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Was war in Libya deliberately timed to take attention away from Fukushima?

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  • Registered Users Posts: 25,229 ✭✭✭✭King Mob


    Overheal wrote: »
    It's still important to remember the much more massive human tragedy of the Tsunami and Quakes as a Whole; it is too easy to focus on the reactor scenario.
    That's true, but the question Uprising asked was specifically about the reactor, so that was the focus of my answer.
    But he no longer seems interested in following it up.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 139 ✭✭HugoDrax


    Over the last week the war in Libya has taken a dominant role in the media in both broadsheet and tabloids. Could this invasion have been "put off" for a few weeks or was it a perfect way to distract the media and populations away from a very serious issue?

    Could you explain how this could be done without anyone knowing?


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 7,225 ✭✭✭Yitzhak Rabin


    King Mob wrote: »
    That's true, but the question Uprising asked was specifically about the reactor, so that was the focus of my answer.
    But he no longer seems interested in following it up.

    Uprising is on a 1 month ban, so he won't be able to answer for a while.


  • Registered Users Posts: 25,229 ✭✭✭✭King Mob


    yekahS wrote: »
    Uprising is on a 1 month ban, so he won't be able to answer for a while.

    My answer to his question was up a day or two before he was banned.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 20,009 ✭✭✭✭Run_to_da_hills


    Now a Level 7, its back in the headlines.


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  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 9,441 ✭✭✭old hippy


    Now a Level 7, its back in the headlines.

    It's never left the headlines.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 20,009 ✭✭✭✭Run_to_da_hills


    old hippy wrote: »
    It's never left the headlines.
    Its been back stage for quite a bit now.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 9,441 ✭✭✭old hippy


    Its been back stage for quite a bit now.

    Guess it depends what media outlets you subscribe to, I suppose.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 188 ✭✭33


    King Mob wrote: »
    Ok, the reactors are going to shut down and buried. Japan's economy is going to suffer pretty badly from the delayed exports and losing a major plant, on top of all the damage done by the tsunami. The radioactive materials released will decay pretty quickly and with careful monitoring the damage to people will be negligible. People ignorant of the facts will assume this disaster is as bad as Chernobyl and anti nuclear lobbyists will capitalise on this. Heads of state will call for more regulation like Sarkozy did, but probably won't follow it up. None of the most science ignorant sources will feel no repercussions from making terrible, scaremongering stories and continue to do so for the next disaster.
    Ultimately the people in the area will recover, rebuilt and move on as best they can.

    But that's just my opinion. It's open to change as facts become available.

    Well it should be open to change now that it has been upgraded to the highest level available, chernobyl was one reactor remember.

    LINK

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caesium-137

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isotopes_of_caesium#Caesium-134

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iodine-131

    It has been played down from day 1, I read a report last night about a nuclear expert say it was obvious it has always been a level 7.

    Since all this began Japan has been saying it's stabilizing, and even now having raised the level to 7 the PM says its still stabilizing, now if thats not playing it down, I dont know what is.
    http://www.voanews.com/english/news/asia/east-pacific/Japanese-PM-Says-Nuclear-Plant-Stabilizing-Despite-Higher-Crisis-Rating-119680334.html

    It has leaked 10% of Chernobyl so far, and its a month old, with the levels of released radiation always being said to be minimal, so when did this 10% suddenly appear?.
    The reactors are in meltdown, something Japan has being denying, if the reports are true the leaks only began to get heavier recently, so 10% of chernobyl in a short space of time should be worrying for everybody.


    Also this is like a slow puncture where Chernobyl was like a blowout, and it's just continuing and will be a very bad problem for years to come.

    And it's still being played down?



  • Registered Users Posts: 6,007 ✭✭✭Moriarty


    33 wrote: »
    Well it should be open to change now that it has been upgraded to the highest level available, chernobyl was one reactor remember.

    ...

