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What Happened to Media Coverage of Fukushima?
While the U.S. media has been occupied with Anthony Weiner, the Republican presidential candidates and Bristol Palin's memoir, coverage of Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant disaster has practially fallen off the map. Poor mainstream media coverage of Japan's now months-long struggle to gain control over the Fukushima disaster has deprived Americans of crucial information about the risks of nuclear power following natural disasters. After a few weeks of covering the early aftermath of Japan's earthquake and tsunami, the U.S. media moved on, leaving behind the crisis at Fukushima which continues to unfold. U.S. politicians, like Rep. Joe Barton of Texas, have made disappointing and misleading statements about the relative safety of nuclear power and have vowed to stick by our nuclear program, while other countries, like Germany and Italy, have taken serious steps to address the obvious risks of nuclear power -- risks that the Fukushima disaster made painfully evident, at least to the rest of the world.
Problems Multiply
News outlets in other countries have been paying attention to Fukushima, though, and a relative few in this country have as well. A June 16, 2011 Al Jazeera English article titled, "Fukushima: It's much worse than you think," quotes a high-level former nuclear industry executive, Arnold Gunderson, who called Fukushima nohting less than "the biggest industrial catastrophe in the history of mankind." Twenty nuclear cores have been exposed at Fukushima, Gunderson points out, saying that, along with the site's many spent-fuel pools, gives Fukushima 20 times the release potential of Chernobyl.
Efforts to bring problems at Fukushima under control are not going well, either. Japanese authorities only just recently admitted that nuclear fuel in the three damaged Fukushima reactors has likely burned through the vessels holding it, a scenario called "melt-through", that is even more serious than a core meltdown. Months of spraying seawater on the plant's three melted-down fuel cores -- and the spent fuel stored on site -- to try and cool them has produced 26 million of gallons of radioactive wastewater, and no place to put it.
After a struggle, the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO), finally managed to put in place a system to filter radioactive particles out of the wastewater, but it broke down soon after it started operating. A filter that was supposed to last a month plugged up with radioactive material after just five hours, indicating there is more radioactive material in the water than previously believed. Meanwhile, TEPCO is running out of space to store the radioactive water, and may be forced to again dump contaminated water into the Pacific Ocean. TEPCO already dumped some water into the ocean weeks ago, amid protests from fisherman, other countries and environmental organizations. And even if TEPCO does successfully filter the contaminated water and manage to bring its radioactivity down to acceptable levels, the utility will still have to deal with the pile of radioactive sludge the process will produce. The plan they've come up with to deal with the sludge is to seal it in drums and discard it into the ocean, which may cause even more problems. Greenpeace has already found levels of radiation exceeding legal limits in seaweed and shellfish samples gathered more than 12 miles away from the plant. The high levels of radiation in the samples indicate that leaks from the plant are bigger than TEPCO has revealed so far.
The cascade of other problems caused by the Fukushima disaster include the costs of relocating residents from the affected area around the plant, compensating people for the loss of their homes and belongings, and a drop-off in global sales of goods and products exported from Japan due to fear of radioactive contamination.
Domestic Nuclear Worries
For Americans who think "out of sight, out of mind" or "it can't happen here" when it comes to Fukishima and its ramifications, think again. Janette Sherman, M.D., an internal medicine specialist, and Joseph Magano, an epidemiologist with the Radiation and Public Health Project research group, noticed a 35% jump in infant mortality in eight northwestern U.S. cities located within 500 miles of the Pacific coast since the Fukushima meltdown. They wrote an essay, published by CounterPunch, suggesting there may be a link between the statistic and the Fukushima disaster. They cited similar problems with infant mortality among people who were exposed to nuclear fallout from Chernobyl. Sherman and Magano urge that steps be taken to measure the levels of radioactive isotopes in the environment of the Pacific northwest, and in the bodies of people in these areas, to determine if nuclear fallout from Fukushima could, in fact, be related to the spike in infant mortality.
Tensions are also rising over two U.S. nuclear reactors in Nebraska located on the banks of the Missouri River, which is now at flood stage. On June 20, the Omaha, Nebraska World Herald reported that flood waters from the Missouri River came within 18 inches of forcing the Cooper Nuclear Station near Brownville, Nebraska, to shut down. Officials are poised to shut down the Cooper plant when river reaches a level of 902 feet above sea level. The plant is 903 feet above sea level. The Fort Calhoun Nuclear Plant, 20 miles north of Omaha, issued a "Notification of Unusual Event" to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission on June 6 due to local flooding. That plant is currently shut down for refueling, but will not restart because of the flooding. Compounding worries over these two plants is a shortage of sand needed to fill massive numbers of sandbags to hold off Missouri River floodwaters. One ton of sand makes just 60 sandbags, and hundreds of thousands of sandbags are needed to help save towns along the river from flooding. Sand is obtained from dredging the riverbed -- and the companies that sell sand can't dredge the river while it is flooding. These plants are already in a risky situation, and the flooding in Nebraska could easily be worsened just by a summer afternoon cloudburst.
