You are funny. Hundreds of thousands of years? Something that takes that long to decay can only be considered radioactive in an academic sense. Your flight is far worse. When it comes to radiation, if it takes a long time to decay it isn't emitting much and isn't dangerous. If it decays quickly it is dangerous, but only for a short time.
Your hyperventilating about Fukushima and Chernobyl is especially pathetic considering you can't even provide statistics, much less the graves of all those who supposedly died. They exist only in your mind.
How are Hiroshima and Nagasaki doing these days?
| In the General/Chat forum, on a thread titled Another New Nuclear Reactor Energizes U.S. Clean Energy Hopes, hopespringseternal wrote: |
| You seem to be astoundingly ignorant of the difference between cosmic rays during a 2 hr passenger jet flight and hundreds of thousands of years of populations consuming radioactive waste in the air/food/water. Astoundingly ignorant. You are funny. Hundreds of thousands of years? Something that takes that long to decay can only be considered radioactive in an academic sense. Your flight is far worse. When it comes to radiation, if it takes a long time to decay it isn't emitting much and isn't dangerous. If it decays quickly it is dangerous, but only for a short time. Your hyperventilating about Fukushima and Chernobyl is especially pathetic considering you can't even provide statistics, much less the graves of all those who supposedly died. They exist only in your mind. How are Hiroshima and Nagasaki doing these days? |
You continue with your astounding ignorance.
You are comparing isotopes of nuclear fuel to cosmic rays on a 2 hr flight and you can't understand why that's pathetic? You're hoping people don't understand half-life?
By your reasoning, people should be able to purchase Uranium for use in high school science fairs. The only thing left for you to do is to compare radioactive fuels to bananas.
Russia made it illegal for doctors to report deaths by radiation poisonings, but the public still talked about it.
Japan made it illegal for doctors to report deaths by radiation poisonings, but the public still talks about it.
The town surrounding the smoldering Chernobyl plant held an outdoor fair in the fallout. The messaging from officials soon changed from, "Everything is fine..." to "Let's put you on a bus and house you out of town for a brief stay - you don't need ANY luggage. Get on the buses STAT!" to "You can't go home again."
You're just sure deaths and illness from heavy irradiation is mythical. So if I get a dental x-ray I have to sign consent understanding the risk of harm following exposure to x-rays and the benefits of such x-rays in treating illness. But you're still here arguing that
Hiroshima and Nagasaki - Tracking of cancer was intentionally defeated when the database listing proximity to the explosions and the names of the persons reported were erased. But the nuke industry doesn't waste time thinking about people suffering and dying. It spends it's time denying it ever happened.