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Fukushima Nuclear Disaster at One Month: The Explosion of Nukespeak
Today marks exactly a month since the nuclear power disaster in Japan began. Along with the ongoing discharges of radioactivity from the Fukushima nuclear plant complex, there has been a largely outrageous flow of media coverage.
Brian Williams on NBC Nightly News on April 6th asked a good question: “And what about all that water, the many million gallons of it, highly radioactive, dumped in the Pacific Ocean for days on end—and we’ve all been told it will dissipate. But how can this not be harmful?” he queried correspondent Miguel Almaguer.
The question might have been good but the response to it, Almaguer’s report, was far from that. He presented a talking head expert, Luca Centurioni of Scripps Institution of Oceanography, who said: “No, there is no immediate danger.” (Centurioni’s background, according to his resume posted on the Internet, reflects no background in radioactivity.)
“The bottom line,” said Almaguer, “experts are in agreement there’s no threat to our water or our food.” He added: “And as you can see Brian, California’s coastline is as beautiful as ever.” Radioactivity, of course, is invisible.
Or consider Charles Osgood on “The Osgood File” on CBS radio on April 1—stressing that there was nothing to fear but fear. Indeed, he played President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s declaration in 1933 that “the only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” That might have been a reasonable reassurance amid the Depression. But here were the first indications of radioactivity having come to the U.S. from Japan with radioactive iodine being “found in milk in the states of California and Washington,” noted Osgood.
But, he quickly added, “the contamination is described as miniscule, posing no threat to the public.” To bolster that assertion he presented Blair Thompson, “spokesman for the Washington Dairy Products Commission.”
“Radiation can be a scary word, but I think it’s important to remember that actually we live surrounded by radiation every day,” said milk industry PR man Thompson.
Indeed, chirped Osgood: “Some of our most common foods—potatoes, carrots, bananas and Brazil nuts—contain radioactive potassium.”
Yes, there is naturally occurring “background radiation” of various sorts—and that causes a level of cancer. As the Nuclear Information and Resource Service (www.nirs.org) states: “Even exposure to background radiation causes some cancers. Additional exposures cause additional risks.” Cited is a 700-page 2005 National Academy of Sciences report, “Health Risks from Exposure to Low Levels of Ionizing Radiation,” that concluded that: “There is no safe level or threshold of ionizing radiation exposure.” There have been numerous similar reports.
And not only were reporter after reporter over the past month unaware of the facts about radioactivity, the experts they presented were quite a crew, too.
Consider David Brenner. He was on PBS Nightly News on March 18, two days after being featured in the New York Times story about him headlined: “Countering Radiation Fears With Just the Facts.” In the article, he was quoted as saying “I think there is a role for safe nuclear power.” Just a fact? Clearly, he was ready for TV, too.
Asked by Jeffrey Brown about “the plutonium found in the ground” around the Fukushima nuclear plants, Dr. Brenner, director of the Center for Radiological Research at Columbia University, responded: “Well, there are various sources that the plutonium could have come from. But I think we’re relieved that the levels of plutonium are actually very low, and actually, typical of plutonium—natural plutonium contamination in this country.”
Plutonium is the most lethal of all radioactive substances. There is no level “actually very low.” A millionth of a gram inhaled, a microscopic particle, is all that’s needed to produce lung cancer. Furthermore, there is no “natural plutonium contamination in this country.”
Plutonium is a manmade substance. It was discovered by Glenn Seaborg in 1941 and used in the atomic bomb dropped on Nagasaki and almost all atomic weapons since. Plutonium-239 is what Uranium-238 can become when in the proximity of fission.
Nuclear power plants build up 500 to 1,000 pounds of plutonium every year. Indeed, the concept for nuclear power plants came from the plutonium production reactors built at the Hanford reservation in the state of Washington during the Manhattan Project crash program of World War II to build atomic bombs. Also produced in those reactors were large amounts of heat. With the war over, seeking to do more with nuclear technology than just build more nuclear weapons, the scientists, engineers and corporate contractors of the Manhattan Project—which became the Atomic Energy Commission—pushed a scheme to use that heat to boil water to turn a turbine and generate electricity.
