and to skip quoting Dinh 1) o.o 2) o.O 3) ._. 4) And by antimatter, I mean for, first and foremost, research areas, and energy production. I'm sure that there are many other areas where antimatter could be used, but when a tiny amount of antimatter could equal 120 tonnes of conventional rocket fuel (<- more or less quoting), I think people who are interested in being a bit better in the long-term would be willing to invest. Plus, well, with antimatter, one could have more efficient engines, provided that they have enough antimatter and an efficient design, to mine at, say, the Asteroid belt. Mining asteroids has extreme resource potential, does it not? While expensive, the Earth is quickly running out of resources. A sudden boost in minerals from giant mineral chunks floating in space sounds good. ish. 5) gud. Japan) Well what if they [u]did[u] kind of come back, and start repopulating? I was thinking of expansion by way of underwater 'bases' of sorts, and something like really-large sea platforms constructed during the war as a sort of bunker, except easier to defend and the like for the masses of Japan?