Global Support for Nuclear Power Drops; Some U.S. Reactors on Borrowed Time
Polls reveal that global support for nuclear power has nosedived in the wake of the Fukushima disaster. A survey of over 19,000 people in 24 countries showed that three quarters of people now think nuclear power will soon be obsolete. Three countries still show support for nuclear power: the U.S., India and Poland.
The relative safety of nuclear power in the U.S. is tenuous, despite what some politicians have claimed. A big problem is that the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) has been working with the nuclear power industry to keep our country's reactors operating within safety standards, but they've been doing it by either weakening those standards, or not enforcing them at all. A year-long investigation by the Associated Press (AP) revealed that the NRC has acted appallingly, extending licenses for dozens of aging U.S. nuclear plants despite their having multiple problems, like rusted pipes, broken seals, failed cables and leaking valves. When such problems are found, the NRC will weaken the standards to help the plants meet them instead of ordering them to be repaired to meet current standards. The nuclear industry argues that the standards they are violating are "unnecessarily conservative," and in response, the NRC simply loosens the standards. Just last year, for example, the NRC weakened the safety margin for acceptable radiation damage to nuclear reactor vessels -- for the second time. Through public record requests to the NRC, the AP obtained photographs of badly rusted valves, holes eaten into the tops of reactor vessels, severe rust in pipes carrying essential water supplies, peeling walls, actively leaking water pipes and other problems found among the nation's fleet of aging nuclear reactors.
The Take Away
Fukushima has been a wake up call about the dangers of nuclear power, and some countries are heeding the information. But it seems the U.S. is still sleeping when it comes to this issue. Light-to-absent coverage of TEPCO's struggles to bring Fukushima under control, legislators who insist on acting favorably towards the nuclear power industry despite the deteriorated state of our current reactor fleet and an ineffective Nuclear Regulatory Commission have all contributed to a bad combination of a dangerous situation and a complacent American public on this issue.
Maybe now that the latest scandal in Washington has subsided, public and media attention will return to this crucial issue, and the U.S. will turn its attention to tackling some of the truly serious problems posed by a continuing reliance on nuclear power.
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61 Comments so far
Show AllAs Ms. Landman notes, will the United States admit that nuclear power should be looked at more closely or will it continue to put its head in the sand and pretend that nothing is amiss?
"The release of atomic energy has not created a new problem. It has merely made more urgent the necessity of solving an existing one."-Albert Einstein [1879-1955], German-born physicist and Nobel Laureate
"Human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe."-H.G. Wells [1866-1946], English writer
Excellent question.
There are so many issues dismantling our lives and we are so overwhelmed dealing with each one, that it becomes hard to notice something like this was "kept from us".
The United Kingdom is also still enthralled by nuclear - it is easy to do with a conservative government - just wave money under their noses -
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-13887579
Manysummits
=======
this is an excellent article.
the US coverage of Fukushima shut down upon the attack on Libya.
please note we are posting major global coverage of nuke issues, including Fukushima, Nebraska, etc., at www.nukefree.org.
please send relevant articles to me at solartopia@me.com.
thanks also to CommonDreams, which has done a great job of keeping up on the issue.
No Nukes! Harvey Wasserman
Hmmm
If the US MSM actually told Americans the truth about the melt downs we would have a lot of really angry people. The first melt down actually accured 3 DAYS after the quake (the Japanese and US governments knew this of course and flat out lied to the rest of the world) The fact is that large sections of the US have been contaminated. Not only the air, but rain and ground water, crops etc are way above safe levels over much of the US. And remember that right after the Earthquake the EPA "revised" the "safe" limits for radiation. What they did was raise the the limits from 1 to a hundred times higher. Which is how the EPA can publicly state right now that the radiation levels are within "safe" limits. In other words we are being lied to once again. I am sure some one is claiming this is all in the "interests of national security". (theirs not ours) Take a good look around and where the elite are spending their summers. Parts of the US have escaped much of the radiation, but others parts of the country are way above safe limits.