Among their schemes, too, has been using plutonium as fuel in nuclear plants for the same reason plutonium was turned to by the Manhattan Project: limits of high-grade uranium. Manmade plutonium has been seen as the fuel for what’s called “breeder” reactors.
Meanwhile, amid all the disinformation about radioactivity there has been the effort by most of media to frame a debate between nuclear and coal—choose your poison. In fact, the energy debate is between nuclear, coal and oil, on one side, and safe, clean, renewable energy technologies, led by solar and wind, on the other.
But you wouldn’t know that from media reports over the past month. The New York Times, for example, devoted part of a long “Science Times” article on March 29 to what the subhead stated: “Alternatives Carry Risks Too.” It said: “Radiation is a real threat, nuclear physicists say, but not as great as many people believe it is, and not as great as other threats. Indeed, every energy source comes with dangers, from mine or wellhead or the smokestack or tailpipe.” The piece went on to discuss coal-mining accidents and gas pipeline explosions. There was not a mention of the safe, clean energy technologies such as solar and wind.
Editorial cartoonist Walt Handelsmann in Newsday on April 4 went even further, drawing a picture of two pieces of wood with the caption: “Looking for cheap, risk free, all-natural, abundant energy…Start rubbing.” That’s not the choice.
As Lester Brown, president of Earth Policy Institute, concludes in his new book, World on the Edge: How to Prevent Environmental and Economic Collapse—as have many studies and reports—solar, wind and geothermal energy can provide all the energy the world’s needs. He dismisses nuclear power as too expensive and dangerous.
It not only can happen, it is happening, emphasizes Brown. “The old energy economy, fueled by oil, coal, and natural gas, is being replaced with an economy powered by wind, solar, and geothermal energy. Despite the global economic crisis, this energy transition is moving at a pace and on a scale that we could not have imagined even two years ago.”
But the real energy choices were largely not being discussed by media through the past month of Fukushima disinformation.
The classic book on disinformation on nuclear technology is Nukespeak, published in 1982. It is dedicated to George Orwell, author of 1984, and written by Stephen Hilgarten, Richard C. Bell and Rory O’Connor.
It opens by declaring that “the history of nuclear development has been profoundly shaped by the manipulation through official secrecy and extensive public-relations campaigns. Nukespeak and the use of information-management techniques have consistently distorted the debate over nuclear weapons and nuclear power. Time and time again, nuclear developers have confused their hopes with reality, publicly presented their expectations and assumptions as facts, covered up damaging information, harassed and fired scientists who disagreed with established policy, refused to recognize the existence of problems…claimed that there was no choice but to follow their policies.”
In the first month of the Fukushima disaster, there’s been an explosion of Nukespeak by the nuclear power establishment aided and abetted by a compliant media.



47 Comments so far
Show AllGood article, pointing out the massive wall of disinformation facing US citizens on Fukushima, radiation toxicity, and a refusal to consider renewable energy sources such as wind, solar, and geothermal. The owners of the media are the same people who have already chosen our energy future: fossil fuel and nuclear power. People must, against all odds, organize, educate, and demonstrate--at whatever scale--to fight against this suicidal path planned for us.
Additionally, I would add that radiation toxicity is CUMULATIVE. That is, every bit of exposure 'adds up;' no injury is forgotten or forgiven. Each and every exposure increases the chances of cancer, birth defects, etc. What do the birth defects look like? See this if you have not already: http://inmotion.magnumphotos.com/essay/chernobyl
Also: The study below is in the form of a pdf and is a document for those 'nuclear power boosters' who pretend to be experts on toxicity:
Radiation Experts Determine 200,000 Cancers Likely from Fukushima
The Health Outcome of the Fukushima Catastrophe Initial Analysis from Risk Model of the European Committee on Radiation Risk ECRR By: Chris Busby
http://www.fairewinds.com/content/health-outcome-fukushima-catastrophe-initial-analysis-risk-model-european-committee-radiatio
STIV: Excellent post.
