If by "a lot", you mean "a little", and by "ammunition", you mean "small arms ammo like Remington rifle cartridges, which aren't explosive, and by "secretly" you mean "it was on the damn cargo manifest", then you're on the money.
Or do you have any sort of legitimate proof that there was some kind of other munitions stowed away on the ship that is actually relevant to its sinking? Anything besides empty "I said it's there" claims?
Sorry, but tentacle porn and pedophilia is not mainstream in the US.
Look, I said I'm still working on it. I can't do this shit all by myself.
The story line is relatively simple. The protagonist, Rui is a teenage girl.
Sold!
Fantastic!
Imaginary things are now real! Imaginary people now have all the rights of real people!
Another college freshman learns of the concept of "corporate personhood"...
Checking the form submission in script is like the sign outside a stadium that says, "don't bring knives into the stadium."
Checking the form submission on the server side is the burly guy with the metal detector at the entrance.
The latter can do the job all by himself. The former, by itself, can't be trusted - but the idea of it is to (hopefully) cut down on the other's workload a bit.
In the big picture, there's a distinct trade-off between security and usability.
That doesn't mean that, in the small picture, every security improvement comes at the cost of usability. But when you're talking big picture, to get the kind of security you're talking about, you have to rethink what it means to use a computer/OS/etc. Things you currently take for granted (like, as someone else said, plugging a USB device in) become "holes" that have to be closed.
The moon is made of green cheese. -- John Heywood