Still ignoring my simple point that raising the safe limits a thousand times is ridiculous.
Bull. What you mean to say is that we haven't yet responded to your point
du jour; by this afternoon it will be a different point, and answering this will make us late for your next tail gate party.
Your "simple point" was that raising the maximum allowed amount of instantaneous radiation allowed to be absorbed by a power plant employee by a thousand is ridiculous. This is, of course, a fabulous straw man; Dr Alison, the author of the thousand x adjustment, has been demonstrated, by actual video, to have said that the 1000x applies to the EPA standard yearly dose applied to non-atomic workers at large. The current limit is 1 mSv/yr, he thinks it could be raised to 100 mSv/month, emphasizing the stated requirement that it be a continuous dose over a length of time, not an instantaneous one. The limit for the worker in an emergency is 50 mSv per year. It is well known that if a worker receives such a dose it is not continuous, but something he likely received in a hour or less; if it were continuous, the management would have to have fixed the problem.
You knew this, I discussed it above 4 days ago, including remarks about how it was originally derived and why it is the value it is, and you made no rebuttal about it at that time or since, until today. This shows that you were not swayed, which is OK, but you could not argue your point. The principles of fair argumentation should have kept you from bringing it up again unless you have something new and substantive to say; it is old, has been debunked in your face, and you cannot respond meaningfully. That didn't stop you from bringing it up 4 days later as if you'd been defending it all along.
This sort of argument is dishonest and disingenuous. If you cannot just admit that you made a trifling error in understanding Alison's remark and let it go, or at least restate it so it is corrected and carry on, then you could have the grace to simply let it lie.
What is your argument for the ridiculousness of the proposal? Have you tried such a dose out on anyone, such as yourself? Do you have documentation about anyone having received continuous dosage at that rate who eventually suffered ARS? Or is it just your gut feeling? Frankly, I was a bit floored by the proposal; before anything like that is implemented I'd want to see a concrete study which endorses it specifically. But ridiculous is not the adjective I'd use.
Well?