These things contribute to the "success" of the nuclear industry's deceptions:
1. PR campaigns
2. Radiation is invisible
3. Cumulative effects
4. Time (i.e. the gap between exposure and the full manifestation of impacts to personal/public health. This of course dilutes the capacity to PROVE the connection within the bounds of what the law defines as the "burden of proof.")
I keep getting flashbacks of the powerful scene from the film "Silkwood" where Meryl Streep's character passes through the radiation detection machine and all the alarms go off. She yells, "I'm cooked!" That's a status more and more of us would identify with were the alarm bells in place.
Notice how instead of backing away from this dangerous technology, the paid "experts" now seek to create a new norm that establishes exposure to plutonium as permissable.
To the "Disaster Capitalists" this, too, is good news! There's profit to be found in more cancers to treat!
True, true, true, Sioux -
I would add that inside the industry information services work to misframe and compartmentalise information so that employees, including engineers and executives, can be extensively educated about one or another aspect of the plant and quite deliberately misinformed about some other that may be crucially related.
This gets accomplished several ways:
- Information handling is contracted out, and contracting companies hire many of their employees temporarily, from office temp firms. In this way, people can handle and classify extremely damning information without having substantial opportunity to put it together and understand its significance.
- Security clearances are not arranged only by more trusted or less trusted, but by need-to-know specific bodies of information. To speak very broadly, engineers do not need to know executive overview kinds of information; executives do not need to understand the physical operation of the plant. Both of these, understood together, give a far clearer picture of the danger of the plants. Of course, again, contracting out certain work allows work to be given to employees who know little else about the plant, and allows other workers in the plant to know little about the work of these contractors.
- Databases are constructed to avoid certain types of information. Those who assemble and code the information are only allowed to classify documentary evidence in certain categories and under certain terms. The word "accident" is forbidden, for example. These classifications are spot-checked by several levels of supervisor before they enter the databases.
Of course, it will not surprise anyone that anything that might make the plant appear dangerous or the executives liable is guarded most closely and distorted most sharply.
What may be more surprising is that these things are most strenuously guarded from those who actually work at or with the plant, so that many of the people who are otherwise best informed about the plants' functions have a seriously distorted take on the plants' intrinsic dangers--all very much by executive design.
And while this nuclear catastrophe will result in more cancer cases to treat, if the "experts" keep going on record telling us that "we are exposed to radiation when we fly in an airplane, walk outside on a sunny day or eat a banana", it will give the insurance companies cover to declare that anybody who gets radiation-caused cancer will be denied coverage due to their pre-existing condition caused by flying, walking outside on sunny days or eating bananas.
Exotic floor show-
Sugary Dog-and-Pony:
No Happy Ending.
BARDAMU: Thank you for the astute elaboration. Also kudos to HUGH, Minitrue and Bill from Sag.
I guess the shills got tired of trying to defend the indefensible... or, they're waiting till the heat turns down. How many half-lives might that require?
Ooh, that "no immediate danger" is devious.
There's no immediate danger in eating fast food, drinking a bottle of whisky and smoking forty cigarettes a day.
But it'll get you in the end...
Good point. How immediate does a danger have to be in order to be taken seriousl,y and dealt with? We have no idea and no way of knowing how near that "end" it'll get us in is.
One point to check, breeder reactors are designed to make more nuclear fuel than they use. This is done according to wiki, by converting U238 into Pu, as U235 is consumed. This is a necessary procedure as there a limited amount of U235 available if nuclear power is to used for a significant time. Storage of nuclear waste is the bugaboo. It needs to put away someplace out of the way, in such a place that it can't be moved by geological processes for a period of time exceeding recorded history. Science magazine had an article back in the 60's or 70's proposing that the storage be at the top of mountain with guards similar to monks who would take vows to protect it, and more importantly develop mythology indicating that the gods would be angry with anyone going up the mountain and would destroy anyone who tried. THX 1138 is a George Lucas movie (DVD) that shows how a society deals with large scale use of nuclear energy along with other issues.