On the other hand the highest activity levels ever recorded for HAARP in Alaska took place in the 2 days prior to the earthquake in Japan...........
Given the massive radiation contamination going on now in the northern hemisphere, and the lethal long term effects it will have; one could argue that this is in fact a form of population control.
Oh and where did the Bush family and friends by 100,000 acres ranches? Paraguay the land of fresh air, trillions of gallons of UNDERGROUND fresh water, and of course no extradition with the US.........
"right after the Earthquake the EPA "revised" the "safe" limits for radiation. What they did was raise the the limits from 1 to a hundred times higher. Which is how the EPA can publicly state right now that the radiation levels are within "safe" limits"
The Atomic Energy Commission did the same thing in the 1960s for the radioactive iodine released in the atmospheric tests in Nevada. When the measured levels reached the "safe level," the AEC raised the safe level. They certainly made us all feel safer.
the prison coverage of fukushima is in nebraska, where the global warming caused flooding is about to cause inundation of a nuclear power plant
I hope that one of Joe Barton's perks of office is that TEPCO keeps the pool at his home in Texas filled all year round.
Has anyone heard more about the flooded (it flooded last week) Nuclear Power Plant in Nebraska?
http://www.americanfreepress.net/html/nuclear_reactor_in_peril_275.html
Last night at around 9:20 PM a levee was breached about three miles north of Brownsville. The Cooper nuclear plant is about one mile south of Brownsville. It was within 18 inches of flooding before the breach. However, the latest news today is that the water did not rise enough to endanger the Cooper plant.
So they rolled the dice again and it worked. These nuclear industry gamblers will kill us all with their willful stupidity.
US corps are very likely guilty of criminal negligence which killed...so that is manslaughter, at best, and corporate protection...the "corporate veil" which prevents folks harmed by a corp from getting at the personal assets of the owners and directors is "pierced" (I do not joke: Google "piercing the corporate veil" if you must geek out with the legalese).
If the media starts covering this...the same media which is owned in large part by nuke-builders (GE, eh?)--their owners might--albeit admittedly remotely might-- eventually find themselves on a path that could see them stripped of assets and imprisoned.
Imprisoned and impaupered, if I may coin one here.
Does that clear anything up?
As soon as it was painfully obvious that Fukushima was the single worst case scenario coming true, and the various lies and deceptions were revealed for what they are, NBC (owned by GE, maker of the reactors for the US Navy) yanked it's coverage. The rest of the media herd followed suit.
I think as soon as this story broke, and people started investigating for themselves what a nuclear meltdown was, and how bad it could be, the nuclear industry knew it's game was over.
And from what I understand of the latest news fro Japan, the nuclear fuel from the three catastrophically compromised reactors has completely escaped their containment vessels, and are now melting their way to water saturated bedrock. When that happens, it is entirely possible we will see a nuclear contaminated steam explosion that will necessitate the permanent evacuation of Japan.
Why believe anyone on this issue? Take your own data. I just got done putting the final touches on my Geiger counter design. Current exposure rates in my location 54313 is 500 nS/Hr. Thems the facts here in NE Wis...
"Only through mathematics shall we find truth."
I don’t know about Fukushima but I sure am glad all that pesky oil in the Gulf of Mexico disappeared so fast and didn’t do any damage. It’s amazing how fast human caused catastrophes can disappear when the media manipulates the news. I'm just glad the news does such an outstanding job of keeping us all informed on who is sending who naked pictures of themselves on their cell phones. Boy, I sure wouldn’t want to be left out of that loop for up to the minute reporting. The journalists must be so proud.
We need even more coverage of the baby killer party girl too!
"Who controls the past controls the future."
George Orwell
"...Who controls the present, controls the past."
The (important) remainder of that quotation.
Great article. However what is happening is predictable, in the Fascism we know as Democracy in the US.
General Electric will face the largest product liability issue in history. Clearly their hardware is of a terrible, unsafe design. (If corporations are persons, persons need to accept responsibility for their actions.) Of course, GE is the largest media owner in the US, and the control is apparent. The "we really screwed up with this one" is not going to be broadcast. Have you noticed?
Do you really have to ask? Wake up and realize that words don't count for much unless their funded by government. The fourth estate has been compromised by money. We ought to expect writers to do some serious resistance to earn our willingness to read their writings. Anything else is just fluff.
now that is very good comment. hear effin hear!
Dear Mark Abram,
Please go volunteer for the cleanup.
Then come back and tell us all about it.
Thank you.
EVERYONE who isn't a nuclear industry tool here, knows that you are a nuclear industry tool.
