Belz...
Fiend God
It's ridiculous to say something is 'perfectly safe' if general society considers it dangerous.
Since when do we trust mr. everybody to determine something they are not qualified to determine ?
It's ridiculous to say something is 'perfectly safe' if general society considers it dangerous.
People were terrified of cameras when they first came out, too. Something about them stealing your soul or some other completely baseless mumbo-jumbo. Then we invented computers and pop culture was filled with Terminator-style nightmare visions of robots rising up to conquer the earth. Then finally, nuclear power comes along, making one hell of an entrance by burning two cities to the ground, and surprise, surprise, that scares us, too.Since when do we trust mr. everybody to determine something they are not qualified to determine ?
We fear what we don't understand. That, at least, is nothing new.
'The Battle of Chernobyl'
Exposes the "scientifically proven" 4,000 casualty figure for the rubbish that it is.
a second explosion, ten times more powerful than Hiroshima which would have wiped out more than half of Europe. This was kept secret for twenty years by the Soviets and the West alike.
Yeah... Europe (or even only "half of Europe") is a little bigger than ten times Hiroshima...
At the moment of the accident, there were 1,659 fuel assemblies in the reactor core, and each
assembly contained 0.1147 ton of uranium. The fresh fuel of the reactor RBMK-1000 before the accident
at Chernobyl NPP contained 2 % of uranium-235.
It gets better when you get to the commentsSo. Yeah. Total utter rubish.
Your point? Today's spacecraft are based upon really old aeroplane designs which were never meant to go into space. Rockets were initially not intended to be fired across continents. Computers were originally not meant to be small enough to fit in peoples' pockets.Seti these nuclear reators are based upon really old submarine designs and were never meant to be upscaled.
Again, soNot my opinion but the director of the nuke sub program who implemented nuclear reactors in subs for the US.
Reactors cost a fortune to buildIts a cheap tech though so people who want to make money like it.
.90% of the tiny amounts of waste created is recycled, the rest is stored safely like all other toxic waste. I don't see the problem.But its dirty as hell with really no where to store the waste, which is a whole different subject of its own.
See, here's the deal. Capitalists are bad like those in Norway, a kingdom in Europe, in which squirrels like to eat acorns. Therefore tulips and coffee as products are not sustainable, and Winnie the pooh can't paddle his canoeu up 2 mout rushmoor. Thus reactors r bad.The truth is 95% of the stock in the US is owned by 5%. A 5% who very rarely IF ever truly feel the ramifications of decisions they make simply to attain or maintain wealth of an order that is ludicrous. So our planets gets trashed so a FEW rich people can get richer. And now the IMF and world bank get to own japan as they will never be able to pay back their loans they will be getting to repair their nation, unless of course they agree to privatize some of their resources for the benefit of that few again. It all BS brother. Solar panels on the homes in CA,AZ,NV,TX,NM could power half the US or more. Its no secret that the BP is the biggest supplier of solar panels. Are they trying to get them to the world cheaper as demand rises according to the economic principles the establishment eschews. Nope they fix the price and it will stay where they want it so solar stays dead. They can make money and sell them cheaper, they are subsidized by the US gov after all, but why do the right thing AND make money? Thats not in their creed. Just blind greed and a corporate media to play buffer between the truth and the lies. SO you are right in some regards but only because big money wants it that way. In 1945 35% of new millionaires were from poverty. Now it is about 2-3%. Things sure are getting more fair in the world. Free your mind and your ass will follow.

'The Battle of Chernobyl'
One and a half hour documentary that exposes the "scientifically proven" 4,000 casualty figure for the out-of-thin-air rubbish that it is.
Does anyone know of any research into the fate of the tens of thousands of "bio-robots"/"liquidators" sent in to try and clean up the horrific disaster?
Huhu. I can recognize rubish when I see it, indeed...
But its dirty as hell with really no where to store the waste, which is a whole different subject of its own.
90% of the tiny amounts of waste created is recycled, the rest is stored safely like all other toxic waste. I don't see the problem.
'The Battle of Chernobyl'
One and a half hour documentary that exposes the "scientifically proven" 4,000 casualty figure for the out-of-thin-air rubbish that it is.
Does anyone know of any research into the fate of the tens of thousands of "bio-robots"/"liquidators" sent in to try and clean up the horrific disaster?
That is not quite the same thing as saying that there were only 56 deaths in the accident; obviously there were probably more, but there is no official trace of them. Blame for that fact, in the face of a monumental accident and the Soviet need to secrecy, can be argued (and will be) far after we're long gone.
'The Battle of Chernobyl'
One and a half hour documentary that exposes the "scientifically proven" 4,000 casualty figure for the out-of-thin-air rubbish that it is.
Does anyone know of any research into the fate of the tens of thousands of "bio-robots"/"liquidators" sent in to try and clean up the horrific disaster?
B.) How is a 150 kiloton ground burst supposed to wipe out half of Europe?