It seems the Planet of the Apes movie may be prophecy except that we are doing it gradually instead of with all out war. It works out the same.
Watch this:
http://www.fairewinds.com/
The phrase you are looking for is: "Oh. Shit."
Are you sure you have that quote correct?
I thought he said:
<<"A l l _ y o u r _ b a s e _ a r e _ b e l o n g _ t o _ u s">>
The operative word here is definitely 'Catastrophe' - with a capital c. The fact that radiation is invisible is the most upsetting to me. I look out at a beautiful spring day but what am I seeing? Here in Vancouver, BC we may be witnessing the slow ebbing of life as we know it. All life poisoned by ionizing radiation over the next ten years. It's quite unbearable. At 57 I feel I am living my last years way ahead of time and it's the only way to keep my sanity, ironically.
I'm 73 and was lucky to survive my bout of radiation poisoning at Bikini in 1956. There are not many of us left. I do not look forward to ingesting yet more of this stuff, but we seem to be running out of choices.
---------------------------------------
I Have Seen the Dragon
I have seen the Dragon
Through clenched lids and arms pressed tight.
I have felt its hot breath on my back
And listened to the rumble of its voice.
I have looked upon its breath,
Glowing Amethyst, red and purple,
Climbing towards the stratosphere
To deposit its venom downwind.
I have waited in fear as my gums began to bleed
And my hair came out in clumps.
I breathed a prayer of thanks
As I began to heal.
After fifty years, our ranks are thin,
We who have seen the Dragon and survived.
Those who have died or are sickened still,
Their numbers are legion.
All we can hope for, work for, pray for,
Is that no madman will ever be allowed
To unleash the Dragon again.
For its legacy to all is death, disease and decay.
© Stephen M. Osborn
2 November 2006
---------------------------------------
And so it seems to have come to pass.
Steve,
Yes it has. I just looked at Japan with Google Earth. They have a plug-in where you can see earthquake locations in near real time (last hour, day, week). The latest cluster in Japan is mostly NOT off shore like the huge cluster beore, during and after the March 11 quake. One of those quakes today occurred only 9 miles east of the Fukishima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant. Most of the quakes occurred about 43 milees south- south west of that plant on land. That means the Dai-ini plant is in trouble. For a map of where alll the nuke plants are in Japan go here.
http://radiationnetwork.com/Japan.htm
Here's another good site:
http://www.emsc-csem.org/Earthquake/index.php
Can't get the link to work, appears to be overloaded
I use it all the time - copied the address from the window I leave running whenever I'm on the net - I know the address is good, and it gives great information, easily sorted lists, etc. Try it again - I've never had a problem loading it... have it on right now.
http://www.emsc-csem.org/Earthquake/index.php
The metaphor of unleashing the dragon is well taken but incomplete. The international treaty ban upon atmospheric testing of nuclear explosive devices is one of the enduring success stories of the antinuclear movement. Bikini atoll had a lot to do with that.
Yes, the world still has to worry about madmen at the top of the political/military heirarchy - loose cannons like Curtis LeMay or the wacko SAC base commander portrayed by Sterling Hayden in Dr. Strangelove - who fixate daily upon thinking about the unthinkable. There must be functioning institutional checks upon that type of madmen in the United States, Russia, China, Israel, Britain, France, India, Pakistan, North Korea, and anywhere else on the planet where weaponized nukes are a reality.
Fukushima alerts us to the madmen in business suits who run the civilian sector nuclear power industry. Friends and public relations flacks for Our Friend the Atom have been whistling past the graveyard on "spent" fuel rod storage for decades now, occasionally pointing fingers at the politicians and regulatory technocrats still unable to "solve the problem of nuclear waste disposal" - all the while merrily carrying on with business as usual from quarter to quarter, license renewal to license renewal.
"All we can hope for, work for and pray for,
Is that no madman can ever be allowed
To unleash the Dragon again."
Close, but not quite. Those sleeping dragons in their cooling ponds can, and almost inevitably will awaken some day, without any madman unleashing them at all.