Mark Abram,
Have you done the homework I gave you on ionizing radiation causing up regulated tyrosine kinase enzimes? The younger the organism (because of rapid cell multiplication), the more damage.
Here's just one of those enzymes that goes nuts (cancerous tumors from too much cell division and improper signaling causing cells in those tumors to live when they should die) when it is up regulated by radiation: It's called Abl.
Abl is a non-receptor tyrosine kinase distinguished by its localization in the nucleus as well as the cytoplasm. Cytoplasmic Abl associates with F-actin and is capable of
STIMULATING CELL GROWTH.
Nuclear Abl is thought to participate with DNA-PK and ATM to initiate signaling in response to DNA DAMAGE.
Chromosomal translocations involving Abl and the breakpoint cluster region on chromosme 22 produce the bcr-Abl fusion protein, RESULTING IN AN constitutively active Abl thought to be critical in the PATHOGENESIS of chronic myelogenous LEUKEMIA (CML).
"Constitutively active" means up regulated, pal. The ARS (acute radiation syndrome) literature by the nuclear industry states that ANY level of ionizing radiation from radionuclides can up regulate TKEs (tyrosine kinase enzymes).
If you really were a scientist, you would research this and be prepared to go where the truth led you.
I'm not convinced you are a scientist because your extreme partiality and lack of objectivity is anathema to scientific thought.
But don't fret, mr. nuclear bullshit artist. The New York Times is doing a Tom Sawyer with a nuclear picket fence and warning that the US is "falling behind" (hurry! catch up!) on the new and improved modular reactors that are the wave of the future! They are so happy abroad painting their nuclear picket fence. They are going to make so much money and the US will be left behind. Boo Hoo.
Cheer up, Mark. Establishment mendacity, manipulation and criminal negligence supports your position. It must be nice to have so many friends with deep pockets.
After all, that's all that counts, right Mark?
Thank you. Yes there is alot of "cherry-picking" and "turd-throwing" going on, pro and con. I used to think we had to go to nukes; only way forward, but I'm now convinced there are at least a DOZEN ways forward, including even wind and solar (which, before, some "turd-throwers" convinced me was insufficient, thus leading to massive die-off). Bottom line is we MUST develop a more kindly regard for humanity, and the place where they live...Earth. Technology isn't always our friend, but it needn't be our enemy either. It's a life-saver, when used rightly. There's the key; "right use".
"...Fukushima's SMALL ADDITION to background radiation..." ? (my capitals)
Mark authoritatively speaks as if this thing is over and done... (move along nothing to see here).
But it is not over - no where near - and it is NOT SMALL; there is much heartache and suffering to come. Highly irradiated water continues to spew into the ocean as it has for months now; and our atmosphere continues to receive isotope laden fallout. That doesn't even begin to mention the melted core issues previously discussed!
The industry's record for truth and transparency is not good. (Just as i expect is Marks...)
I highly recommend the informative "The Battle of Chernobyl" previously linked to by others:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yiCXb1Nhd1o
Peace.
The 114 other ciyties ain't the closest to Fukushima !
The cherry-picking happened to be the closest 8 cities....in areas where increased radiation levels were measured.
actually, you are drawing a lot more conclusions about their findings than they did themselves... as far as i understand it, they noted the rise and wondered if there is a connection. so far the only refutations that i have seen of this study have been from obscure sources (such as yourself, or some blog, or small town alaskan newspaper etc) and in none of these refutations was there any sustained discussion or dialogue with the study's authors. just personal attacks. much like Rachel Carson got. you yourself said that the rise in infant mortality was insignificant (i believe the rise of 3 additional infant deaths per week in each city on average, is only insignificant if it isnt your child and you dont care much about other people) which not only is vulgar, but it basically does what all apologists for empire do, it isnt happening and it doesnt matter if it is... only liars try to cover all their bases...
Time for an update of the Doomsday Clock.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doomsday_Clock
As soon as Fukushima hit, I researched about Chernobyl. It was shocking the similarities and just as shocking the differences.
The Russians wanted to be World leaders and so they did act like World leaders when it came down to it. They were slow and bureaucratic, but they were very human and they did value human life.
What is happening now is a De- evolution in human behaviour.
Because corporations and corporate governments are now involved, and they are psychopathic.
Definition of CORPORATE
..endowed by law with the rights (and liabilities) of an individual. Corporations are places that psychopathic, predator personalities can hide and gather strength behind. Just like them, the corporation is treated with the rights of a human but it is vacant.