    10% of Chernobyl so far, and its a month old, with the levels of released radiation always being said to be minimal, so when did this 10% suddenly appear?.
    The reactors are in meltdown, something Japan has being denying, if the reports are true the leaks only began to get heavier recently, so 10% of chernobyl in a short space of time should be worrying for everybody.


    Also this is like a slow puncture where Chernobyl was like a blowout, and it's just continuing and will be a very bad problem for years to come.

    And it's still being played down?

    Sweet zombie jesus. Please have a read of this, have a sit down, and them come back to us when you're less manic: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/04/12/fukushima_ffs/

    I would urge you to read the entire article, but I'll quote one piece specifically refuting your FUD above:
    Most media have chosen to report Japanese government calculations indicating (three-page PDF/56.7 KB) that perhaps 10,000 terabecquerels per hour of iodine-131 may have been emitted from the Daiichi cores in the hours following the initial decision to vent them. This is assessed as around 10 per cent of the emission levels seen at Chernobyl.

    That's largely meaningless, however. If all the iodine emitted in one hour had been sitting still at a single point (no) and that had been the only radio-isotope present (no again) you could have stood 100 metres from that point for three hours and suffered zero health consequences. Becquerels of a given isotope don't relate closely or directly to health consequences: we need to look at dose rates instead.

    At times, close to reactor buildings on the Daiichi site, radiation dose rates as high as 1,000 millisievert/hour have been recorded by remote instruments. That is serious radiation: after an hour exposed to it you'd be likely to suffer actual radiation sickness, though you'd be just about certain to recover. Two hours, and you might die: four hours, a fatal result would become likely. If millions of people were exposed to such levels for say a quarter of an hour, decades later you'd be able to point to increased cancer rates among them (though the risk to any individual would be negligible).

    But these were in fact very brief spikes right next to a damaged core, resulting mostly from very short-lived isotopes that were decaying before they could drift beyond the plant fence. Nobody at all has been exposed to such levels.

    Thus far the worst exposure was suffered by three workers who stood in ankle-deep radioactive water for several hours and sustained doses above 100 millisievert from doing so, indicating local levels of 20-odd millisievert/hour. They have suffered zero health consequences as a result. As of the latest reports, as many as four other workers (of all the many hundreds present at the site) have gone above 100 millisievert: the maximum level allowed is 250 before being withdrawn from the operation altogether, but as is common in the nuclear industry intense caution is being exercised.

    Danger beyond the plant fence has remained effectively nil. As of yesterday, according to nuclear experts at MIT in the States (reviewing data from Japanese and international monitoring teams on the ground) the highest dose rates seen within 30km of the plant have been 0.0016 millisievert/hour.

    For context, you could live permanently under radiation levels of 0.0016 mS/hr and you would never achieve even half the annual dose levels permitted by airline crew.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 188 ✭✭33


    Moriarty wrote: »
    Sweet zombie jesus. Please have a read of this, have a sit down, and them come back to us when you're less manic: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/04/12/fukushima_ffs/

    I would urge you to read the entire article, but I'll quote one piece specifically refuting your FUD above:

    I did, it's laughable if it wasn't so serious, the author has extensive knowledge

    this piece caught my attention

    This is the problem that everyone faces, who describes nuclear incidents as they really are – that is, insignificant. You are accused of being heartless, of failing to care about or empathise with people who are terribly frightened. You have committed the same sin as bracingly telling a toddler that there is no monster under his bed and that he should go back to sleep.

    So the author says nuclear incidents are insignificant and it's true, he mentions iodine and ommits caesium, a much more dangerous product.

    here's his bio, why do you believe him?

    Profile

    Lewis Page served as an officer in the Royal Navy from 1993 to 2004, and is now an author and authority on military matters. His book Lions, Donkeys and Dinosaurs: Waste and Blundering in the Military was published in 2006. He is a regular contributor to the Register and Prospect magazine
    lewis.jpg
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/lewis-page

    He dismisses nuclear disasters as insignificant.

    Great link and unbiased information.


    He also has zero consideration for future effects of radiation, he and his article are as bad as each other, and thats bad.


