► Show Top 10 Hot Links

Posts Tagged ‘Nuclear Energy’

Hysteria about Curies, Rads, Rems & Becquerels

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 108 Comments › )
Filed under Japan, Open thread, Satire at March 18th, 2011 - 11:00 pm


Before exposure.


After exposure.

This is what the alarmist media would have you believe. Any questions? Yes? Then check this out.  And this. Oh, yeah, and check out Page 27 of this.

I don’t mean to suggest that the situation at Japan’s Fukushima plant isn’t serious, but I do mean to suggest that the U.S. media’s fear mongering is way out of proportion to the actual danger.

Besides, tomorrow night’s “MegaMoon” is going to cause mass destruction,  stars to collide, and all beer to go flat before it comes crashing down into Lake Erie, so this may be the final Overnight Open Thread.

____________________________________________

Update— Here’s a map of radiation distribution from Nevada nuclear tests 1952-1962 [via]:

Click to see it larger.

 

Some Perspective For The Nuclear Hysteria: Wind Is Far More Dangerous.

by Flyovercountry ( 60 Comments › )
Filed under Media, Politics, Science, Technology at March 18th, 2011 - 6:00 pm

I have been watching with much amusement as people in California have been bending over backwards to be idiotic.  They are gulping down iodine tablets like they are Pez candies.  Terrified about the prospect of a radiation leak from a nuclear power plant magically arriving to us here in the U.S.  Some food for thought for the morons in our most populous and most liberal state, Bananas contain Potassium, which is radioactive.  Your exposure from eating the yellow genetically manipulated fruit, (cross pollinated from plantains,) will be far greater than anything which could possibly arrive from Japan even if the whole plant exploded and the fuel were exposed and in flames.  Doing your laundry this year?  The phosphorous in that detergent is radioactive, and will expose you to far higher doses of radiation than the worst sci-fi possible scenario than anything which could possibly arrive from Japan.

In our society however, hysteria trumps fact.  People are gobbling down the iodine, which amuses me, but it doesn’t hurt anyone.  What is dangerous to our society is the fact that these dolts are causing our own energy production to be shut down.  So, let’s get the facts straight.  One, even after an Earthquake 10 times more powerful than an 8.0, and a tsunami which followed, the Nuclear facility in question in Japan has not lost containment.  The engineers there have done a tremendous job, and the design of the building has worked just like it was supposed to.  Two, wind powered turbines have resulted in more loss of American lives than Nuclear Power. The above link will take you to a Newsbuster’s story which provides perspective.

You read that right. According to the Caithness Windfarm Information Forum, there were 35 fatalities associated with wind turbines in the United States from 1970 through 2010. Nuclear energy, by contrast, did not kill a single American in that time.
The meltdown at Three Mile Island in 1979 did not kill or injure anyone, since the power plant’s cement containment apparatus did its job – the safety measures put in place were effective. Apparently the safety measures associated with wind energy are not adequate to prevent loss of life.
Nuclear accounts for about nine percent of America’s energy, according to the Energy Information Administration, and has yet to cause a single fatality here. Wind, on the other hand, provides the United States with only 0.7 percent of its energy, and has been responsible for 35 deaths in the United States alone. So if we’re trying to weigh the costs and benefits of each, it seems wind fares far worse than nuclear. Yet no one seems to be discussing plans to halt production of all new wind farms until Americans’ safety can be guaranteed.

Read more: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/lachlan-markay/2011/03/17/inconvenient-truth-wind-energy-has-killed-more-americans-nuclear#ixzz1GyhT0w39

We have finally reached the point in our world where people would rather the horror movie version of world events regardless of facts, and then fantasize as though it were all true.  It’s cute when I can watch my T.V. and laugh at people on the West Coast blowing their dough on iodine and panic over what is actually nothing.  It is not cute when that hysteria forces me to pay a higher price for electricity and every product which uses electricity in its manufacture.  The Eco fascists are forcing us to shut down Nuclear and utilize wind because they are claiming that Nuclear is dangerous.  Well darn it, Wind is demonstrably more dangerous.  We need to stop the horrific loss of life caused by windmills.  Write your Congressman and Senators today, and tell them you demand that all wind farms be shut down before Billions die needlessly.  Remember, it’s for the children!

Crossposted at Musings of a Mad Conservative.

The Face of Nuclear Proliferation

by Iron Fist ( 106 Comments › )
Filed under Iran, Military, Nuclear Weapons, Politics, Russia, Venezuela at October 26th, 2010 - 9:08 am

Lest anyone missed it, the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, long on life support, has become un-officially obsolete. Iran is taking the final steps to become a “peaceful” nuclear power under the treaty, but the enrichment centrifuges keep spinning and spinning.

TEHRAN (Reuters) – Iran has begun loading fuel into the core of its first nuclear power plant on Tuesday, one of the last steps to realizing its stated goal of becoming a peaceful nuclear power, state-run Press TV reported on Tuesday.

