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Post by ZETAR on Apr 12, 2018 3:15:22 GMT
www.globalresearch.ca/fukushima-darkness-radiation-effects-of-fukushima-daiichi-triple-meltdowns-felt-worldwide/5625847It’s been six years since the triple 100% nuke meltdowns occurred at Fukushima Daiichi d/d March 11th, 2011, nowadays referred to as “311”. Over time, it’s easy for the world at large to lose track of the serious implications of the world’s largest-ever industrial disaster; out of sight out of mind works that way.
According to Japanese government and TEPCO (Tokyo Electric Power Company) estimates, decommissioning is a decade-by-decade work-in-progress, most likely four decades at a cost of up to ¥21 trillion ($189B). However, that’s the simple part to understanding the Fukushima nuclear disaster story. The difficult painful part is largely hidden from pubic view via a highly restrictive harsh national secrecy law (Act on the Protection of Specially Designated Secrets, Act No. 108/2013), political pressure galore, and fear of exposing the truth about the inherent dangers of nuclear reactor meltdowns. Powerful vested interests want it concealed.
Following passage of the 2013 government secrecy act, which says that civil servants or others who “leak secrets” will face up to 10 years in prison, and those who “instigate leaks,” especially journalists, will be subject to a prison term of up to 5 years, Japan fell below Serbia and Botswana in the Reporters Without Borders 2014 World Press Freedom Index. The secrecy act, sharply criticized by the Japanese Federation of Bar Associations, is a shameless act of buttoned-up totalitarianism at the very moment when citizens need and in fact require transparency.
The current status, according to Mr. Okamura, a TEPCO manager, as of November 2017:
“We’re struggling with four problems: (1) reducing the radiation at the site (2) stopping the influx of groundwater (3) retrieving the spent fuel rods and (4) removing the molten nuclear fuel.” (Source: Martin Fritz, The Illusion of Normality at Fukushima, Deutsche Welle–Asia, Nov. 3, 2017)
In short, nothing much has changed in nearly seven years at the plant facilities, even though tens of thousands of workers have combed the Fukushima countryside, washing down structures, removing topsoil and storing it in large black plastic bags, which end-to-end would extend from Tokyo to Denver and back.SHALOM...Z
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Post by ZETAR on Apr 12, 2018 3:16:18 GMT
Can't think where to put this one. But here we are.
So Hawaii is awoken to the shrill of an incoming missile warning.
38 minutes later it is cancelled.. someone pressed the wrong button.
My question is, what was the US military response ?
Look at it this way.
If a Russian ICBM was launched the UK got four minutes warning.
The USA got about 20 minutes for the same launch.
So why did it take 38 minutes to tell the Hawaiians that it was a false alarm ?
Were we in the same situation where only the cool head of a Russian officer prevented retaliatory launch of a countermeasure.
And how long before the screen watchers realised it wasn't real.
HAL
INT21
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Post by ZETAR on Apr 12, 2018 3:16:45 GMT
ZETAR,
YOU WOULD APPROVE OF 1800 TONS OF "Deadly Nuke Waste"... ADJACENT TO YOUR ENCLAVE/CAVE?..
I live in a cave where the female cave dwellers smoke quite heavily. So I would probably be at more risk personally from that.
This stuff needs to be sealed up but accessible;e as someone is bound to find a use for it some day. Would be a shame to place it out of reach.
We need more nuclear physicists to work on these problems.
HAL
INT21
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Post by ZETAR on Apr 12, 2018 3:17:18 GMT
HAL...GOTTA GIVE IT TO YA MATE!"We need more nuclear physicists to work on these problems."
Pinball Wizardyoutu.be/4AKbUm8GrbMHe ain't got no distractions
Can't hear those buzzers and bells
Don't see lights a flashin'
Plays by sense of smell
Always gets a replay
Never seen him fall
That deaf dumb and blind kid
Sure plays a mean pin ballSHALOM...Z
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Post by ZETAR on Apr 12, 2018 3:17:49 GMT
Who should be held responsible for the Aliso Canyon gas leak?Date: February 13, 2018
Source: University of Southern California
A USC-led analysis of the Aliso Canyon gas leak determined corporate dysfunction by the SoCalGas Co. and lax regulatory oversight charted the path to the largest greenhouse gas leak in U.S. history.
