I read some of the same research years ago and also never saved. Onc of the more convincing points was that agriculture recovered almost immediately around Hiroshima.
All that proves is that the fears of nuclear explosion effects were overdrawn. The radioactivity was not as dreadful as anticipated. So, you started out in ignorance, were misinformed, then found you were wrong---and yet you are clinging to your misinformation. Learning is lost on you.
How does the videos of the nuclear physicist that eats the uranium from the 70s or 80s fit in? Not that I necessarily believe what I saw is what the reality is.
I tend to believe in nuclear weapons but have been unable to determine if it is because of 58 years of propaganda or not. Not that what I believe makes any difference to anything on this subject.
Like anything I keep an open mind as much as I can because of lies and propaganda.
You have to figure out how to discern the lies and propaganda. That requires reading and learning and unifying your knowledge. One thing is for sure, physics is real. Everything about nuclear technology is real. There are books that spill all the beans. Read them.
There was a nuclear scientist who did publicly eat either some uranium or (I think) plutonium, to prove a point about its deadliness as a toxin (not). I wouldn't be up to playing that game, not having a good opinion of heavy metals in general. As far as I know, he never had reason to regret it.
There is such a plenitude of information about nuclear weapons, why would you doubt their existence? Is it because you don't see them going off all the time? Do you doubt the occurrence of massive conventional explosions? They don't happen all the time, either, but when they do, it is a terrible event. (Think Beirut ammonium nitrate stockpile explosion.) Perhaps we should set off a nuke every now and then to convince the scoffing ignoramuses that they should wake up and smell the coffee.
Im an engineer Ive had physics and chem. Like I said I am on the same wavelength as you. I just keep my mind open to possibilities. Or try to I dont always succeed.
I just wanted to know if you had seen that guy eat the uranium.
I read some of the same research years ago and also never saved. Onc of the more convincing points was that agriculture recovered almost immediately around Hiroshima.
All that proves is that the fears of nuclear explosion effects were overdrawn. The radioactivity was not as dreadful as anticipated. So, you started out in ignorance, were misinformed, then found you were wrong---and yet you are clinging to your misinformation. Learning is lost on you.
How does the videos of the nuclear physicist that eats the uranium from the 70s or 80s fit in? Not that I necessarily believe what I saw is what the reality is.
I tend to believe in nuclear weapons but have been unable to determine if it is because of 58 years of propaganda or not. Not that what I believe makes any difference to anything on this subject.
Like anything I keep an open mind as much as I can because of lies and propaganda.
You have to figure out how to discern the lies and propaganda. That requires reading and learning and unifying your knowledge. One thing is for sure, physics is real. Everything about nuclear technology is real. There are books that spill all the beans. Read them.
There was a nuclear scientist who did publicly eat either some uranium or (I think) plutonium, to prove a point about its deadliness as a toxin (not). I wouldn't be up to playing that game, not having a good opinion of heavy metals in general. As far as I know, he never had reason to regret it.
There is such a plenitude of information about nuclear weapons, why would you doubt their existence? Is it because you don't see them going off all the time? Do you doubt the occurrence of massive conventional explosions? They don't happen all the time, either, but when they do, it is a terrible event. (Think Beirut ammonium nitrate stockpile explosion.) Perhaps we should set off a nuke every now and then to convince the scoffing ignoramuses that they should wake up and smell the coffee.
Im an engineer Ive had physics and chem. Like I said I am on the same wavelength as you. I just keep my mind open to possibilities. Or try to I dont always succeed.
I just wanted to know if you had seen that guy eat the uranium.