To: Veto!
They've never been published because they are meaningless.
To: hinckley buzzard
Well that is nothing, there has been 17,357 deaths due to truck vibrations when they pass over bridges. And wait until you hear what is the result of trains passing by.
Then there is Congress.....
3 posted on
12/28/2011 7:47:29 PM PST by
stubernx98
(cranky, but reasonable)
To: hinckley buzzard
Bingo!
14,000 deaths? Some degrees (credentials) should be taken back before this is over. This is total bull-s**t.
5 posted on
12/28/2011 7:47:57 PM PST by
DoughtyOne
(Santorum..., are you giving it some thought? I knew you would.)
To: hinckley buzzard
They've never been published because they are meaningless.
Could you perhaps elaborate a bit on that? I find this one paragraph a bit more than meaningless:
"The CDC issues weekly reports on numbers of deaths for 122 U.S. cities with a population over 100,000, or about 25-30 percent of the U.S. In the 14 weeks after Fukushima fallout arrived in the U.S. (March 20 to June 25), deaths reported to the CDC rose 4.46 percent from the same period in 2010, compared to just 2.34 percent in the 14 weeks prior. Estimated excess deaths during this period for the entire U.S. is about 14,000."
That may not be a demonstrable cause and effect at work, but it is damned curious.
7 posted on
12/28/2011 7:49:49 PM PST by
mkjessup
(Jimmy Carter is the Skidmark in the panties of American history, 0bama is the yellow stain in front.)
To: hinckley buzzard
Please explain.
I hope they’re meaningless, because Boise having 200 x the normal level of
radiation is scary. Here in the inland NW, weather patterns have been bizarre, with huge storm clouds rising up from Japan to Alaska and then almost straight down over Spokane and on down to Boise. A few days after Fukushima, local news reported high levels of radiation, then all news stopped.
10 posted on
12/28/2011 7:54:10 PM PST by
Veto!
(Opinions freely dispensed as advice)
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