These guys use to kick a piece of nuclear fuel into the water with their foot. And they new they were safe doing it. Carry two different amounts of plutonium in separate pockets each under amount required for uncontrolled chain reaction. In other words, safe if unless the two volumes got together. They new that too.
Swimming in reactor coolant water. Drinking a couple bottles of the water daily. (High levels of cesium 137)
There is no such thing as radioactive waste.
Question: So there was no accident at three mile island?
Answer: No, they did it on purpose.
Where did we see this on Sept. 11, 2001
The whole RADON in you house is a scam!! I think I heard him say that the entire Lead Poising scare was a scam too! GRRRRRRRRRR
Who owns the plutonium, and what is it worth? What ever it's worth, most likely 100's of trillions of dollars, it belongs to the people, citizens of this country. It came out of our land, and is being stored in our land.
There was an accident at Three Mile Island, a partial core meltdown resulting from a failure in the coolant system. The system finally came to rest. Some radioactive gas and iodine leaked into the atmosphere. Governor Thornburgh was considering ordering a general evacuation, but relented after realizing that more people would be harmed by accidents in the evacuation melee than by radioactivity exposure. The containment structure was contaminated by the leakage of primary coolant. It was not done "on purpose." There was no way the actual event could have been done on purpose.
The fear of radioactivity and radiation is overblown. But this does not mean that it can never be of serious concern, or even lethal. Level is everything. An early worker in the Manhattan Project inadvertently made the error of allowing two pieces of fissionable material to get too close together. They had a sudden flash of fission and he was lethally exposed, dying within minutes.
Plutonium is not found in nature. It is transmuted from natural uranium in a nuclear reactor. So, it belongs to whomever made it. (But all fissionables are controlled by the government for reasons of security.) Nuclear weapons "belong to the people" too, but they will never get out of government hands.
Thanks, but I've been aware of the over-exaggeration of radioactivity fears for at least half a century. I've read "The Effects of Nuclear Weapons" by Glasstone and Dolan (the Bible on the subject). I've heard of people doing stunts like eating plutonium, though I wouldn't advise anyone to ingest any metal.
Just in case anyone was in doubt - it is definitely something to do with nuclear fission. - I suppose some hospital may have dumped their x-ray stuff in a spot near the shrimp-farm, but I sincerely doubt it.
This is Fukushima - coming to haunt us.
[sidebar] I love shrimp. We sould cycle for an hour to go to the beach: my uncle would don a special hand-pushed triangular scoopnet. He would walk, chest-deep, back-and-forth, just on the outer edge of the sandbank, while watching us kids swim in "'t zwin" (translation from Friesian: something like the in-between) - This was a warmer bit of water, and the shrimp were attracted to it, just as we kids were. I could feel them tickling me.
't Zwin was where one could remain in the ocean for about half an hour, before freezing. We would all troop back over the akshully hot sand and dry off, in a lttle cabin (one of a long row, above the hugh tide mark - These quaint huts were essential, for shelter, on a bleak, featureless and sand-windy North Sea beach.
My uncle would pull out a massive pot, and a tiny portable gas-ring and boil all the shrimp, while we huddlled under damp, scratchy towels.. There was a good three pounds of shrimp, all boiled in a bucket of seawater. Those were memorable times. Sitting around for two hours shelling little shrimp... making hot-dog buns, full of shrimp and mayonnaise- how many buns you want? Enough for at least two days of "would you like another?*
My point in that long ramble was: shrimp don't really hang out in schools 'out in the open ocean'. You have a mistaken picture of how this works.
Shrimp like to congregate in harbors and river mouths, or in relative shelter, as I illustrated above: Near the coast, basically. In my childhood, we were catching baby shrimp, that hung out where human babies also happened to like to swim safely, in slightly warmer water.
Just throw it in the trash. Then forget about it - maybe section off the dump - LOL who is going to bother - the way things are going, we will see people scavenging dumps for food?