Bill from Saginaw
Hi Bill,
I believe I wrote that poem when it looked like der Bush was going to start nuking Iran to keep them from nuking anybody in ten years. I've been fighting the entire nuclear industry for almost a half-century. As you can see by the results, I've not been very effective.
Perhaps these may be more appropriate. I wrote the one on DU when we started seeing the results in Iraq. It Will Go On is perhaps more appropriate, now that we have isotopes and radionuclides in our milk, rain water and no doubt soon in our food.
--------------------------------------------------------
Depleted Uranium
Depleted Uranium, the new panacea
The Arms Maker’s choice with a half-life of only 4.5 billion years.
Workers in DU must wear exposure suits and respirators
Just a creative use of atomic leftovers.
Dense, hard, it punches through armor like tissue,
Vaporizes and fragments into dust and tiny chunks.
Dust to be breathed and chunks to be embedded
As shrapnel or become buried in earth.
Battle tested in Desert Storm and Kosovo,
Now everyone is making them, and selling them,
To armies around the globe, eager for the latest thing.
Meanwhile, the Iraqi desert and Kosovo are laden with tons.
Pay no attention to the sick and the dying.
The Government says it is anything but DU.
Agent Orange was all in the mind, too.
Birth defects and cancer are coincidence in Govspeak.
A hundred or a thousand years from now,
When Hussein and Imperial America are long forgotten,
Or are but spooky tales told around the campfire,
As a new civilization tries to grow.
Peasants, trying to coax food from the ground will stir up clouds of dust.
They, their children and their animals will slowly sicken and die,
And they will know not why.
Just collateral damage from a weapon long ago.
Steve Osborn
19 February 2003
--------------------------------------------------------
It Will Go On
The red, setting sun, casts long shadows of the rocks and hills.
When the guns are silent and the napalm has burned out,
The desert still exists, silent save for the susurration of the sand
Blown by the winds, slowly covering the wounds of war.
Forgotten monuments again becoming homes and shelter.
Small creatures creep out in the gathering stillness
To carry on their own lives, eating and being eaten
In the long dance that predates man and will continue long after.
As the climates change, volcanos and tsunamis rend the land and shore,
With the melting of the ice the seas rise; temperate zones become steppes
Encased in permafrost. Man's vaunted civilization may crumble away.
Man, himself, may run crying into the limbo that holds the dinosaurs.
The desert, silent save for the susurration of the sand, will still exist.
The red, setting sun, will cast long shadows of the rocks and hills.
Small creatures will creep out in the gathering stillness
To carry on their own lives, eating and being eaten as they always have...
Steve Osborn
21 November 2005
--------------------------------------------------------
When I wrote this, it was primarily about Iraq, Though the napalm is (I hope) long gone, now we have global radiation to worry about, so the end may well be the same.
You're older than me, but what you have to say really hits home. This is not the world we dreamed of, back when we were young - the Nazis and Imperial Japan had just been defeated; Ike ended the Korean War - the future held so much promise; we had such high hopes - not just for ourselves, but for the whole world. Now the present is a debris-field and the future is as dark as a cave. There's no light at the end of the tunnel anymore - nothing but pain and misery as far as the eye can see. It's not just the dragon - there are monsters everywhere, and they are eating us alive.
I'm starting to wonder if today's monster CAN be killed - or will they just gorge on all of humanity and then start eating each other (I guess they already eat each other). The Nazis were the real monsters when I was growing up (before the War Department invented the threat of 'the Russians are coming' and 'Red China') - the neo-Nazis are even worse monsters, and nobody seems to even object. How did fascism fade as the foremost threat to humanity? I guess the Rockefellers and Bernays solved that problem. How do we get out of this monster-infested situation?
Whenever I had a bad nightmare, I realized that I always won in the end - must be from all the 'children's stories' you mentioned - excellent comment! Thanks!
Another excellent post. I appreciate you doing so much research, and your good writing.
I feel the same way.
From the National Council on Radiation Protection- ncrponline.org - 2011 update
"Commentary No. 10: Advising the Public about Radiation Emergencies"
"The lnformed public that is vital for successfully dealing with a radiation emergency cannot be developed after the emergency has begun."