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,007 ✭✭✭Moriarty


    33 wrote: »
    I did, it's laughable if it wasn't so serious, the author has extensive knowledge

    this piece caught my attention

    This is the problem that everyone faces, who describes nuclear incidents as they really are – that is, insignificant. You are accused of being heartless, of failing to care about or empathise with people who are terribly frightened. You have committed the same sin as bracingly telling a toddler that there is no monster under his bed and that he should go back to sleep.

    So the author says nuclear incidents are insignificant and it's true, he mentions iodine and ommits caesium, a much more dangerous product.

    How is he incorrect? Please tell me.
    33 wrote: »
    here's his bio, why do you believe him?

    I thought playing the man and not the ball was something CTers constantly complained about? There is nothing to "believe" in what he's saying, beyond the physical properties he is describing. If you don't believe those, I'm not going to try and get you to hop off the crazy train.

    In either case, I subscribe to his newsletter as he is explaining exactly what's going on without specious apocalyptic tripe and with all the facts to back him up.
    33 wrote: »
    Great link and unbiased information.

    He also has zero consideration for future effects of radiation, he and his article are as bad as each other, and thats bad.

    Which effects are you talking about here in relation to this situation? How is he unbiased in what he is saying?


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,092 ✭✭✭CiaranMT


    I noticed lots of numbers in your posts 33, but no 33's!! :P


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 188 ✭✭33


    Moriarty wrote: »
    How is he incorrect? Please tell me.



    I thought playing the man and not the ball was something CTers constantly complained about? There is nothing to "believe" in what he's saying, beyond the physical properties he is describing. If you don't believe those, I'm not going to try and get you to hop off the crazy train.

    In either case, I subscribe to his newsletter as he is explaining exactly what's going on without specious apocalyptic tripe and with all the facts to back him up.



    Which effects are you talking about here in relation to this situation? How is he unbiased in what he is saying?


    Here he is last month telling us all its winding down:confused:

    Hysteria rages unchecked as minor incident winds down
    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/03/22/fukushima_tuesday_2/

    Heres more of his news
    http://search.theregister.co.uk/?q=&advanced=1&psite=0&author=Lewis+Page&date=the+dawn+of+time&site=all+The+Register+sites&results_per_page=100

    Its obvious he's an industry shill.

    I won't waste anymore time on him, he's a lying idiot, chemical radioactive ali.

    We should ask him to give a first hand report from outside the gates if its all so safe, that would shut the scaremongers up, but he wont, dont worry.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 188 ✭✭33


    CiaranMT wrote: »
    I noticed lots of numbers in your posts 33, but no 33's!! :P

    take your hand off my name, that will sort that out:p


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,007 ✭✭✭Moriarty


    Hang on, you aren't able to challenge the facts in the article that I linked at all? You have to resort to attempted - (really poorly done, btw) - character assassinations?

    With complete good faith, I can tell you that it's the most accurate reporting of the incident (beyond individual academics reporting along similar lines) that I have read. I don't have a vested interest in this and can't find a single issue with what he's reporting. Can you?
    33 wrote: »
    Here he is last month telling us all its winding down:confused:

    Hysteria rages unchecked as minor incident winds down
    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/03/22/fukushima_tuesday_2/

    .. and it was, and continues to. Where's the problem there? This sort of thing doesn't resolve itself overnight.. particularly when certain parts of the media have found a story that's increasing circulation - and hence revenue - due to scaremongering.
    33 wrote: »

    He's an industry shill because he isn't reporting what you want to read? Since you apparently can't show me where he's not telling it like it is, this is all I can read into your last sentance. There's an anti-nuclear industry alive and well too, should I be accusing you of being a shill for them?
    33 wrote: »
    I won't waste anymore time on him, he's a lying idiot, chemical radioactive ali.

    We should ask him to give a first hand report from outside the gates if its all so safe, that would shut the scaremongers up, but he wont, dont worry.

