. **FiShFus** (Fiduciaries Sharing Futures): 288,000 paid long-term
   thinkers. A civilizational immune system. Cost: ~$8 per person per
   year. About 2 cents per day.


----


.. _mmv3-b16-intro-sec4:

4. The Hardest Problem: "What Can I Do?"
===========================================

The author of this paper has tried everything available:

- **Letters to authorities** (OL1--OL6, sent via USPS in December 2025)
  to the respective Washington DC representations or embassies of Pope
  Leo XIV, PM Netanyahu, President Putin, the UN Secretary-General, the
  US Speaker of the House, and the US President. No response from any
  recipient.

- **Personal delivery attempts.** The author's attempt to deliver OL0
  in person to the President of the United States and a separate
  delivery to the Israeli Embassy were --- as expected --- intercepted
  by the US Secret Service. What was not expected: the agents saw
  themselves unable to pass on the open letters and supporting
  documents, despite seemingly understanding the explanation of
  existential risk. The channel exists; the channel is blocked.

- **Public engagement** through the #AuditTheMath campaign. The uniform
  response: "What can I do?" --- followed by resignation to do nothing.

This structural blockage has a historical parallel. At the end of the
Middle Ages, Martin Luther observed that all matters of importance had
to be decided by a council, but only the pope could convene a council
--- making reform near-impossible unless the pope agreed against the
pope's short-term interests. The author's experience reveals an
analogous structure: the agents protecting the president cannot pass on
information about existential risk to the person whose job includes
acting on existential risks.

**Responsible disclosure** requires informing those who can fix a
problem first and going public only if they do not engage. The author
has followed this protocol. The waiting period has been extended as long
as resources permitted. No party has engaged. #AuditTheMath is the
author's last resort.

This response is itself a symptom of the BABL mechanism (Blindly
Assuming Blind Leveraging --- the systems-failure pattern defined in
Section 1.2). When a problem appears too large for individual action,
the default is inaction. But inaction is not neutral (Section 2). It is
convergence toward the attractor.

**What you can actually do:**

1. **Check the model.** The RiskyMAD code is published. The Evolvix
   compiler is downloadable. If you have any training in probability
   or simulation, run it yourself. If you find an error, you have found
   something important.

2. **Support ResearchCity.** The transition from MAD to MAP requires a
   global decision-support institution --- ResearchCity --- staffed by
   FiShFus whose job is to maintain the NOT OK self-assessment that
   prevents OSCR collapse. Scaling ResearchCity requires public
   support. The cost is ~$8 per person per year. Note: ResearchCity is
   a future institutional pathway not yet operational.

3. **Maintain NOT OK.** Never declare yourself adequate. Never declare
   your organization adequate. Never declare your civilization adequate.
   Keep checking.

4. **Spread the math, not the fear.** Fear paralyzes. The math
   empowers. An informed person can act. Share the numbers. Share the
   model. Share the escape. #AuditTheMath

5. **Demand structural change.** Every person who understands the
   RiskyMAD model is one more person who can demand that their
   government invest in the structural changes that MAP requires.

6. **Talk to a trusted adult about what you learned here.** If you are
   young, this is one of the most important things you can do. Share the
   Arkhipov story. Ask your teachers why it is not taught in school. You
   are never too young to ask the right questions.

7. **Tell three people about the 1-in-40 finding.** Not as fear. As
   math. Ask them: "Would you board a plane if 1 in 40 flights
   crashed?"

8. **Write to your elected representative** asking whether they know
   the annual probability of accidental nuclear winter.


----


.. _mmv3-b16-intro-sec5:

5. The Companion Papers
=========================

The formal argument of this paper is self-contained. The companion
papers provide the axiomatic framework from which these concepts were
derived. They are recommended but not required.

