21 August, 2011

What happened to the used fuel stored on top of the plant? No one tells about how much fuels remained in the plants nor how much disappeared to the air. Congratulation for the people in Fukushima. They can sue the government if they get cancer. 100% cancer fatelities would be possible for the group suing on Fukushima's case, isn't it? TEPCO might ask them to be dead before start the lawsuit to prove the relationship with the fatality study, though. How many people got cancer already? They might look healthy but they might be the late stages of multiple cancers. The doctors might just check the full body counter for the radioactive while they ignore to check the cancer examinations if it's not listed on their procedure.

Beyond the diseconomics and the proliferation and terrorism risks of plutonium, there are also severe safety and environmental hazards. Plutonium is fiendishly toxic. A speck of it the size of a pollen grain, if caught in the lungs after inhalation or in bone after ingestion, can cause cancer. A severe reactor accident with plutonium-based MOX fuel in one-third of the core will result in 100% more latent cancer fatalities than if the core was made up entirely of conventional uranium fuel. Such an accident with an all-MOX core would kill 300% more people than with an all-uranium core. (See NCI Scientific Director Edwin Lyman's "Public Health Risks of Substituting Mixed-Oxide Fuel for Uranium Fuel in Pressurized Water Reactors," Science and Global Security, Princeton University, 2000, Volume 9, pp. 1-47.) www.nci.org/pdf/lyman-mox-sgs.pdf
(http://www.nci.org/new/nci-plu.htm)

1 comments:

Anonymous said...

Miyoko here goes a tip to fight isolation caused by gangstalking.
I took it from the blog: factorexterno.blogspot.com

Combating isolation by skimming short conversations in public places:
Non-human External Factor subliminally manipulates the behaviour and thoughts of the people surrounding gang stalking victims to make them act anti-socially.
If you are a gang stalking targeted individual you will end up totally isolated, all your friends, relatives and acquaintances will let you down, they will behave anti-socially towards you. It will neither be possible for you to establish new positive and stable relationships with new people. In such case, the best way to combat loneliness and isolation is to continually establish short casual conversations with pedestrians in the street and public places; if you do this several times a day you can skim a few minutes of conversation each time and at the end of the day, when you arrive home at night, it makes a great difference, you will feel much better, your lonely feelings will disappear.
You may pretend for example that you are not from the city and repeatedly ask pedestrians about how to arrive to a certain address or street; its up to your imagination to improvise additional comments in each of these short conversations in order to lenghten them as much as possible. If your first impression is that a given pedestrian is not prone for a short chat then just move forward, don't bother. Many times you will be suprised how some people you approach are even more eager to chat than you yourself, they will even offer themselves to walk along with you.
You can do this in any public place, a coffeshop or anywhere else, even while you are in a shop queue,
Repeat it several times everyday until you are able to skim enough conversation minutes to make you feel psychologically ok. Approach janitors asking them any question about the neighbourhood, generally they are glad to establish conversations with bypassers.
You must be cautious every time you approach someone because you may find some unexpected behaviour, just remember the External Factor can negatively manipulate any person in your vicinity. Take this into account every time and don't be dissapointed with non-cooperative responses.
Be flexible and remember whats important is not what you talk about or the attitudes of the pedestrians, what counts is that each time you are interacting breafly with people.