    Wow, what a lot of insults to throw at someone that lied completely and blatantly - no wait - murdered loads of people - no wait - wrote an article. Bloody hell.

    You claim he's lying, but haven't pointed to a single point of his that isn't correct. How does that even make sense?

    Granted, you're also implying that he's a genocial scumbag for writing an article on a current event, but I'm not sure how I can even respond to that ridiculousness..


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 188 ✭✭33


    Moriarty wrote: »
    Hang on, you aren't able to challenge the facts in the article that I linked at all? You have to resort to attempted - (really poorly done, btw) - character assassinations?

    With complete good faith, I can tell you that it's the most accurate reporting of the incident (beyond individual academics reporting along similar lines) that I have read. I don't have a vested interest in this and can't find a single issue with what he's reporting. Can you?



    .. and it was, and continues to. Where's the problem there? This sort of thing doesn't resolve itself overnight.. particularly when certain parts of the media have found a story that's increasing circulation - and hence revenue - due to scaremongering.



    He's an industry shill because he isn't reporting what you want to read? Since you apparently can't show me where he's not telling it like it is, this is all I can read into your last sentance. There's an anti-nuclear industry alive and well too, should I be accusing you of being a shill for them?



    Wow, what a lot of insults to throw at someone that lied completely and blatantly - no wait - murdered loads of people - no wait - wrote an article. Bloody hell.

    You claim he's lying, but haven't pointed to a single point of his that isn't correct. How does that even make sense?

    Granted, you're also implying that he's a genocial scumbag for writing an article on a current event, but I'm not sure how I can even respond to that ridiculousness..

    Let's wait another month and see if he changes his tune, although I doubt it, in 5 years if the radiation is still spewing out and half of Japan have cancer he'll probably still be telling the same rubbish.
    "You just cant beat these 7 eyed fish, they are so delicious, and cancer and mutated babies are all ok too"


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,007 ✭✭✭Moriarty


    33 wrote: »
    Let's wait another month and see if he changes his tune, although I doubt it, in 5 years if the radiation is still spewing out and half of Japan have cancer he'll probably still be telling the same rubbish.
    "You just cant beat these 7 eyed fish, they are so delicious, and cancer and mutated babies are all ok too"

    Hang on, you called this guy a liar, an idiot, a shill and smeared him with the name of chemical ali a genocidal psychopath, but now you respond with a 'lets wait and see'?

    You called him a liar, so where exactly are the lies?

    Or are you the lying shill here? Step up and own your words, coward.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 188 ✭✭33


    Moriarty wrote: »
    Hang on, you called this guy a liar, an idiot, a shill and smeared him with the name of chemical ali a genocidal psychopath, but now you respond with a 'lets wait and see'?

    You called him a liar, so where exactly are the lies?

    Or are you the lying shill here? Step up and own your words, coward.

    I'm a coward now?, hows that?

    the idiot is writing misleading articles pretending everything is ok and theres nothing to worry about from nuclear accidents and radiation is ok, wheres he?, is he in Japan, would he allow his family stroll around Fukishima prefecture eating lettuce and strawberries?

    He's a shill, face it.


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,007 ✭✭✭Moriarty


    Where he is has got nothing to do with the facts which surround the issue. The facts are officially established by a number of national and international agencies. What is being disputed is the interpretation of those facts.

    Now, for the fourth time, can you show us where the lies are in that piece?


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 188 ✭✭33


    Moriarty wrote: »
    Where he is has got nothing to do with the facts which surround the issue. The facts are officially established by a number of national and international agencies. What is being disputed is the interpretation of those facts.

    Now, for the fourth time, can you show us where the lies are in that piece?

    I'll just paste the article and red the lies.