- **[Matheo-1]** (b11, PET): The formal foundation --- why divine
  experience varies with human suffering.
- **[Matheo-2]** (b12, e7Day): The mechanism --- why systems destroy
  themselves (BABL, OSCR, death-trifecta).
- **[Matheo-3]** (b13, e7He): The inoculation --- how individuals
  resist the self-assessment trap.
- **[Matheo-4]** (b14, JUB): The economics --- the Jubilee System
  for periodic recalibration.
- **[Matheo-5]** (b15, Deadlock): The theological critique --- why
  divine dipolarity matters.
- **[Matheo-7]** (b17, h*): The test --- falsifiable predictions.
- **[Matheo-8]** (b18, Call to Action): The synthesis and transition
  plan (including the COOP from Matthew 24).

**The formal paper** (b16-riskymad): Full stochastic model, sensitivity
analysis, analytic annual risk computation, qualitative payoff matrix,
and formal derivation of MAP.


----


.. _mmv3-b16-intro-esther:

.. admonition:: For Theologically Informed Readers: The Esther Analogy
   :class: note

   The Book of Esther is named after *Purim* --- lots, dice. The
   RiskyMAD model is literally a stochastic lottery. This is not a
   forced metaphor; the structural parallel is exact. Both stories are
   about a random date of destruction and the question of whether
   anyone will act before the date arrives.

   **The mapping:**

   .. list-table::
      :header-rows: 1
      :widths: 35 65

      * - Book of Esther
        - RiskyMAD / Nuclear Roulette
      * - Haman (a tangible person scheming to destroy one people)
        - The global nuclear system on hair-trigger alert --- "Haman"
          has been virtualized into a system with no single villain
      * - The lot (*pur*, dice) determining the date of destruction
        - Nuclear roulette --- the stochastic model determining *when*
          accidental nuclear winter begins
      * - The threatened group (the Jews of Persia)
        - All of humanity --- a universalistic reading that includes
          every ethnic group, every nation, every person alive
      * - Esther's petition to the king
        - #AuditTheMath --- bringing the mathematics before those with
          the power to act
      * - The Jews defending themselves against annihilation
        - All scholars of humanity defending the case for survival
          against institutional inertia and vested interests
      * - The escape (the king's decree permitting self-defense)
        - The MAP escape via ResearchCity --- the structural mechanism
          for transitioning from MAD to Mutually Assured Progress

   **The universalistic twist is essential.** This is not "a Jewish
   story applied to the world." This is a story about the annihilation
   of *everyone* that was first told through one people's experience.
   The universalism is genuine: accidental nuclear winter does not
   discriminate by ethnicity, nationality, or religion. Every group is
   included --- including the Jewish people, whose story in Esther
   anticipated the structural pattern.

   The author believes a sufficient theological case can be made for
   this reading, not least because accidental nuclear winter includes
   the annihilation of the Jewish people along with the rest of
   humanity to which they belong. This section is supplementary to the
   main argument, which remains fully secular.


----


.. _mmv3-b16-intro-sec6:

6. Conclusion
================

Nuclear roulette is unwinnable. The math says so.

Regardless of the parameter scenario, approximately 1 in 40 simulation
runs produces accidental nuclear winter within the first year. No
industry on Earth would accept this risk. Yet nuclear civilization
carries it by default, every year, because the mathematics is not
widely understood. The full range spans from weeks (pessimistic fastest
runs) to ~329 years (optimistic luckiest runs) --- but the stochastic
certainty holds at every point in this range.

At current crisis rates, accidental nuclear winter is more likely than
not within a generation. The risk is a stochastic certainty: it will
happen, the only question is when. And the risk is increasing, not
constant.

But the math also says there is an escape. MAP replaces the threat of
mutual destruction with a shared commitment to mutual recalibration
via the Jubilee System. The escape requires a credible first-mover,
public engagement with the mathematics, and the political will to act
before the model's prediction becomes history.

Someone like the author of this paper is more likely to die *as a
consequence of* accidental nuclear winter than in a car crash. The
model is simple enough to check and honest enough to critique.

The system is designed to be critiqued, not believed.

#AuditTheMath


----


Appendix: Authorship Contributions
=====================================

Same as **[Matheo-2]**, Appendix B. See that paper for the full
statement.