The new study, researchers said, is the first to report what went wrong and why an estimated 97,100 metric tons of methane -- more than what 440,000 cars emit in a single year -- polluted a Los Angeles neighborhood from October 2015 to February 2016.
"SoCalGas's Aliso Canyon system failure and the resulting major environmental scandal in 2015 has clear echoes of BP's Deepwater Horizon oil spill in 2010 and BP's Texas City refinery explosion in 2005," said Najmedin Meshkati, senior author of the study and a professor of civil and environmental engineering and industrial systems engineering at the USC Viterbi School of Engineering.
That translates to one major energy sector disaster every five years.
"How many more oil and gas disasters have to occur before a healthy culture of safety is implemented?" Meshkati asked. "The lessons learned from the Aliso Canyon gas leak can improve the nation's underground gas storage facilities. Better industrial safety culture will protect the health and safety of people, will protect the environment, will help keep electricity and gas prices down and will shield the reputation of industries such as Sempra Energy, the parent company of the SoCalGas Co."
Published in the Journal of Sustainable Energy Engineering late last year, the study used a robust risk management framework called AcciMap to systematically analyze how the government, regulators, company, management, staff and work processes contributed to the four-month-long Aliso Canyon gas leak that temporarily displaced more than 11,000 Porter Ranch residents.
SoCalGas's organizational system was dysfunctional
The SoCalGas Co. supplies 22 million customers and 17 power plants with natural gas energy. This pressure pushed upper management to prioritize unsafe supply practices to meet increased demands, the report stated.
"SoCalGas had lenient requirements for infrastructure record keeping, no comprehensive risk management plan and no testing programs or plans in place to remediate substandard wells," Meshkati said. "The company needs to improve its safety culture."
SoCalGas was aware of a possible future leak in the Standard Sesnon 25 (SS-25) well about a quarter century before a pipe ruptured there. Company logs from 1992 say "check for potential leakage past shoe as high as 8,150 [feet]."
The SS-25 well is 64 years old and 8,750 feet deep. An underground safety valve designed to shut off flow to the surface when abnormal conditions occurred was removed in 1979 and never replaced, according to the study.
"If a functional kill valve were in place for well SS-25 in October 2015 when the leak began, the leak could have been stopped in a matter of hours or days rather than after four months," Meshkati said.
SoCalGas made eight unsuccessful attempts to stop the leak using kill procedures. It later contracted a well control company to "facilitate a proper kill procedure," the study reported.
This case study offers tips for nationwide underground gas storage facilities, such as improved well monitoring using up-to-date technology like infrared methane detectors, nonstop pressure monitoring and more training for employees. It notes that logs are necessary to assess possible risks linked to specific wells and that records for mechanical integrity must be documented. (The last time well SS-25 recorded an inspection was in 1976.)
"We believe that a proactive culture of committed leadership, having a questioning attitude, personal accountability, good communication and innovative technology are necessary to ensure that systems act to their full potential," Meshkati said. "These are among the traits of a healthy safety culture developed by the nuclear industry. It will be beneficial if it were adopted by all safety-sensitive industries."
Lax regulatory oversight
Methane is about 32 times more detrimental to global warming than carbon dioxide because of its stronger heat-trapping ability, the study stated.
The federal Clean Air Act does not regulate methane, though it does have strict regulations for carbon dioxide.
Considering that the United States is the most prolific operator of underground gas storage facilities in the world, we must rethink the lack of federal, state and local oversight in this arena, said Maryam Tabibzadeh, study first author and a recent USC Viterbi doctoral graduate when the study was conducted. She is now an assistant professor at California State University, Northridge.
A key energy source
Natural gas is a significant energy source in the United States. It supports 33 percent of electricity generation in America via more than 350 underground gas storage facilities or about 14,000 wells, according to a 2005 report.
These wells were functioning without a national risk analysis framework, which is used to prevent operational failures and to streamline crisis management protocols when accidents happen, the study reported.
After the Aliso Canyon gas leak, Congress passed the Protecting our Infrastructure of Pipelines and Enhancing Safety (PIPES) Act in June 2016. The act created an interagency task force led by the U.S. secretary of energy.