    The total non-story of the Fukushima nuclear powerplant "disaster" – which has seen and will see no deaths or measurable health consequences for anyone anywhere – has received a shot in the arm today with the news that Japanese authorities have upgraded the incident to a Level 7 on the nuclear accident scale.
    This was reported in some mainstream media outlets like this:
    "Radiation in Japan is as bad as Chernobyl ... level is raised to 7 for only the second time in history ... spread of radioactive particles is out of control ... Lasting horror: Ukrainian children suffering from cancer caused by radiation from the Chernobyl disaster"
    The facts are that the incident at Fukushima Daiichi remains far and away the most minor of the various consequences which have followed the initial, devastating magnitude-9.0 quake and tsunami which struck northeastern Japan nearly a month ago. It has caused less human consequences than a moderate road-traffic accident. The nuclear reactors in the stricken provinces came through mostly unscathed (even at the Daiichi site two are expected to return to service, and at other nuclear powerplants in the region no significant damage at all was seen). One nuclear worker, in a crane cab at the time, was killed by the quake strike at the Daini plant: two were killed by the tsunami wave at Daiichi. A handful have been injured by the quake and following hydrogen explosions.
    Almost all other infrastructure hit by the natural disaster failed catastrophically. Housing, transport and industry across the region collapsed with deadly consequences, killing people by the tens of thousands. Oil plants, chemical factories, storage facilities and tankers of every type ruptured and burned, spilling megatonnes of pollution and carcinogens into the environment. But almost nothing is heard of all this, except as a footnote to the supposed radiological hazards resulting from the Fukushima Daiichi reactors 1 to 4.
    So what's happening in and around the Daiichi plant?
    Residual heating in the cores at reactors 1 to 3 has now decayed down to less than 0.37 per cent of normal output power. It is this heating which has previously driven emissions of core material from the cores, and which plant personnel struggled to control in the hours and days after the tsunami knocked out backup cooling power and backup-backup batteries were exhausted. During that time heating levels, though falling fast, were initially 20 times what they are now.
    Steam vented from the hot cores was and is not dangerous in itself, but some material from the fuel rods themselves was naturally carried out along with vented steam. Some of this was carried off by the wind to be deposited in the area around, where it is detectable in minuscule amounts.
    Most media have chosen to report Japanese government calculations indicating (three-page PDF/56.7 KB) that perhaps 10,000 terabecquerels per hour of iodine-131 may have been emitted from the Daiichi cores in the hours following the initial decision to vent them. This is assessed as around 10 per cent of the emission levels seen at Chernobyl.
    That's largely meaningless, however. If all the iodine emitted in one hour had been sitting still at a single point (no) and that had been the only radio-isotope present (no again) you could have stood 100 metres from that point for three hours and suffered zero health consequences. Becquerels of a given isotope don't relate closely or directly to health consequences: we need to look at dose rates instead.
    At times, close to reactor buildings on the Daiichi site, radiation dose rates as high as 1,000 millisievert/hour have been recorded by remote instruments. That is serious radiation: after an hour exposed to it you'd be likely to suffer actual radiation sickness, though you'd be just about certain to recover. Two hours, and you might die: four hours, a fatal result would become likely. If millions of people were exposed to such levels for say a quarter of an hour, decades later you'd be able to point to increased cancer rates among them (though the risk to any individual would be negligible).
    But these were in fact very brief spikes right next to a damaged core, resulting mostly from very short-lived isotopes that were decaying before they could drift beyond the plant fence. Nobody at all has been exposed to such levels.
    Thus far the worst exposure was suffered by three workers who stood in ankle-deep radioactive water for several hours and sustained doses above 100 millisievert from doing so, indicating local levels of 20-odd millisievert/hour. They have suffered zero health consequences as a result. As of the latest reports, as many as four other workers (of all the many hundreds present at the site) have gone above 100 millisievert: the maximum level allowed is 250 before being withdrawn from the operation altogether, but as is common in the nuclear industry intense caution is being exercised.
    Danger beyond the plant fence has remained effectively nil. As of yesterday, according to nuclear experts at MIT in the States (reviewing data from Japanese and international monitoring teams on the ground) the highest dose rates seen within 30km of the plant have been 0.0016 millisievert/hour.
    For context, you could live permanently under radiation levels of 0.0016 mS/hr and you would never achieve even half the annual dose levels permitted by airline crew.
    The only actual health menace of any kind beyond the plant fence from Fukushima (and indeed following Chernobyl) has been presented by ingestion of radioisotopes in food: specifically of radioisotopic iodine. For adults this appears to have almost no effect, but in the case of children radio-iodine is taken up and concentrated in the thyroid gland very efficiently. Even though it decays away completely in a matter of weeks (iodine-131 has a half-life of just eight days), if a child ingests even quite small amounts of radio-iodine he or she will have a tiny extra risk of thyroid cancer in future – about 0.02 per cent, based on Chernobyl.
    Fortunately, thyroid cancer – unusually among cancers – is almost always curable without ill effects (this is done, counterintuitively, using much larger amounts of iodine-131) and so the chance of such a child actually dying as a result of such exposure is unfeasibly tiny: less than one chance in a million.
    But these people are frightened! It's cruel to tell them not to be! Eh?