A government spokesman said the fuelling showed Iran’s nuclear program was on track despite international sanctions aimed at forcing it to curb uranium enrichment activities which many countries fear are aimed at developing atomic weapons.

“Iran has started injecting fuel into the core of the Bushehr nuclear power plant in the southern port city of Bushehr,” the English-language Press TV said on its website.

Amid great media fanfare, fuel rods were transported into the reactor building in August, but they were not inserted into its core and the plant’s start-up was delayed due to what were described as minor technical problems.

Iran expects the Russian-built 1,000-MW plant finally to begin generating energy by early next year.

Reuters

This is really past the drop-dead date for any pre-emptive strike by America to stop this plant from going on-line. Any strike from here on out will have radiological consequences for the Iranian people that are beyond anything that America would be willing to cause. While we (Blogmocracy, not necessary the US Government) might breathe a sigh of relief over an Iranian Chernoybl, American bombs are not going to help bring that about.

This does not, in theory at least, bring Iran any closer to nuclear weapons. The Iranian uraniam enrichment facilities are located elsewhere, and have not paused (to my knowledge) in their operation. It is the enrichment facilities at Natanz (and perhaps elsewhere) that arre the biggest potential building blocks in an Iranian Manhatten Project. So why the fuss?

Simply put, this lets the nuclear proliferation genie out of the bottle. If the Islamic Republic of Iran has a nuclear program (the largest exporter of terrorism on the planet), and the world acquieses, who, therefore, may not? Other than America, of course, but that is a domestic issue and not a matter of proliferation as we are already a nuclear power. Venezuela is the next nation in the process to build nuclear energy facilities with Russian technology and assistance:

Russia first offered Venezuela nuclear power in 2008, during an intense spell of anti-Western sentiment in Moscow after the war with Georgia. The agreement on Friday fleshed out that offer.

It specified that the Russian state nuclear power company, Rosatom, would build one nuclear plant with two large pressurized water reactors to generate power, and one small research reactor to make medical isotopes and what was described as nuclear materials that could be useful as pesticides for agriculture.

Mr. Medvedev said Friday that Russia would help Venezuela build “an entire range of energy opportunities.” He added that “even such an oil- and gas-rich country as Venezuela needs new sources of energy.”

New York Times (requires login)

Nuclear pesticides? That is a new one for me, but that is what the article says.

With an active reactor in Iran and plans for one in Venezulea, it would seem that many rising American enemies are on their way to nuclear power. For peaceful purposes, of course. No one should be concerned. After all, the Russians are in charge. What could possible go wrong?

Hugo Chavez’s Venezuela To Go Nuclear

by WrathofG-d ( 186 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Democratic Party, Iran, Leftist-Islamic Alliance, Nuclear Weapons, Russia, United Nations, Venezuela, World at September 16th, 2009 - 10:07 am

Undoubtedly a result of the fecklessness of the Obama Administration, and the UN in response to Iran’s moving forward toward nuclear weapons, Hugo Chavez has decided to begin working on becoming a nuclear power himself.

The connections between Venezuela and Iran are well documented, and it seems that we are now finally seeing the fruits of our ignoring them.

It is all being underwritten by Russia (of course).

http://mypetjawa.mu.nu/archives/chavez_ahmadinejad_iran_hug.jpg http://static.indianexpress.com/m-images/2009-04-18/M_Id_72338_obama_chavez_meet.jpg















CARACAS, Venezuela —  Hugo Chavez wants to join the nuclear energy club and is looking to Russia for help in getting started.

The Venezuelan leader is already dismissing critics’ concerns over his nuclear ambitions, offering assurances his aims are peaceful and that Venezuela will simply be following in the footsteps of other South American nations using nuclear energy.

Yet his project remains in its planning stages and still faces a host of practical hurdles, likely requiring billions of dollars, as well as technology and expertise that Venezuela lacks.

Russia has offered to help bridge that gap, and Chavez has announced that the two countries have created an atomic energy commission.

“I say it before the world: Venezuela is going to start the process of developing nuclear energy, but we’re not going to make an atomic bomb, so don’t be bothering us afterward … (with) something like what they have against Iran,” Chavez said Sunday.

The socialist president is closely allied with Iran and defends its nuclear program while the U.S. and other countries accuse Tehran of having a secret nuclear weapons program.

Does this “we are doing it just for peaceful purposes” sound familiar?

Oh, don’t worry; the Obama Administration responded:

U.S. State Department spokesman Ian Kelly on Monday expressed misgivings about Venezuela’s nuclear ambitions. Responding to a reporter’s question about whether the United States would be worried about nuclear transfers between Iran and Venezuela, Kelly said: “The short answer is, to that, yes, we do have concerns.”

Kelly noted that Venezuela is a signatory of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, which would restrict any nuclear program to nonmilitary purposes.

{The Article}