Having a task force in place quickens the response time when accidents happen because studied and practiced procedures are activated, said Meshkati, whose expertise is in major complex technological systems failures such as the Chernobyl disaster, Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster and BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill.
"Risk analysis is vital for safe well operations and relies on analyzing prior data records, yet no national standards for well records were in place prior to the accident," the report stated. "There was no clear overarching agency that was in control of the accident's intervention and aftermath."
Without an authoritative agency to direct emergency response, the SoCalGas Co. did not have a clear path for addressing emergencies quickly, nor was it forced to maintain or update aging infrastructure, the report stated.
As of August 2016, California was one of only three states that had regulations addressing well construction, well maintenance and well closures, the report noted.
Simone Stavros, a master's student at USC Viterbi, and Mikhil Ashtekar, a master's student from California State University, Northridge, also contributed to the study.
Story Source:
Materials provided by University of Southern California. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
Journal Reference:
1. Maryam Tabibzadeh, Simone Stavros, Mikhil S. Ashtekar, Najmedin Meshkati. A Systematic Framework for Root-Cause Analysis of the Aliso Canyon Gas Leak Using the AcciMap Methodology: Implication for Underground Gas Storage Facilities. Journal of Sustainable Energy Engineering, 2017; DOI: 10.7569/JSEE.2017.629515
www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/02/180213091757.htm
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Post by ZETAR on Apr 12, 2018 3:18:21 GMT
WTO backs Japan complaint against South Korea’s Fukushima import banwww.japantimes.co.jp/news/2018/02/23/national/wto-backs-japan-complaint-south-koreas-fukushima-import-ban/#.WpeI2WrwbklTokyo on Friday welcomed a World Trade Organization panel’s ruling that Seoul’s continued import ban on seafood from Fukushima Prefecture — home to the 2011 nuclear disaster — and other parts of Japan amounts to the nation taking “arbitrarily and unjustifiably” discriminatory measures.
A dispute settlement panel under the WTO published a report Thursday detailing its ruling in favor of Japan’s complaint against a blanket import ban imposed by South Korea on all fishery products from the prefectures of Fukushima, Miyagi, Iwate, Aomori, Ibaraki, Tochigi, Gunma and Chiba.
While acknowledging Seoul’s measures against seafood from Fukushima and the other nearby prefectures were justified initially, the WTO report said maintaining the ban to date is “more trade-restrictive than required,” and recommended that the ban on 28 kinds of fish be lifted, as requested by Japan.
South Korea, the report said, failed to comply with a WTO agreement stipulating that sanitary measures by member countries do not “arbitrarily or unjustifiably discriminate.”
The panel also said a South Korean requirement that Japanese exporters of all marine products submit certificates of inspection if small amounts of radioactive cesium or iodine are detected is an effective barrier to fair trade.
In Tokyo, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga welcomed the ruling.
“We believe our claims have been duly taken into account and think highly of the judgment” by the panel, he said, adding that Japan will “swiftly” urge South Korea to scrap its ban on seafood.
Suga also said Tokyo will further “strengthen efforts” to alleviate or remove regulatory measures implemented by other countries against Japanese food due to fears over the nuclear disaster.
As of Thursday, countries including the U.S., China and Singapore have partial import bans on Japanese food.
While Japan welcomed the ruling, the panel’s judgment is not final. South Korea said Friday that it will appeal to a higher panel, suggesting Japan still faces a thorny road ahead.
“The Korean government will appeal (the ruling) to safeguard public health and safety,” the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy, was quoted as saying by the Yonhap news agency. “Regardless of the decision, the current import ban will be put in place until the WTO’s dispute settlement procedure ends.”
The final decision is expected to be handed down in the summer at the earliest.
Suga expressed disappointment over Seoul’s response.
“We find the appeal extremely regrettable. We will take appropriate steps to make sure our claims will be acknowledged by a higher-level committee, too,” Suga said. “Needless to say, we will also firmly urge South Korea to sincerely and swiftly redress measures recognized by the panel as in violation of the WTO agreement.”
Since the 2011 nuclear meltdowns at the Fukushima No. 1 power plant, South Korea has established one of the world’s most stringent measures against Japanese food in general.