    It is a total certainty that no child has or will suffer any such exposure. Occasionally, radio-iodine levels in water have been sampled at a rate which, if babies drank such water constantly for a year, they might achieve that one-in-a-million chance of dying decades down the road. No baby will be able to do so for a year, as radio-iodine stopped being produced at Fukushima when the cores scrammed a month back. Already, more than 95 per cent of what was there has decayed away into inoffensive xenon: in another month this figure will be well above 99 per cent.
    As this is written, even these minuscule, barely-measurable health effects are disappearing. In only one village in Fukushima province does the tapwater remain above the can-a-baby-drink-it-for-a-year benchmark.
    That's it – that really is it. You can forget all the rest of it – "radioactive water released into the sea" etc. None of that offers any measurable possibilities of harm – though of course, nearby nations are seizing the chance for a bit of fisheries protectionism and baseless consumer panic worldwide will surely hit Japan's fishing industry hard.
    So why have the Japanese authorities raised the incident to a 7? After all, my god, this is the highest possible rating for a nuclear accident. Surely this must be serious?
    Well, the Japanese government says it has done this purely on account of the calculated airborne emissions figure, an order of magnitude less than Chernobyl – or if you like, within an order of magnitude of Chernobyl.
    In reality, the rise to Level 7 is a result of the constant badgering both from inside and outside Japan to the effect that the Japanese government is not taking this seriously. By calling it Level 7, the authorities are saying that yes, they assess the Daiichi situation as extremely serious. They really do care.
    This is the problem that everyone faces, who describes nuclear incidents as they really are – that is, insignificant. You are accused of being heartless, of failing to care about or empathise with people who are terribly frightened. You have committed the same sin as bracingly telling a toddler that there is no monster under his bed and that he should go back to sleep.
    Part of the problem here is that in the case of nuclear dangers it is rather as though the toddler had a mentally troubled aunt or uncle who, in addition to telling the kid fairytales at story time, insists that the monsters in the stories are real.
    The people in charge of story time here are the media, and like many of us finding ourselves troubled by bizarro in-laws, the media fails – seldom really even tries, often enough – to prevent the mad aunt telling the kids rubbish.
    The good old Beeb, for instance – Auntie Storytime herself – briefly denied the monster's existence a little while back: but then felt compelled to allow "the other side of the story" from crazy Uncle Greenpeace:
    The accepted wisdom has been that the consequences of a catastrophic nuclear accident may be large, but that the frequency is low ... Given that only a few decades, rather than millennia separate the accidents at Fukushima, Chernobyl and Three Mile Island it is clear that nuclear operators and/or regulators are significantly underestimating the inherent risks ... in the EU, renewables installations provided the majority of new capacity in 2008 and 2009 ... the ongoing disaster at Fukushima has highlighted the environmental, societal and economic impact that nuclear power can have in extreme conditions.
    Actually as we have seen the consequences of a "catastrophic" nuclear accident are either zero (Fukushima, Three Mile Island) or minuscule (Chernobyl actually killed fewer than 60 people). Nuclear is far and away the safest means of generating power, with deaths per terawatt-hour a tiny fraction of those resulting from low-tech means such as coal and wind.
    Renewables plants did indeed provide most new capacity in the EU – but in fact most production came from new gas, as renewable "capacity" is a largely meaningless figure.
    Indeed, Fukushima has highlighted the impacts nuclear power can have under extreme conditions, but not in the way that uncle Froggatt says: environmental (nil impact), economic (slim to none impact – some 40-year-old plant written off a few years early, rolling blackouts mostly didn't occur and ended altogether yesterday) and societal (cretinous panic impact only).
    Even the Guardian's famous treehugger George Monbiot rebelled in the face of the global idiocy, joining many another well-known Green before him in suddenly noticing a strong smell of coffee. But the Graun couldn't bear to tell the toddlers the truth straight: again, mad Auntie Fear was invited in so as to present a "balanced view".
    Nobody dares to be so heartless as to tell the frightened toddler outright to go back to sleep. Baseless fear is coddled, tolerated, treated as understandable and reasonable – and often enough, wantonly pumped up in pursuit of fringe agendas or readership figures.
    As for the INES nuclear incident scale and Fukushima's new 7 rating – the highest possible – you could draw various lessons from that.
    But the only rational conclusion to draw is that an industry which can have an accident at the extreme top of its possible internationally agreed accident scale without killing a single person is already so safe that it probably deserves to relax its costly precautions quite a lot – rather than having them cranked up yet further, as seems all too likely.
    If nuclear were allowed to be as dangerous as gas – that is, perhaps somewhere in the region of 400 times as dangerous in terms of deaths per terawatt-hour – there can be little doubt that electricity would become extremely cheap, maybe indeed too cheap to bother metering it for most users. Waste could be dealt with and supplies extended by many times by simply reprocessing fuel, something which the fearmongers have already managed to ban in many countries.
    That would not only mean realistic prospects of low-to-zero carbon emissions: it would also mean no need to much care about the opinions of various unsavoury regimes around the world, or to funnel revenue to them to spend on weapons. Cheap nuclear energy would hugely boost economic performance. It would also offer effectively unlimited fresh water supplies, and realistic options for space travel beyond low Earth orbit.
    Some of us at least are getting a bit sick of the idea that you simply aren't allowed to tell frightened people quite bluntly to act their age – and we're getting more than just a bit sick of irrational or unscrupulous fairytale-spinners making them frightened in the first place.


