Just curious. You know. Just asking.
Cause the deaths of straw men are serious bidniss
Like opinions on internet, it’s a tragedy when one burns.
Just curious. You know. Just asking.
Cause the deaths of straw men are serious bidniss
Like opinions on internet, it’s a tragedy when one burns.
I gather you don’t know that there are any such deaths.
Your reluctance to talk about straw men is evident.
Well, you have 354 posts in this thread, so that’s probably a good number to start with.
Does anybody other than FXM have a casualty cite?
The astute observer of history may well know that according to the nuclear cheerleaders, almost nobody died from Chernobyl. And it really wasn’t even that bad.
And facts won’t change their mind at all.
Anybody?
Pity, nobody wants to burn your strawman. Can’t say I blame them really.
How is it a strawman to ask for actual casualty numbers after a disaster? I’m not misrepresenting anyone’s claims, I’m just wondering if any radiation deaths have been reported.
[QUOTE=FXMastermind]
Pity, nobody wants to burn your strawman. Can’t say I blame them really.
[/QUOTE]
It’s not a strawman, you idiot…it’s a fact. No one has died due to radiation in Japan. Some non-zero number of people MIGHT die due to radiation in the future, but as of right now no one has. I realize that you are too stupid to even keep your heart beating without assistance, but try and grasp this.
And please, for the love you bear small furry animals, stop bumping this thread with your inane bullshit and links to web sites in Japanese. I have no idea why the mods are letting you get away with this horseshit, but please, PLEASE stop. Just stop.
-XT
Ah, when faced with facts, always attempt to discuss something else.
You prefer American reporting? No problem.
Shocking. But not surprising.
That is 586.920 mSv/year, which is over twice the lifetime maximum dose for a radiation worker in an emergency. Potentially harmful is putting it mildly.
Unlike the Soviet Union, Japan has been unable to simply cover everything up.
That would be the highest ranking official, who resigned after discovering the truth, and how the Government was full of shit.
Yeah, well smart people will do that you know. Especially when the Government can’t simply move them to somewhere else.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/01/world/asia/01radiation.html
Oh that is just the tip of the nuclear iceberg there. The western media has been pretty quiet, but that is getting ready to change.
Can 67 microsievers/hour be casually scaled up to 586.920 mSv/year (i.e. by multiplying 67 * 24 * 365)? Doesn’t that suggest a sustained steady radiation exposure rather than a contamination, which I thought would be subject to half-life decay?
I’d kind of like to see Okoshi’s readings of the site over a 24-hour period rather than one-time sampling. In any case, the problem at hand is starting to sound more like one with Japan’s hierarchical culture, rather than with nuclear engineering as such.
http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20110729a3.html
My my, the secrets that are now coming out. So one damaged fuel rod, in a working undamaged nuclear plant, has been quietly secretly a problem for 17 years now. Almost sounds like a damaged fuel rod is a real problem.
So what does a pool with 40 years of fuel rods mean? When they are all damaged? In a building blown to shit? With a damaged reactor with a full meltdown of the core still steaming away?
Oh my.
Timeline for solving that problem?
Never.
Just so it’s clear, the problem is a damaged fuel rod. That means a bunch of radioactive material is not inside metal cladding, and can’t be moved out of water with out bursting into flame, and it is too hot to put inside a dry storage cask. If you could somehow figure out how to move it in the first place.
Well, problems that can never be solved aren’t worth worrying about.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2011/07/31/bloomberg1376-LP8WWK6JTSEJ01-5PIJEFGJ36KM50OK194CMKAJ22.DTL
The highest radiation levels to date were recorded this weekend. The meters were buries at 10, which is the highest they can record.
All is well.
Shocking. But it isn’t really news. This has been known for a while.
The reason they are building giant tents over the buildings is to try and stop the continuous release of radioactivity from the steaming molten cores under the reactors. Radiation is also leaking out through cracks in the containment vessels.
So, it’s still a big ZILCH in the dead-by-radiation department.
Not really.