Posted on 07/16/2019 2:08:38 PM PDT by CondoleezzaProtege
(HBO)
The only thing I don’t like is that it plays into the generally misguided fear of nuclear power.
The Chernobyl reactor was an irresponsibly bad design, and even then it took an idiotic, intentional defeat of safety systems in order to cause the disaster.
I do look forward to watching it from a historical standpoint.
Too bad its mostly B.S.
How so? I think it's quite accurate. The overall message is that this accident was caused not by nuclear power, faulty design or incompetence but rather by the endless lies of socialism.
Riveting.
you think?
I like when historians post
“How so? I think it’s quite accurate.”
Here you go.
Count me suspect.
MOSTLY BS
I love it when radiation scientists post.
Indeed I always look to HBO and others for exact science and then i show it to my students at Cal Tech.
Brief Biography of Zhores Medvedev
Last night I watched a video I downloaded from the internet, titled "The Babushkas of Chernobyl." Made in 2015, it's the story about the elderly women who returned to their homes in the exclusion zone, and continue to reside there.
thanx
The series was not about nuclear power or the effects of radiation. The author of this article got it wrong because the authors shallow analysis missed the whole message of the film maker.
“The overall message is that this accident was caused not by nuclear power, faulty design or incompetence but rather by the endless lies of socialism. “
That message was wrapped in a heavy blanket of lies about the danger of nuclear power and radiation.
LOL, genius.
I have never wanted to reach through the tv screen and punch someone in all of my life.
If Dyatlov was even half as obnoxious and arrogant as he is portrayed in “Chernobyl”, then he was a real piece of work.
First of all, I admit to being extremely ignorant about Nuclear Power and radioactivity.
But when you cited the book about the Southern Urals disaster, I wanted your personal opinion about that incident and the Dyatlov Pass mystery.
As you stated, the 1957 Kyshtym explosion contaminated a huge area and some areas are still contaminated today.
I’m sure that you are probably familiar with the 1959 Dyatlov Pass Incident, where nine explorers died very mysteriously.
The Dyatlov Pass mystery also took place in the Ural Mountains, although further North than the Atomic Plant explosion of 1957.
When they found the bodies of the Dyatlov Pass explorers, it has been said that a few of the hikers bodies were radioactive. I know the two incidents happened two years apart but the contamination covered such a huge area and lingered for so long that I was curious if you have considered the possibility that the explorers contracted Acute Radiation Sickness.
That would explain the radioactivity found on some of the corpses and one of the symptoms of Acute Radiation Poisoning is disorientation. The explorers could have been disoriented and in extreme pain, left their tent and suffered brutal, fatal falls.
I may be way off base on this one, but the Dyatlov Pass Mystery has always intrigued me and I wondered if the intense radiation from the Kyshtym disaster caused their deaths.
I’m just throwing that theory out there.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.