All their Greta-yammering, blots out the real issues we should be focusing on.
Mind you, There are some we can do nothing about.
For example, the myth of sorting one's rubbish (so that the council does not confiscate the bin if filled inorrectly - LOL-Z, complete with managerial carrots (free recycling bin), and sticks (we'll confiscate them if you are bad). But such convoluted climate change tactics does absolutely nothing for the environment , and it causes some grief (my daughter had her recycling bin 'stolen' by the council, because some homeless person stuffed some moldy bedding onto her carefully sorted glass bottles, at the last minute. She put the bin out half an hour before the truk came, and then took kids to school - gets dirty message - YOU BROKE THE RULES, you are not allowed a bin.
A few years back, I found out the council was shipping all the rubbish, including the recyclables, which were actually not recyclable (they jumped the gun on that one, only a smallish percentage of plastic IS recyclable), so it was shipped to China - where it was burned. it eventually became a scandal - with pictures of naughty China with massive trash-piles burning, when it was found that multiple NZ Councils used this LOL
'outsourcing' method of maintianing a 'clean Green' image,
But since then, I have not seen any local new dumpsites open, so I guess the council are still LOL 'outsourcing' their trash problem. Anyhoo. When I discovered they were shipping ALL the trash to China, inlcuding the 'badly sorted' plastic, I stopped recycling. I collect glass jars for my bottle-mad neighbor, that's it. Go and stuff yer hed. I ain't carfully reading illegible little logos on plastic bottles - I avoid them anyway - prefer glass (and I re-use those). Never put a recycling bin out.
Although I am considering a wee pepe-protest, I am saving a recycling bin, full of the vilest trash imaginable. Stinky, sharp tins, glass bottles, soggy cat-piss cardboard - the lot. I am mellowing it, wating for the exact time to put it out for recycling. That way, they'll take the offending item right away from me. So I guess that will help. What do you think? MAkes a little work for the dust-men - and a whole flurry of 'you are bad' messages. Worth it?
Just to put things in perspective, the last time I worked the numbers, it turns out that a cubic kilometer of seawater contains about a metric ton of uranium in solution. We don't give it any thought at all. Dilution of cesium-137 is massive. The best shielding against serious (gamma) radiation is U-238.
All living beings based on carbon incorporate radioactive carbon-14 from nitrogen in the air that has been atom-smashed by cosmic rays. So, we are already radioactive, but at a trivial level. (Kind of fun to get a civil defense Geiger counter and test it on people at a party.) The dilution of seawater is truly staggering. Just because we can measure concentrations at parts per billion does not mean the concentration levels are any kind of threat. ..."Theory 'holds no water'..." Pretty sly. We probably have other things to worry about---like being killed by a direct meteor hit. I think this once happened to a guy sitting in his easy chair. Something the size of a toaster crashed through his roof and nailed him.
Maybe the entire "danger of radiation" thing is a myth.
https://greatawakening.win/p/19BtBpn76Q/-shock-study-radiation-from-the-/c/
Galen Winsor...
An amazing presentation if y'all have never seen it:
https://www.bitchute.com/video/HEvoTgDgpKSx/
This is fascinating. Thanks for this.
These guys use to kick a piece of nuclear fuel into the water with their foot. And they new they were safe doing it. Carry two different amounts of plutonium in separate pockets each under amount required for uncontrolled chain reaction. In other words, safe if unless the two volumes got together. They new that too.
Swimming in reactor coolant water. Drinking a couple bottles of the water daily. (High levels of cesium 137)
There is no such thing as radioactive waste.
Question: So there was no accident at three mile island? Answer: No, they did it on purpose.
Where did we see this on Sept. 11, 2001
The whole RADON in you house is a scam!! I think I heard him say that the entire Lead Poising scare was a scam too! GRRRRRRRRRR
Who owns the plutonium, and what is it worth? What ever it's worth, most likely 100's of trillions of dollars, it belongs to the people, citizens of this country. It came out of our land, and is being stored in our land.
