Posted on 03/18/2011 7:18:32 AM PDT by wantobefree
I thought you folks would like to be in the know. EnvirReporter is taking the radiation monitoring readings for the West Coast live on UStream.
Just wanted to get this up here for your reference.
We know so little about how radiation affects the human body over time.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-bloggers/2690705/posts
ROTFLMAO
What I meant is that there are min. levels people can tolerate for a specific amount of time before it causes damage to your body. Maximum levels are when you begin to experience illness or long term effects.
Perhaps a misunderstanding, I am not having a good day.
Three sources: the sun, food and terrestrial. Granite, stone houses emit more than wooden houses; sandy soil is better than mountainous rocky soil; some foods e.g., Brazil nuts, have a fair amount. It’s everywhere.
I think they idea of a min and max is misleading. As you mentioned, it is time dependent. It should be thought of as a sloping line on a graph over time.
I know people want to simplify to gain or give understanding. But radiation is a cumulative effect, very time dependent.
Understanding that helps people realize how the workers can survive in “unacceptable” high levels to supply water to the pools and the like.
Cheers
Successor to the spill cam.
I happen to be old enough to have lived through hundreds of above ground nuclear tests in the Pacific and Nevada. They released many orders of magnitude of the pittance the Japanese reactors are likely to release even under the worst case.
It is past time the press and uninformed grow up and get real.
The biggest problem we face is not radiation, but the debt and reliance on foreign energy sources.
Thank you for your reasoned comments.
There are studies that have shown that above average exposure to radiation has been beneficial. I don’t claim to be an expert nor have I examined the validity of these studies.
This is not the definitive source, but mentions some of the studies. http://www.anncoulter.com/cgi-local/printer_friendly.cgi?article=414
I'm trying to understand people point of view. In my opinion, lack of knowledge, combined with those pushing panic, is making the perception of the situation far worse than it is.
No doubt, this is a very bad nuclear accident, and could get worse. But if people in the US are buying up significant portions of the world's supply iodine tablets in fear of this accident, we are not understanding the dangers.
I am “pro-energy” and anti-government funding of energy. I contribute a lot on these topics and try to find supporting information for my point of view and challenge those I think are spreading false or misleading information. Sometimes I'm wrong.
What I do not want to see, is fear that is not based on facts, dictate our future energy policies. I understand some people when presented with the same information are not going to see it the way I do. But I want their judgment based on real information and I want Free Republic to be a good source of that information.
Understood and agree. Years ago it was like that-seems to have evolved in forum for sarcasm and put downs.
“But anyone who has even a very slight concern with this here in the US; as personal health risk; is a complete airhead”
Well excuuuuse me! Not that I think we are really going to get any heavy levels of radiation here but we have a 4 month pregnant daughter/daughter in law and 2 year old grandchild in San Jose so frankly I don’t mind looking at the meter and feeling good to see that its a low reading.
I feel better to get the reassurance from an instrument rather than from you or the Marxist Regime currently running our country.
I think the definition of “airhead” may well extend beyond the person who posted the link and those who would like to take a look at it.
A number is not a measurement. It needs units and it needs a scale.
It’s like saying, “I live 5 from here.” 5 miles? 5 feet? 5 meters? 5 x 10^3 meters?
It would also be helpful to know what the danger of various levels are.
If I had a pregnant daughter on the West coast; I would be watching the levels also even though I knew there was no danger to her.
As the poster said yesterday; we tested 100’s of nuclear weapons in the desert here in the 50’s and 60’s.
It is interesting that you see yourself in the Airhead comment, prompting your response.
I do not know you, nor assume that you fit the description, but I encourage you to find information from sources you trust about the effects of radiation on the human body. Listening to the “news” or any government would convince you that we will all die within hours of the “radioactive cloud” hitting the west coast.
Quick question: Do you eat bananas regularly? Good source of potassium aren't they. Did you know that if you eat 1 banana per day that you are ingesting the same amount of radiation that the folks 10 miles away from the reactor, in the radioactive cloud are getting?
I understand that you feel concerned, but I would recommend you gather the facts you need to either justify your concern, or to alleviate it.
I think most people are not panicked and I’m certainly not but frankly I wouldn’t make fun of the poster who put up the link to the radiation monitoring instrument. I’m guessing a lot of folks went there and took a quick look. I did.
Apparently just a little while ago the CEO of the Japanese electric company broke down in tears on TV and said the severity of the crisis at the Fukishimo Nuclear plant is way worse that they were reporting. Now there is the possibility that they will have to try to dump cement on it like Chernobyl. So actually none of us really know what the possibilities are. Hopefully everythng will be OK.
Not making fun of the link; at least that was not my intention.
Just trying to point out the actual risks right now; from what we know; are essentially 0 for people in the US.
We have all of this instant information now at our fingertips that we never used to have.
In some ways it seems people are almost more uninformed about facts and science than they used to be (pre internet).
People can put all kinds of wild ideas (speculation with no facts) on the web; and people eat it up.
People need to seek facts and science when they hear things.
The Gulf oil spill brought up all kinds of wild ideas and conspiracy theories. Some from people on this forum.
Those all turned out to be false of course.
I wonder how many people still think “Meltdown” = Nuclear Explosion = Bomb?
“I wonder how many people still think Meltdown = Nuclear Explosion = Bomb?”
Many.
My daughter has spoken to high school classes about nuclear energy.
Many of them think it’s unsafe because the plants could explode like a nuclear warhead.
You just have to shake your head.
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