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Chernobyl: New Safe Confiement now moving into position
On 16/11/16 09:34, Brian Gaff wrote:
I was told a few months ago that they have been flying military type drones over the local area looking for radiation hot spots still there after all this time, one supposes that they have a way to clean this localised contamination up? Its interesting to note of course that wildlife and plant life have been very successful in the area, and it makes you wonder if we can learn anything from this? IE could we use some of the mutations to make people who are less susceptible to radiation damage of their dna? There are no mutations. People are highly resistant radiation damage already. The main lesson from Chernobyl is that only a few people died, and apart from the iodine fiasco, no one got cancer either. What they DONT want you to know about Chernobyl is that with the worst possible scenario for a nuclear accident - its simply not possible to get worse than a reactor spilling its guts inside no containment - the actual overall death rate was extremely low, there were no cancer spikes in the area or anywhere else except for those directly exposed to I 131, and in fact the whole thing was really remarkably issue free. Radiation at low levels simply is hundreds of times less scary than we were told. Brian -- it should be clear by now to everyone that activist environmentalism (or environmental activism) is becoming a general ideology about humans, about their freedom, about the relationship between the individual and the state, and about the manipulation of people under the guise of a 'noble' idea. It is not an honest pursuit of 'sustainable development,' a matter of elementary environmental protection, or a search for rational mechanisms designed to achieve a healthy environment. Yet things do occur that make you shake your head and remind yourself that you live neither in Joseph Stalins Communist era, nor in the Orwellian utopia of 1984. Vaclav Klaus |
Chernobyl: New Safe Confiement now moving into position
On 16/11/16 13:10, Tim Streater wrote:
In article , The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 16/11/16 09:34, Brian Gaff wrote: I was told a few months ago that they have been flying military type drones over the local area looking for radiation hot spots still there after all this time, one supposes that they have a way to clean this localised contamination up? Its interesting to note of course that wildlife and plant life have been very successful in the area, and it makes you wonder if we can learn anything from this? IE could we use some of the mutations to make people who are less susceptible to radiation damage of their dna? There are no mutations. People are highly resistant to radiation damage already. Given that there has been radiation on the planet since the dawn of time, you'd expect mechanisms to develop for life to counteract radiation damage to DNA - and there are such mechanisms within your body cells, and every other living thing's cells, working all the time. The main lesson from Chernobyl is that only a few people died, and apart from the iodine fiasco, no one got cancer either. What they DONT want you to know about Chernobyl is that with the worst possible scenario for a nuclear accident - its simply not possible to get worse than a reactor spilling its guts inside no containment - the actual overall death rate was extremely low, 75 or so, according to WHO. Which is bad enough for those involved, but then there have been industrial accidents which had far worse outcomes than that. there were no cancer spikes in the area or anywhere else except for those directly exposed to I 131 Of which there is now none left. Exactly. Chernobyl like Fulkushima is a classic example of 'regulatory panic' Like 'the permitted dose was execeded by 100 times' ergo your gonna die. In fact you aren't. Because the permitted dose was defined years ago before we knew how dangerous radiation wasn't. -- If I had all the money I've spent on drink... ...I'd spend it on drink. Sir Henry (at Rawlinson's End) |
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