There was an accident at Three Mile Island, a partial core meltdown resulting from a failure in the coolant system. The system finally came to rest. Some radioactive gas and iodine leaked into the atmosphere. Governor Thornburgh was considering ordering a general evacuation, but relented after realizing that more people would be harmed by accidents in the evacuation melee than by radioactivity exposure. The containment structure was contaminated by the leakage of primary coolant. It was not done "on purpose." There was no way the actual event could have been done on purpose.
The fear of radioactivity and radiation is overblown. But this does not mean that it can never be of serious concern, or even lethal. Level is everything. An early worker in the Manhattan Project inadvertently made the error of allowing two pieces of fissionable material to get too close together. They had a sudden flash of fission and he was lethally exposed, dying within minutes.
Plutonium is not found in nature. It is transmuted from natural uranium in a nuclear reactor. So, it belongs to whomever made it. (But all fissionables are controlled by the government for reasons of security.) Nuclear weapons "belong to the people" too, but they will never get out of government hands.
I'm just curious, did you listen to the video https://www.bitchute.com/video/HEvoTgDgpKSx/
Thanks, but I've been aware of the over-exaggeration of radioactivity fears for at least half a century. I've read "The Effects of Nuclear Weapons" by Glasstone and Dolan (the Bible on the subject). I've heard of people doing stunts like eating plutonium, though I wouldn't advise anyone to ingest any metal.
I agree best not to ingest metals especially when fired out of the end of a barrel lol.
I do make exception for titanium bits and pieces to hold me together, but they are inert.
Most Shrimp in commercial markets are sourced from Farms.
Not caught on the open Ocean.
OK, but the farms are usually near the coastline of the ocean. they are not closed systems.
Also Caesium-137
Just in case anyone was in doubt - it is definitely something to do with nuclear fission. - I suppose some hospital may have dumped their x-ray stuff in a spot near the shrimp-farm, but I sincerely doubt it.
This is Fukushima - coming to haunt us.
[sidebar] I love shrimp. We sould cycle for an hour to go to the beach: my uncle would don a special hand-pushed triangular scoopnet. He would walk, chest-deep, back-and-forth, just on the outer edge of the sandbank, while watching us kids swim in "'t zwin" (translation from Friesian: something like the in-between) - This was a warmer bit of water, and the shrimp were attracted to it, just as we kids were. I could feel them tickling me.
't Zwin was where one could remain in the ocean for about half an hour, before freezing. We would all troop back over the akshully hot sand and dry off, in a lttle cabin (one of a long row, above the hugh tide mark - These quaint huts were essential, for shelter, on a bleak, featureless and sand-windy North Sea beach.
My uncle would pull out a massive pot, and a tiny portable gas-ring and boil all the shrimp, while we huddlled under damp, scratchy towels.. There was a good three pounds of shrimp, all boiled in a bucket of seawater. Those were memorable times. Sitting around for two hours shelling little shrimp... making hot-dog buns, full of shrimp and mayonnaise- how many buns you want? Enough for at least two days of "would you like another?*
That sounds like the absolute best of great times!!! I love shrimp too!
I had to do it, just to keep something pure, in this dirty business.
Depending on where it was sourced from. A company may have been illegally dumping waste.
The dumping of the waste water occurred near Japan. And even then the water was treated repeatedly before being dumped to minimize the rads.
Environmental Laws in quite a few countries are more suggestions than stuff people actually follow. Even in the U.S a lot of illegal dumping happens
OK. Someting to look into, I guess.
My point in that long ramble was: shrimp don't really hang out in schools 'out in the open ocean'. You have a mistaken picture of how this works.
Shrimp like to congregate in harbors and river mouths, or in relative shelter, as I illustrated above: Near the coast, basically. In my childhood, we were catching baby shrimp, that hung out where human babies also happened to like to swim safely, in slightly warmer water.