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,007 ✭✭✭Moriarty


    LoL.

    "lie" does not mean "stuff I don't like to think".

    Now, for the fifth time, can you please show us where the lies are and why they are lies?


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,007 ✭✭✭Moriarty


    So, any joy, 33?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 188 ✭✭33


    Moriarty wrote: »
    LoL.

    "lie" does not mean "stuff I don't like to think".

    Now, for the fifth time, can you please show us where the lies are and why they are lies?
    Moriarty wrote: »
    So, any joy, 33?

    What?, so it's all under control there boss is it?
    The first lie from the shill which I quoted in red
    The total non-story of the Fukushima nuclear powerplant "disaster" – which has seen and will see no deaths or measurable health consequences for anyone anywhere

    The plant workers, Kazuhiro Kokubo, 24 and Yoshiki Terashima, 21, are the first employees of the operator, the Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO), to be reported dead.

    200,000 predicted to get cancer from this "non event", he's a joke.

    http://www.bellona.org/articles/articles_2011/fukushma_leak_No_2







  • Registered Users Posts: 6,007 ✭✭✭Moriarty


    33 wrote: »
    What?, so it's all under control there boss is it?
    The first lie from the shill which I quoted in red
    The total non-story of the Fukushima nuclear powerplant "disaster" – which has seen and will see no deaths or measurable health consequences for anyone anywhere

    The plant workers, Kazuhiro Kokubo, 24 and Yoshiki Terashima, 21, are the first employees of the operator, the Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO), to be reported dead.