******According to the EPA PAGs, we are entering the "Late Phase" of a radiation emergency: "Ingestion of contaminated food and water", which means, optimally, food restrictions and relocation. I don't think that is possible- can we relocate the global population to Chile or Argentina? *******
http://www.epa.gov/radiation/docs/er/400-r-92-001.pdf - Table 1.1
More from Commentary No. 10:
"Radiation exposure is *perceived* (italicized!) by many to carry a very high risk to health compared with risks from other hazards associated with modern technology (Slovic, 1990). This concern about radiation exposure is believed to make it difficult to inform the public adequately before, during and after a radiation emergency.
Research has identified radiation risk perception as particularly complex (Sandman, 1986)"
******Particularly. It's too complex to inform the public at the beginning of the emergency, so they can make informed choices on their own? I've tried talking to friends and family:
"So, hey,uh, you been paying attention to this? I have. This is worse than anyone is allowed or able to admit. Looks like it's headed our way. I've got some links for you. Think we should maybe prepare as best we can?"
Here's what I get:
"God, shut-up Chicken Little! Quit harshin' my buzz, damn- chillax... Nice Tin Hat ya got there, jeez. Were you always a paranoid disaster-junkie?. Maybe you need to get some help, I think you've gone over the edge. You channelling Pleidians or what?"
I wish I was wrong. I'd even take "crazy". I'm not hoping I can say "Told You So".
Trying to calmly keep the kids from playing in the April Showers, wondering how it's possible to decontaminate them if the tap water is contaminated, wondering if it's futile to start the heirlooms I was so excited about- these thoughts have been even more tortuous because I've had to keep them to myself for the last 3 weeks.
Is this what it's like to be have the Second Sight, to see the future in silence?
If so, I hate it. It sucks out loud.
What sucks louder? When my daughters talk about what they want to be when they grow up. And yes, we've done this to ourselves, so maybe we didn't deserve the planet, but the animals did.
We suck. We sucked on the Devil's Johnson, dudes- we sucked it dry.
I like this being angry thing- so much better than abject terror, anyhow.
I guess.
I don't know whether to shit or wind my watch.
Thanks, Hughnanimous- that's what I was implying with the links, but failed to illustrate this as I gave in to the gloriousness of freedom to rant in a 'safe' place.
Exposure via pathways of ingestion and inhalation are longer-term issues which are not included in most of the measurements/doses/etc, and blah...it looks like Fukushima is effing effed- plenty of it, and more to come. Aiyee.
X-rays, etc...these are certainly not good for you, but are not everyday experiences for most of us, medically at least; these are vastly different than contamination from particulates sprinkling down on us from the atmosphere. Yepyep.
I appreciate your reply, and will write and post more links tomorrow- must shut down the brain for now.
best~
Hughnanimous,
It was such a relief to "talk" somewhere that I may have wandered away from my original point(s).
I know that the plumes are dense with particles and travel quickly: contamination on a global scale, the internally bioaccumulating kind. Not at all like occasional X-ray, flights, or...bananas.
I posted the links to the Public Action Guides,etc., to illustrate further how late I believe we really are into this emergency, that indeed we are being kept 'calm' with conflicting or no data, and that all we can do at this point is help each other- continue to dig for real information, share what we know, and allow for expressions of emotion from time-to-time. This is a grieving process, after all. I like the angry stage. ;) It is most useful.
I'll be posting quotes from documents with links wherever and whenever I can.
Thanks
The poems are chillingly beautiful, thank you for sharing them- (I forgot the author's name- sorry)
Here's a link to the latest plume charts - 3 different vertical levels: surface, 2500m and 5000m. The one at 2500m looks more dangerous.
http://www.weatheronline.co.uk/weather/news/fukushima?LANG=en&VAR=euradsfc
I've found Arnie Gunderson to be one of the few worth following on this disaster:
http://fairewinds.com/updates
He talks about the collusion between the NRC, the nuclear industry and TEPCO.
