Ohh I don’t know…I think he is definitely “turning Japanese…turning Japanese…oh yes I think so…” in regards to this wankfest if you know what I mean…
You ain’t a foolin nobody with your ignorance. I post link after link to real events, real happenings, and you try to focus on anything but that.
http://www3.nhk.or.jp/daily/english/04_34.html
Approving this sort of contamination of the ocean means things are desperate.
Not that this wasn’t already obvious.
What’s the plan for dealing with this disaster? “Pumping sea water onto everything for the last three weeks.”
No, the plan for dealing with it!
“We must keep everything cool”
We know that. What’s the plan after that?
“We must keep everything cool”
Repeat for the next ten years.
[QUOTE=FXMastermind]
You ain’t a foolin nobody with your ignorance. I post link after link to real events, real happenings, and you try to focus on anything but that.
[/QUOTE]
What do you suppose this cite proves? That radiation detectors all over the world have noticed the event? Notice when the last time they noticed such an event was (it’s in your cite)? Besides the fact that radiation detectors are incredibly sensitive, what else do you suppose your cite proves?
-XT
As for the whining about “protesters stopped the nuclear fuel from being stored” nonsense…
well, in reality
http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/may2009/2009-05-08-092.asp
If it was open for business no amount of protesting would stop them from simply putting the fuel there.
Try making something else up, see how it goes over.
It’s funny how they were 12 years over that deadline…it’s almost like, I don’t know, something kept delaying them…and delaying them…and delaying them…until something (the gods know what) managed to kill the whole project! I wonder what that ‘something’ could have been? !! It’s a puzzlement, no doubt…
-XT
It was about money.
Hard as it may be to believe, it actually cost a lot of money to build 40 miles of secure tunnels under a mountain.
Especially when it’s a government contract. You probably don’t even know how much money they already spent, do you?
Is not knowing a piece of trivia worse than you not knowing a damn thing at all about the subject?
Of course you don’t. You probably really believe a bunch of hippies waving signs stopped the whole show.
Reality is, it actually cost a shit ton of money to store and guard nuclear material for the next thousand years.
I know EXACTLY how much money was spent on Yucca Mt, guru. I actually have friends, co-workers and even family members who were involved in different aspects of the construction and I’ve, personally, been there. You? Oh, what am I asking…you were probably personally involved in the design plus highly involved in the upper level discussions about it on your other mystery board of ‘experts’! :smack:
-XT
Instead of bragging about your experience, why not educate us with some facts? Not that we believe you about having been there, but still, you could take the same amount of time you spent bragging and post some figures.
It’s not even that hard to do. Give it a try.
Irony!
I was going for satire!
But, you said you knew all about it. Did they leave you out of the budget meetings? Didn’t you get the memo about the cost over runs? The serious problems that caused the redesigns?
Are you sure you really know about this?
Do you realize Three Mile Island had a core meltdown (happened in the first few hours of the disaster)? Half the core was melted.
They did not realize it till years later when they were able to open the reactor and have a look.
What is this “secure” shit?
Is each tiny segment protected by an individual Klingon security officer or sumptin?
About TMI
Yeah, but that is because they were able to contain most of the radioactivity. In Japan you have 6 reactors, all of which have had various levels of melt downs and fuel fires. And a lot of it is not contained.
oops. To expand, we know about what has happened in the cores and fuel ponds because of the release of radioactive materials. Analysis of that shows what has happened.
We don’t have to wait a decade to find out.
Looking at the isotopes also tells how long it has been since nuclear activity took place. You don’t get isotopes with a 40 minute half life, four weeks after the nuclear reactions stopped.