    Do tell us all what caused their death, your answer will be most instructive.
    33 wrote: »
    200,000 predicted to get cancer from this "non event",

    The "European Committee on Radiation Risk" aka "The Group put together by the European Green Party in 1997 with an Official-Sounding name to act as the mouth piece for the anti-nuclear lobby" which has in the past been criticised by the UK Health Protection Agency as "...a self-styled organisation with no formal links to official bodies" and that its findings were "arbitrary and [without] a sound scientific basis. Furthermore, there are many misrepresentations of [the] International Commission on Radiological Protection" by the European Commitee on Radiation Risk.

    ...

    And you produce this group to reinforce your argument? Really?


    Tell you what, I've just formed a group called the European Committee on Radiaton Exposure and I'm now predicting that there will be no deaths from radiation ever again, anywhere. You can quote my organisation on that as you wish - I can even write up a nice press release for you to distribute to the scientifically illiterate media if you like.
    33 wrote: »
    he's a joke.

    A joke which you're unable to refute at all? That makes someone a joke, but it's not him.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 188 ✭✭33


    Moriarty wrote: »
    Do tell us all what caused their death, your answer will be most instructive.



    The "European Committee on Radiation Risk" aka "The Group put together by the European Green Party in 1997 with an Official-Sounding name to act as the mouth piece for the anti-nuclear lobby" which has in the past been criticised by the UK Health Protection Agency as "...a self-styled organisation with no formal links to official bodies" and that its findings were "arbitrary and [without] a sound scientific basis. Furthermore, there are many misrepresentations of [the] International Commission on Radiological Protection" by the European Commitee on Radiation Risk.

    ...

    And you produce this group to reinforce your argument? Really?


    Tell you what, I've just formed a group called the European Committee on Radiaton Exposure and I'm now predicting that there will be no deaths from radiation ever again, anywhere. You can quote my organisation on that as you wish - I can even write up a nice press release for you to distribute to the scientifically illiterate media if you like.



    A joke which you're unable to refute at all? That makes someone a joke, but it's not him.

    Ok lie number 2, second red part.
    It has caused less human consequences than a moderate road-traffic accident. The nuclear reactors in the stricken provinces came through mostly unscathed (even at the Daiichi site two are expected to return to service, and at other nuclear powerplants in the region no significant damage at all was seen).

    So you agree that it has caused less human consequence than a "moderate" road-traffic accident?

    So what does a really bad road traffic accident look like?, if I were to accept Fukishima is no more than a moderate road traffic accident, then I would have to assume a bad traffic accident would maybe equal total destruction of the planet.

    If you accept that nonsense as truthful you and the industry shill must be working together, are you monty burns from the simpsons?
    images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQka-wCGh6HP14b2OewMThXGnv2dsDOMPuQN15QUvVhtWmENXjh

    He's a joke for writing that piece of crap and you have to be having a joke agreeing with him, I won't be wasting any more time on him or you, below is a "moderate" road traffic accident according to him and you pretend to believe it.

    " In Japan, thousands of hectares of farmland have been irradiated. Hundreds of thousands of people have been evacuated from homes 20 kilometres around Fukushima, thousands more in a 30k radius have also left.

    Some areas as far as 60 kilometres from Fukushima have registered dangerous radiation readings.

    Fishermen, whose livelihoods were smashed by the tsunami, now have no hope of going back to sea because of radioactive pollution leaked into the ocean from the nuclear plant.

    And a number of nuclear experts in the last couple of days have said predictions by the power company TEPCO of a six to nine month program to get the nuclear crisis under control are too optimistic."
    http://www.abc.net.au/pm/content/2011/s3197125.htm


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 188 ✭✭33


    Boardstock 2011 for Japan 23rd April, The Mercantile, Dame St, Dublin
    http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=2056231652

    Boardstock 2011 for my front bumper and reg plate happening the following week, same venue, same everything, hope you can all make it.


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