Fun fact:
Asian aquaculturists suspend pig cages over the grow out ponds & the fish gobble up the droppings. 😋😋😋😋😋
Remember that next time you're buying tilapia, shrimp and other farmed fish where the country if origin is somewhere in Asia.
Also canned sardines from Thailand are truly revolting - they taste like plastic.
What’s really odd is that customers are told they just “shouldn't eat it and should throw it out.” No big deal, it has a half life of 30 years.
Just throw it in the trash. Then forget about it - maybe section off the dump - LOL who is going to bother - the way things are going, we will see people scavenging dumps for food?
yeah, just tired of the hypocrisy, climate change hysteria and absolutely no regard for the damage that trash does to our ecosystems.
All their Greta-yammering, blots out the real issues we should be focusing on.
Mind you, There are some we can do nothing about.
For example, the myth of sorting one's rubbish (so that the council does not confiscate the bin if filled inorrectly - LOL-Z, complete with managerial carrots (free recycling bin), and sticks (we'll confiscate them if you are bad). But such convoluted climate change tactics does absolutely nothing for the environment , and it causes some grief (my daughter had her recycling bin 'stolen' by the council, because some homeless person stuffed some moldy bedding onto her carefully sorted glass bottles, at the last minute. She put the bin out half an hour before the truk came, and then took kids to school - gets dirty message - YOU BROKE THE RULES, you are not allowed a bin.
A few years back, I found out the council was shipping all the rubbish, including the recyclables, which were actually not recyclable (they jumped the gun on that one, only a smallish percentage of plastic IS recyclable), so it was shipped to China - where it was burned. it eventually became a scandal - with pictures of naughty China with massive trash-piles burning, when it was found that multiple NZ Councils used this LOL 'outsourcing' method of maintianing a 'clean Green' image,
But since then, I have not seen any local new dumpsites open, so I guess the council are still LOL 'outsourcing' their trash problem. Anyhoo. When I discovered they were shipping ALL the trash to China, inlcuding the 'badly sorted' plastic, I stopped recycling. I collect glass jars for my bottle-mad neighbor, that's it. Go and stuff yer hed. I ain't carfully reading illegible little logos on plastic bottles - I avoid them anyway - prefer glass (and I re-use those). Never put a recycling bin out.
Although I am considering a wee pepe-protest, I am saving a recycling bin, full of the vilest trash imaginable. Stinky, sharp tins, glass bottles, soggy cat-piss cardboard - the lot. I am mellowing it, wating for the exact time to put it out for recycling. That way, they'll take the offending item right away from me. So I guess that will help. What do you think? MAkes a little work for the dust-men - and a whole flurry of 'you are bad' messages. Worth it?
To get your “recycling” bin taken away and told “you are bad”. Ah hell yeah. 😁
Next up: radioactive seagulls, after scavenging at the dump.
perfect lead up for The Birds by Hitchcock.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/walmart-great-value-shrimp-radioactive-contamination-cesium-137-fda/
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-66610977
no Winston, The Party says that 2+2=5.
This is a PR problem. Think "Pre-Cooked."
Just to put things in perspective, the last time I worked the numbers, it turns out that a cubic kilometer of seawater contains about a metric ton of uranium in solution. We don't give it any thought at all. Dilution of cesium-137 is massive. The best shielding against serious (gamma) radiation is U-238.
so are you trying to say that my theory holds no water or that we are all going to die of radiation exposure unless we find some u-238?
All living beings based on carbon incorporate radioactive carbon-14 from nitrogen in the air that has been atom-smashed by cosmic rays. So, we are already radioactive, but at a trivial level. (Kind of fun to get a civil defense Geiger counter and test it on people at a party.) The dilution of seawater is truly staggering. Just because we can measure concentrations at parts per billion does not mean the concentration levels are any kind of threat. ..."Theory 'holds no water'..." Pretty sly. We probably have other things to worry about---like being killed by a direct meteor hit. I think this once happened to a guy sitting in his easy chair. Something the size of a toaster crashed through his roof and nailed him.