Also, the UCS (Union of Concerned Scientists):
http://www.ucsusa.org/nuclear_power/nuclear_power_risk/safety/japan-nuclear-crisis-briefings.html?utm_source=SP&utm_medium=link2&utm_campaign=japan-nuclear-crisis-link2-3-15-11
Yes, most observers seem to be having a lovely time with the terms "low levels" and "no immediate danger". Translation: don't breathe, eat spinach, or go out in the rain.
You won't want to read this article:
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Japan/MD07Dh01.html
"Brian Williams on NBC Nightly News on April 6th asked a good question: “And what about all that water, the many million gallons of it, highly radioactive, dumped in the Pacific Ocean for days on end—and we’ve all been told it will dissipate. But how can this not be harmful?” he queried correspondent Miguel Almaguer."
It's not a disaster...it's an opportunity!
Bottle it up in lead-walled water bottles, give it a fancy name, radiation logo & advertising campaign with a must-have impetus and they'd make a killing amongst the mindless consumers of the world.
Pop the lid, count the rads, feel the buzz!
For a refreshing drink that literally gives you energy, drink Fukushimazing!
Recommended by Ann Coulter!
(collect all the Fukushimazing coupons and send them in for your free iodine tablets today!)
Fukushimazing....it's bloody awesome!
Oldie -
A bit demented, but still very much a goodie.
I hereby nominate your post for the first annual Naomi Klein Disaster Capitalism Award.
If you win in your category for 2011, you get a golden statuette in the shape of an erect penis with a dollar sign balancing on top. To be presented at the glittering award night gala held in the George W. Bush Center in Houston, Texas - by Laura personally - with Donald Trump serving as master of ceremony.
Bill from Saginaw
The 'old energy economy' includes nuclear. The accent on being replaced must be on 'is being'. In the meantime what do we do during the necessary energy transition? More CO2 anyone?
We must get real. Most who write here against nuclear revel in CO2 production. They eat industrial foods, drive a car, use a computer and air conditioners, store pre-packaged food in fridges and freezers, always bathe and shower in hot water, buy disposable, wear synthetics, use plastic bags, walk past the local street stalls into the chain stores and buy foreign almost exclusively, commute tens of thousands of kilometres a year, drive and fly away on holiday and so on and so on almost forever.
Commenting against nuclear has long been a blatant moral smoke screen. Currently most people against nuclear are fissile liars. The entire consumer society, either for or against nuclear, meaning the entire first world, is.
Walk, ride a bike, abandon large homes and private gardens and such pathetic spaces of aristocratic conceit, avoid the chain stores, buy and use only clean power, scrap your car and motor bike, severely curtail your travelling, shiver in winter, sweat in summer, dispense with brands in cosmetics and clothes and foods and other consumables by making your own or buying from your neighbour's own produce and, in other words, embrace and glory in the change it will make to your lifestyle.
It cannot be done in a day but it is a goal that needs to be assiduously pursued.
Do so then scream to shut down ALL fossil and dangerously situated or old nuclear. Scream also to prevent all new fossil and nuclear. In all this be careful of your brothers and sisters. Acclaim the good and mourn the useless but allow those who self destruct to do so if they will.
Otherwise you are a useful fool and should be shut up.
I cannot even get my family to do this.
Right wingers have used the purity test against all environmental arguments for years.
If you're not pure then you need to shut up. Talk about a non-starter.
Had the environmentalists won, even those still driving cars instead of riding horses, this planet would be in much better shape.
Germany is moving ahead with plans to stop using nuclear power and has already moved ahead to transition to renewable energy. And by golly, people still have air conditioning in their houses.
Good points.
But such "all or nothing at all" arguments don't persuade me. Anyone can take a step in the right direction, then another, then another. It's not all that difficult to use half as much energy as your neighbours.
Perhaps you're asking too much, too fast, of your family. How about having one "power-down" day a week? Make it fun; make it a contest: who can reduce their energy the most?
The safe way to use nuclear energy is to drill deep wells and extract the geothermal heat that scientists theorize is caused by a uranium lead core at the center of the Earth.