In addition to the import ban, South Korea slaps Japanese food products with pre-export testing requirements that don’t apply to products from anywhere else, the WTO report noted. In the pre-export testing, detection of a minuscule amount of cesium leads to additional testing for 17 other radionuclides, including plutonium, it said.“What makes South Korea stand out is that it has expanded its regulatory measures against Japanese exports and to this day still maintains significant barriers amid a global trend toward loosening up regulations against Japanese food,” a farm ministry official told The Japan Times.SHALOM...Z
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Post by ZETAR on Apr 12, 2018 3:19:01 GMT
Meanwhile......New evidence of nuclear fuel releases found at FukushimaDate: February 28, 2018
Source: Manchester University
Summary:
Uranium and other radioactive materials, such as caesium and technetium, have been found in tiny particles released from the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactors.
"Our research strongly suggests there is a need for further detailed investigation on Fukushima fuel debris, inside, and potentially outside the nuclear exclusion zone," said Dr Gareth Law. Credit: Image courtesy of Manchester University
Uranium and other radioactive materials, such as caesium and technetium, have been found in tiny particles released from the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactors.
This could mean the environmental impact from the fallout may last much longer than previously expected according to a new study by a team of international researchers, including scientists from The University of Manchester.
The team says that, for the first time, the fallout of Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactor fuel debris into the surrounding environment has been "explicitly revealed" by the study.
The scientists have been looking at extremely small pieces of debris, known as micro-particles, which were released into the environment during the initial disaster in 2011. The researchers discovered uranium from nuclear fuel embedded in or associated with caesium-rich micro particles that were emitted from the plant's reactors during the meltdowns. The particles found measure just five micrometres or less; approximately 20 times smaller than the width of a human hair. The size of the particles means humans could inhale them.
The reactor debris fragments were found inside the nuclear exclusion zone, in paddy soils and at an abandoned aquaculture centre, located several kilometres from the nuclear plant.
It was previously thought that only volatile, gaseous radionuclides such as caesium and iodine were released from the damaged reactors. Now it is becoming clear that small, solid particles were also emitted, and that some of these particles contain very long-lived radionuclides; for example, uranium has a half-life of billions of years.
Dr Gareth Law, Senior Lecturer in Analytical Radiochemistry at the University of Manchester and an author on the paper, says: "Our research strongly suggests there is a need for further detailed investigation on Fukushima fuel debris, inside, and potentially outside the nuclear exclusion zone. Whilst it is extremely difficult to get samples from such an inhospitable environment, further work will enhance our understanding of the long-term behaviour of the fuel debris nano-particles and their impact."
The Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) is currently responsible for the clean-up and decommissioning process at the Fukushima Daiichi site and in the surrounding exclusion zone. Dr Satoshi Utsunomiya, Associate Professor at Kyushu University (Japan) led the study.
He added: "Having better knowledge of the released microparticles is also vitally important as it provides much needed data on the status of the melted nuclear fuels in the damaged reactors. This will provide extremely useful information for TEPCO's decommissioning strategy."
At present, chemical data on the fuel debris located within the damaged nuclear reactors is impossible to get due to the high levels of radiation. The microparticles found by the international team of researchers will provide vital clues on the decommissioning challenges that lie ahead.
Story Source:
Materials provided by Manchester University. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
Journal Reference:
Asumi Ochiai, Junpei Imoto, Mizuki Suetake, Tatsuki Komiya, Genki Furuki, Ryohei Ikehara, Shinya Yamasaki, Gareth T. W. Law, Toshihiko Ohnuki, Bernd Grambow, Rodney C. Ewing, Satoshi Utsunomiya. Uranium Dioxides and Debris Fragments Released to the Environment with Cesium-Rich Microparticles from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant. Environmental Science & Technology, 2018; DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b06309
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Post by ZETAR on Apr 12, 2018 3:19:35 GMT
BRITISH COLUMBIA CANADA BEFORE AND AFTER TIDAL ZONE PICTURE SHOW A EXTINCTION EVENT PLAYING OUT ALONG THE COAST LINE . PICTURE ON THE RIGHT ARE PICTURE OF THE SAME PLACE TAKEN BY ME ON THE FUKUSHIMA EXPEDITION FOR LIFEwww.thenuclearproctologist.org/SHALOM...Z
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Post by ZETAR on Apr 12, 2018 3:20:16 GMT
Warhead Lab Leaks Killed Thousands In The Fukushima DisasterSea-dumping doomed the Americas As we learned early on, much of the nuclear releases from Fukushima was being transported eastward by the North Pacific current and the northern jetstream, much of that abetted by years of official tolerance of unchecked venting and wastewater releases. The groundwater outflows were and still are being enabled by the media myth of an “ice wall”, an expensive boondoggle that provided cover for the release of reactor coolant from the Fukushima storage tank farm. The so-called isotope-filtration equipment from AREVA and Kurion of Hanford were ineffective. For all the numbers games played by the “experts”, tossing out round-ball estimates, there’s been no containment of nuclear contamination in Japan, which soon proved itself again to be an eager exporter, this time of radioactive steel, used cars, motorbikes and bicycles.
