To: E. Pluribus Unum
2 posted on
11/25/2007 1:08:34 PM PST by
rellimpank
(--don't believe anything the MSM tells you about firearms or explosives--NRA Benefactor)
To: E. Pluribus Unum
3 posted on
11/25/2007 1:08:37 PM PST by
Steely Tom
(Steely's First Law of the Main Stream Media: if it doesn't advance the agenda, it's not news.)
To: E. Pluribus Unum
You mean “The Hills Have Eyes” wasn’t based on fact?
5 posted on
11/25/2007 1:10:29 PM PST by
rbg81
(DRAIN THE SWAMP!!)
To: E. Pluribus Unum
That was interesting.
Thanks for posting it.
6 posted on
11/25/2007 1:13:43 PM PST by
PeteB570
(Guns, what real men want for Christmas)
To: E. Pluribus Unum
Yes radiation scare is blown out of proportion. Unfortunately this moves nukes closer to the “conventional weapons” category. eeks.
7 posted on
11/25/2007 1:14:57 PM PST by
Hunterite
To: E. Pluribus Unum
It's OK to eat the fish.
To: E. Pluribus Unum
As in the previous radiation threads, the main danger is lawsuits when terrorists detonate a dirty bomb.
9 posted on
11/25/2007 1:17:39 PM PST by
RightWhale
(anti-razors are pro-life)
To: E. Pluribus Unum
—I have seen it asserted in print that vets of US nuke subs live longer than average—anybody out there know anything about that??
10 posted on
11/25/2007 1:18:03 PM PST by
rellimpank
(--don't believe anything the MSM tells you about firearms or explosives--NRA Benefactor)
To: E. Pluribus Unum
Dr. Bernie Cohen, a health physicist at the University of Pittsburg offered to eat an amount of Plutonium equal in mass to an amount of caffeine ingested by Ralph Nader. He was calling B.S. on Nader’s claims about the toxicity of Plutonium.
15 posted on
11/25/2007 1:36:11 PM PST by
Lonesome in Massachussets
(NYT Headline: Protocols of the Learned Elders of CBS: Fake but Accurate, Experts Say)
To: E. Pluribus Unum
Most of my wife's family worked on the NV Test Site back in the days of above-ground shots. They tell stories of having to stay inside the school house for a couple of hours until a nuke cloud had passed. My father-in-law developed a curious chest tumor after scraping himself on a piece of heavy machinery while bulldozing dead irradiated animals off a blast site. He had the tumor removed and is still kicking into his seventies.
That being said, there are a lot of folks from that area that didn't make it into their sixties, but that may be attributed to other causes. Desert living can be hard on the body.
16 posted on
11/25/2007 1:42:24 PM PST by
randog
(What the...?!)
To: E. Pluribus Unum
Good article. The danger of low dose radiation (under 150 REM) is certainly exaggerated in the media (and of course, exposure levels themselves are themselves systematically exaggerated).
In the face of any data contrary to the anti-nuclear fictions weaved by the media, anti-nuclear activists, neo-luddites, we must contend with the inevitable straw-man argument - “radiation isn’t dangerous” - being refuted by observations of acute radiation poisoning occuring after exposure to between 1000 and 10,000 REM, followed by anecdotal stories of old hags trying to swindle millions out of entities having nothing to do with their hereditary diseases.
18 posted on
11/25/2007 1:46:24 PM PST by
M203M4
To: E. Pluribus Unum
Talk to the victims of Chernobyl if they’re any left.
19 posted on
11/25/2007 1:56:54 PM PST by
lilylangtree
(Veni, Vidi, Vici)
To: E. Pluribus Unum
And the scaremongers prevent us from having the option of buying radiated food off store shelves. Yep, they know what is in our best interests. NOT!
Hard to believe that they physically carry the spent fuel cells. Maybe those black jackets are one foot of lead thickness. I don't even want that job.
To: E. Pluribus Unum
Here's a nomograph gif I put together. Interesting tool
22 posted on
11/25/2007 2:20:00 PM PST by
Malsua
To: E. Pluribus Unum
Is Atomic Radiation as Dangerous as We Thought?Let's find out.
23 posted on
11/25/2007 3:17:22 PM PST by
Viking2002
(Waterboarding the Left every chance I get.)
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