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Build More Nuclear Power Plants, Bush Says
CNSNews ^ | 6/22/05 | Susan Jones

Posted on 06/22/2005 9:56:33 AM PDT by Tumbleweed_Connection

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To: Tumbleweed_Connection
President Bush said gasoline prices will not drop when he signs a bill. But making the nation less dependent on foreign oil will make life better for future generations, he said.

I disagree.... When the US commits to an alternate form of energy for both electricity and transportation use, the price of oil will drop like a rock! And, I hope I live to see the day that the current Saudi prince has to drink his light sweet crude to stay alive........

101 posted on 06/22/2005 7:23:13 PM PDT by eeriegeno
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To: FightThePower!

Coal is cheaper, and also plentiful in the US.


102 posted on 06/22/2005 7:26:51 PM PDT by Diddle E. Squat
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To: eeriegeno
"when he signs the bill..."

What about the future?

103 posted on 06/22/2005 7:28:58 PM PDT by Tumbleweed_Connection (http://hour9.blogspot.com/)
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To: Tumbleweed_Connection

Nuke power is clean and if the plants are built right and in out of the way places they can solve our energy problems for a long time until we figure out an even better way of producing power.


104 posted on 06/22/2005 7:33:23 PM PDT by John Lenin (Liberalism: Where defeat is victory)
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To: eeriegeno
When the US commits to an alternate form of energy for both electricity and transportation use, the price of oil will drop like a rock!

Absolutely true in the past when fear of a successful energy Manhattan project greatly decreasing the demand for oil kept the OPEC price down. They didn't want to encourage the U.S. to find an alternative.

However, it may be that OPEC knows about current successful energy research, like the research just published by UCLA on a successful experiment generating energy from cold fusion.

They may be out now to wring every last dime they can for their resource during the last few golden years of The Petroleum Age that they have left.

Plus there is also the growing demand for oil in China keeping pressure on the price.

105 posted on 06/22/2005 7:35:15 PM PDT by patriciaruth (They are all Mike Spans)
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To: John Lenin

We realized this long ago. Ask yourself why the liberals built them out of the country and not here?


106 posted on 06/22/2005 7:35:25 PM PDT by Tumbleweed_Connection (http://hour9.blogspot.com/)
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To: Tumbleweed_Connection
Liberals are brain-dead, they are the useful idiots of the big money in power generation. Look at the results of not passing an energy policy, higher electric bills, higher gasoline costs and why ? Because the market is rigged by a few big oligarchs that the slightest disruption in distribution causes energy prices to skyrocket. Their idiotic fantasy of wind and solar reminds me of the joke about the Russians figuring out how to land a spaceship on the sun, they will go at night ...
107 posted on 06/22/2005 7:43:12 PM PDT by John Lenin (Liberalism: Where defeat is victory)
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To: Justanobody

Quit yer bragging. I don't even have an inverter, but I am wired for solar if I ever decide to do it.


108 posted on 06/22/2005 8:50:47 PM PDT by KC_for_Freedom (Sailing the highways of America, and loving it.)
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To: Tumbleweed_Connection

The big question is can Bush cut down the regulations and bureaucracies which are stopping nuclear power. On terrorists we can use cruise missiles where we find them..

But on the government administrators holding the nation's energy supply hostage, it seems more difficult.


109 posted on 06/22/2005 8:54:35 PM PDT by ran15
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To: biblewonk
I'm joining the green party.

I'll miss you!

110 posted on 06/22/2005 8:56:35 PM PDT by BlazingArizona
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To: kharaku
The other problem with Chernobyl however is that it was an intentional, and moronic, test of what would happen during a meltdown, it isn't a valid critisism of saftey concerns...

And more relevantly, because the Chernobyl design is nothing like the US standard pressurized-water design. The only Chernobyl-class reactors in the US are a few old federally-operated units that produce fuel for nuclear weapons.

111 posted on 06/22/2005 9:01:56 PM PDT by BlazingArizona
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To: KC_for_Freedom
I don't even have an inverter...

Might I suggest an upgrade? You never know when we may need to "head for the hills" and it is always good to have all the comforts of home. ;*)

112 posted on 06/22/2005 9:04:33 PM PDT by Just A Nobody (I - L O V E - my attitude problem!)
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To: Justanobody

Exactly.. And there are many people in America who work INSIDE nuclear plants. Their life expectancy is slightly above the national average.


113 posted on 06/22/2005 9:04:40 PM PDT by ran15
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To: SuziQ

Thanks for the post. I too follow solar closely. It's a shame solar has the reputation that only liberals support its research. I'm afraid nuclear is pulling the rug out from under it again like it did back in the 80's. Perhaps as Japan shoots for 50% of all residential electrical demand being met by solar energy by 2030 (by which time we'll be scrambling for storage facilities for the tons of radioactive waste we've produced), some more conservatives will see that back-burnering solar research was not the smartest move we've ever made. I guess we'll see.


114 posted on 06/22/2005 9:07:50 PM PDT by so_real ("The Congress of the United States recommends and approves the Holy Bible for use in all schools.")
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To: ran15

Yep - have several family and friends that can attest to that. They're doing better than most!


115 posted on 06/22/2005 9:08:09 PM PDT by Just A Nobody (I - L O V E - my attitude problem!)
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To: biblewonk
So does wind power without the horrible terrible nasty waste.

The great misconception about nuclear is that it "produces waste". It can't, unless you believe that energy springs magically out of nothing. Natural uranium has a half-life of roughly a billion years. When we 'burn' it in reactors, we are using up a fraction of the energy it contains, leaving behind a mixture of unburned uranium and a transmuted mxture of breakdown product elements. Meany of these breakdown products are more stromngly radioactive than the original uranium, bt only because their half-lives are so mch shorter. Radioactive iodine decays away in a matter of weeks, for example. There is no way the total energy in nuclear waste can exceed the energy in the uranium you started with.

When nuclear waste is recycled, as at Tsukuba and Cap-La-Hague, these elements are separated. Unburned uranium is used to make new fuel rods; plutonium can be burned to create still more energy in specially designed reactors; short half-life elements are simply allowed to decay away quickly. Some of the intermediate-term elements have medical uses.

America could recycle too, but right now the process is expensive. Since we have the large stable deserts that Japan and France don't, we find it more efficient to store nuclear waste until recycling, like all technologies, gets cheaper.

116 posted on 06/22/2005 9:17:37 PM PDT by BlazingArizona
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To: LilDarlin
Build, build, build!

But let's adopt a standadized design first. The problem with our first generation of plants is that every reactor was individually designed and built. If cars were designed and manufactured that way, who could afford one?

117 posted on 06/22/2005 9:23:47 PM PDT by BlazingArizona
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To: Tumbleweed_Connection
He's dead right.

OTOH, as far as I know nobody has rescinded Jimma Cartah's directive prohibiting nuclear waste recycling which would end the nuclear waste problem but for plutonium.

118 posted on 06/22/2005 9:26:08 PM PDT by Tribune7
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To: Tumbleweed_Connection

Build them in Mexico !


119 posted on 06/22/2005 9:26:40 PM PDT by traumer
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To: Diddle E. Squat
Coal is cheaper, and also plentiful in the US.

It's also very dirty, both to mine and to burn. It even releases more radioactive waste than nuclear does, and unlike in nuclear plants this stuff is not concentrated and collected - it just wafts away into the air, into your lungs.

120 posted on 06/22/2005 9:30:46 PM PDT by BlazingArizona
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