To spare itself the burden of an effective containment program, Japan has been waging a “soft” nuclear war against its Pacific neighbors. Over the past seven years, I have suggested that boring tunnels into the hard-rock Abukuma Plateau is a proven method for water storage, as done under Kanto region rivers in lieu of new dams, but the government apparently prefers overseas dumping as a type of passive-aggressive vengeance.
Considering that the corium, or melted fuel rods, is mostly self-contained in the gravel and rock below the destroyed reactors, the math still would not account for the mega-effects of 311 on the environment of the Northern Hemisphere, which includes the sudden expansion of the Arctic ozone hole April-June 2011, fragmentation of the ice cap, annihilation of the wild salmon fisheries, the West Coast drought and lightning-triggered wildfires, poisoning of milk from dairy cows, and other bleak news that’s gone unreported in the mass media or falsely attributed to global warming, al in the service of course of the utilities companies that operate nuclear power plants.
How then did Fukushima disaster manage to achieve such planetary destruction while Japan itself remained relatively unharmed? The underlying answer to this paradox is center of the most pervasive cover-up in scientific history, authorized at the highest levels of the UN nuclear-energy agency IAEA, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and uranium-producer Canada’s Nuclear Safety Commission. After failing to warn, much less protect billions of their residents, the “regulators” in the US and Canada have been complicit in a cover-up of the rising radioactivity risk to population centers in the Americas due to their idolatrous worship of the nuclear bomb, the Moloch of our modern times.
The total absence of health-related data concerning radioactive ingestion, has forestalled any accurate determination of whether a global “hibakusha” (radioactivity victims) crisis is under way, but certainly the unborn have been sacrificed in their millions through miscarriages from radioactive exposure of ovaries and abortions out of unspoken fear. By the time in the future, or perhaps never, when studies are done on the spike in heart failure and cancers on top of terminated pregnancies, it will be too late for the health-care system to launch effective preventative measures to preserve the humane genome. As in the loss of insects across the Americas due to our inaction, homo sapiens will soon be extinct. And perhaps for the better, since our collective inaction proves the streak of inbred criminal denial in our less-than-masterful species.
Inexorably, as casualties mount and the economic damage spirals out of control, public anger will squarely put the blame not only on TEPCO and the deceitful Japanese political elite but also on the cowardly sold-out American and Canadian governments. Their ultimate responsibility, however, is the direct role of the US and Canada in supporting Japan’s rogue nuclear-weapons program, which lies at the heart of the 311 disaster(s). FULL STORY HERE >>> www.rense.com/general96/warhead.html <<< SHALOM...Z
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Post by ZETAR on Apr 12, 2018 3:20:47 GMT
Fukushima Extinction Level Event ⌛ Spawning American Monster Mutations ⌛ Fukushima ELE E.L.E. ⌛
youtu.be/h1ECWtWk85kOur planet is being poisoned. The end result will be extinction of the human race. Our home towns will soon resemble the abandoned settlements inside the Fukushima exclusion zone.
In 2011 the combination of an earthquake and a tsunami damaged three nuclear reactors at the Fukushima power plant in Japan. Every day since the accident it has released 400 tons of radioactive wastewater into the Pacific ocean. This is no longer just a problem for seafood lovers.
The damaged Fukushima reactors are beyond repair. The radiation leaking from the cores is so intense that it would kill a human repair crew within minutes. They tried to send robots in, just to take pictures. None of these robots lasted more than an hour, and none of the robots have ever returned. If any one of the three damaged reactors were ever allowed to "melt down", the airborne fallout would reach the west coast of the United States in a matter of days. The solution reached by TEPCO, the Tokyo Electric Power Company which owns the plant, is to keep the reactors cool with a constant flow of water.
But there is a price. Any water that goes in must come out, and it is highly irradiated. TEPCO recaptures about half of the polluted water. Recaptured water is stored in tanks on site, and they are running out of tanks. The remainder of the contaminated liquid runs to ground, and because the plant sits on the Pacific coast this water flushes out to the ocean. In six years the contaminated water has spread to the very corners of the Pacific.
The largest mammals on the planet communicate by means of whale song. The Orca whales of the Pacific are no longer singing. As radiation fills the ocean the incidence of orca death, especially among infants, rises dramatically. Their young are no longer able to survive the first year of life. This one hundred percent mortality rate of Orca infants, will ensure the extinction of the species.
Cesium-134 is the radioactive element known as the Fukushima marker. This element is man made. It can only be produced in nuclear power cores. At this time the Fukushima plant is the only source of this element in the wild. In 2015, Cesium-134 was found during the testing of Sockeye Salmon in the lakes of British Columbia. Canadian authorities released pictures of the tumors being found in their Salmon as a direct result of Fukushima poisoning. For the same reason, off the west coast of the United States, Coral Trout is getting skin cancer.
Marine animals are not the only migratory species suffering from mutations stimulated by radiooactive isotopes. In Nebraska in 2013, hornets that had mutated in size from exposure to Fukushima radiation, killed several people. Their venom was two thousand times stronger than that of a common wasp. At the Nebraska Medical Research Symposium, Dr. Leon Hobbes presented a paper on this insect. He had never seen the like. One sting immediately turns the surrounding tissue blue. All of the victims died within minutes of an acute allergic reaction, even if they had no prior allergy to insect venom.Our planet is slowly being poisoned and if this is allowed to continue, this event will reach the level of extinction of the human race. One may see a preview of what one's home town will eventually look like. The government of Japan has declared that towns inside the evacuation zone are now safe to live in again. But nobody is moving back. SHALOM...Z
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Post by purr on Apr 19, 2018 23:33:57 GMT
The schtuff of nightmares, thanks for 'splainin, ZETAR!
purr
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Post by HAL on Apr 22, 2018 19:34:49 GMT
ZETAR,
.. The government of Japan has declared that towns inside the evacuation zone are now safe to live in again. But nobody is moving back..
There is a missed opportunity here.
The government should buy the homes of folks who do not want to move back, and rent them out to Senior Citizens for a nominal fee.
Then they can carry out careful check on these people and follow their health. As they are going to die in the near future anyway it is likely that their demise will not be speeded up by a little radiation.Also as they are not likely to be further procreating there is no risk of a mother having a deformed baby due to radiation damage of the fetus; The time when it would be more likely to suffer genetic harm. If they reach their expected life termination date and do not show any sign of radiation poisoning then the government can declare the area safe and sell the homes on the open market.
HAL.
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Post by ZETAR on Apr 22, 2018 20:15:18 GMT
ZETAR, .. The government of Japan has declared that towns inside the evacuation zone are now safe to live in again. But nobody is moving back.. There is a missed opportunity here. The government should buy the homes of folks who do not want to move back, and rent them out to Senior Citizens for a nominal fee. Then they can carry out careful check on these people and follow their health. As they are going to die in the near future anyway it is likely that their demise will not be speeded up by a little radiation.Also as they are not likely to be further procreating there is no risk of a mother having a deformed baby due to radiation damage of the fetus; The time when it would be more likely to suffer genetic harm. If they reach their expected life termination date and do not show any sign of radiation poisoning then the government can declare the area safe and sell the homes on the open market. HAL. HMMM...I DO RECALL YOU SUPPORTED POISONING WATER RESERVOIRS TO CONTROL A SPECIFIC POPULATION. QUITE SURE YOU'RE IN THE STIR MODE BUT WITH FUKUSHIMA...THE SCIENCE IS THERE FOR SPECIFIED OUTCOMES...IF YOU'VE PAID ATTENTION. SEEMS TEPCO LIED TO THE WORLD AND STILL LYING TO THE JAPANESE PEOPLE. PROPAGANDA IS STILL PROPAGANDA!REMINDS ME OF...Army scientists secretly sprayed St Louis with 'radioactive' particles for YEARS to test chemical warfare technology www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2210415/Revealed-Army-scientists-secretly-sprayed-St-Louis-radioactive-particles-YEARS-test-chemical-warfare-technology.html#ixzz5DQstK3jj The United States Military conducted top secret experiments on the citizens of St. Louis, Missouri, for years, exposing them to radioactive compounds, a researcher has claimed.
While it was known that the government sprayed 'harmless' zinc cadmium silfide particles over the general population in St Louis, Professor Lisa Martino-Taylor, a sociologist at St. Louis Community College, claims that a radioactive additive was also mixed with the compound.
She has accrued detailed descriptions as well as photographs of the spraying which exposed the unwitting public, predominantly in low-income and minority communities, to radioactive particles.
'The study was secretive for reason. They didn't have volunteers stepping up and saying yeah, I'll breathe zinc cadmium sulfide with radioactive particles,' said Professor Martino-Taylor to KSDK.
Through her research, she found photographs of how the particles were distributed from 1953-1954 and 1963-1965.
In Corpus Christi, the chemical was dropped from airplanes over large swathes of city. In St Louis, the Army put chemical sprayers on buildings, like schools and public housing projects, and mounted them in station wagons for mobile use.
Despite the extent of the experiment, local politicians were not notified about the content of the testing. The people of St Louis were told that the Army was testing smoke screens to protect cities from a Russian attack.
'It was pretty shocking. The level of duplicity and secrecy. Clearly they went to great lengths to deceive people,' Professor Martino-Taylor said. 'There is a lot of evidence that shows people in St. Louis and the city, in particular minority communities, were subjected to military testing that was connected to a larger radiological weapons testing project.'
Previous investigations of the compound were rebuffed by the military, which insisted it was safe.
However, Professor Martino-Taylor believes the documents she's uncovered, prove the zinc cadmium silfide was also mixed with radioactive particles.
She has linked the St Louis testing to a now-defunct company called US Radium. The controversial company came under fire, and numerous lawsuits, after several of its workers were exposed to dangerous levels of radioactive materials in its fluorescent paint.
WOULD YOU BE WILLING TO STEP UP AND BE THEIR GUINEA PIG? YOU COULD HAVE YOUR GARDEN OUTSIDE AND PLENTY OF FRESHLY RADIATED WATER FOR IRRIGATION SEEMS LITTLE HAS BEEN LEARNED FROM CHERNOBYL!SHALOM...Z
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Post by HAL on Apr 22, 2018 20:40:52 GMT
...HMMM...I DO RECALL YOU SUPPORTED POISONING WATER RESERVOIRS TO CONTROL A SPECIFIC POPULATION. ..
I don't think so.
Maybe at some time I have mentioned that it would NOT be a good idea as it would also poison anyone (and anything) that used the water as well as the intended victim.
..WOULD YOU BE WILLING TO STEP UP AND BE THEIR GUINEA PIG?..
Certainly. provided that I had a good radiation meter and full knowledge of what the safe levels are.
Why not? I'll probably be dead in the next five or ten years anyway.
You will notice that the people in the old fairground are not wearing any protective clothing. Also in a BBC documentary a while back the reporter was wandering around with a radiation meter, in normal street cloth, and didn't find any excessive levels.
HAL
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Post by HAL on Apr 22, 2018 20:45:51 GMT
Here is something that wasn't widely published.
In France, the coffin of Marie Curie was exhumed to be mover to a more prominent place. In respect to her work on radiation.
The people moving the coffin were somewhat concerned. Worried that the radiation, with a half life of thousands of years, may effect them. So they went to great trouble to check for this radiation to see if the level was safe. And they found nothing.
There are a lot of scare stories out there. Not all of them are true.
Re the St Luis article. Is there any corroborating medical evidence that people in this area were suddenly showing signs of radio active substance ingestion ?
Bearing in mind that radio active isotopes are regularly used in tracing blood flows in patients today.
HAL
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