Humans, ironically, non-corporate entities are treated by the law with less rights. See Wal- Mart this week. Love those Waltons. Such a loving corporate family.
Just to throw something more into the toxic mix.
It seems that we get no information on the effects of the ongoing aftershocks (or separate earthquake events, depending upon one's point of view), that are certainly impacting Fukushima plant criticality. This appears to be a geological seismic chain reaction triggering a nuclear one. It must be a signifacant part of the scenario.
I agree. The hydrogen (Tritium) embrittlement of all the pipe infrastructure of the nuclear power plants has turned these creaky dinosaurs into death traps for us all.
These nuclear power plants are not capable of withstanding any significant shaking.
Here is just one article on the increase in learning disabilities in children who were exposed in the womb to radiation. We've known about this for a LONG time.
http://bjr.birjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/57/677/409
Why hasn't TEPCO been nationalized, and why haven't the rest of the world's governments poured resources, whatever it takes, into fixing the catastrophe? How can this not be front page news anymore?
Oh. That might make tepco's stock price go down, or it might be a violation of GE's Bill of Rights protections as a "corporate person" to be put on the spot.
I suppose our MSN stopped covering the Fukushima event because soon after the earthquake and tsunami TEPCO officials and the Japanese government stated it was not a serious problem.
Then our highly reliable and honest EPA reported the radiation arriving every day from Japan was not a health hazard. The cesium 137 was not all that dangerous and the amounts in ppb were very low. They say we receive more radiation from the sun. I've never inhaled any poisonous radioactive isotopes that came from sunbeams, none I'm aware of anyway.
Then last month TEPCO officials informed the Japanese press that they planned on having everything under control by Janurary of 2012, which made everyone feel lot's better. They said the hundreds of square miles of land in Japan so far which was now steralized for use for the next hundred or thousand maybe years was just part of doing business, so that friggiing disaster was nothing to be upset about.
A few days later TEPCO officials changed that Jan 2012 date to ("they didn't have a clue") of when they will have it under control, but not to worry as the "safe" limits for radiation exposure had been raised to very high limits, so everyone was "safe".
Based upon all of that, there is no (story) for our MSN, there is no problem and no danger to anyone, except perhaps a (few) workers at the nuclear power plant. And the nuclear radiation has killed nobody and never will.
Apparently Mark Abram has been spot on all along. Of course we should keep in mind that Mark Abram is obviously either brain damaged or a fool. The same would apply to the executives of our MSN who make the rules of which news to broadcast... They don't want to frighten anyone, especially the sheep.
Now if I were in charge of the MSN, I'd have the reporter tell it sort of like this...
("Good Morning all you Americans,,, We have brand new information about the amount of radiation which is arriving here (daily) and is accumulating in the US from the Fukushima Japan catastrophic nuclear disaster... The major danger at the present time is billions of microscopic specks of deadly for life cesium 137 is ariborne, it is a very dangerous health hazard to inhale any of those specks of poison... Dingbat Doris of our EPA says,,, "it is not a health problem, just don't inhale any".
It is likely you and your children have already inhaled some, so wthin the next ten to fifteen years, expect cancers to have developed in any of several body organs, including but not limited to, the liver, lungs, brain and bone marrow.
Pregnant mothers should be advised to not be surprised if your newborn is born with very serious medial problems, such as, missing eyes or limbs, no sex organs, brain deformaties and or other serious medical problems.") __ Please stay tuned while we take a 20 minute break from the news for a dozen commercials.. First up is AARP.
Commercial:... AARP is now selling health insurance for cancer treatment at a low rate. Not eligible for the AARP program as yet? No sweat, we tak anyone's money. Just call this toll free number and we'll take your premiums and send you a health insurance policy that you won't believe possible. Call now within the next fifteen minutes and we'll really screw you.
Or, as Obama puts it, "You would have to eat more spinach than Popeye to fry your gonads."
GE (owner of NBC) and Westinghouse (owner of CBS) manufacture nuclear reactors. Better to ignore the the story of the century, the worst industrial accident in history, than to jeopardize future profits from reactor sales.
(ABC is going along with the blackout because someday NBC and CBS will be able to return the favor when Disney wants a story buried. One hand washes the other.)
I agree but a more apt metaphor would be:
One corrupt bastard corrupts another.
Or we could be more polite and say:
One hand dirties the other
"the story of the century"
no no no!
"nine-eleven" is the story of the century!
keep your priorities straight.
Yeah, the Russians did the same thing at Chernobyl. When it became evident that the workers were receiving dosages far above the "maximum safe level," they just raised the safe level to above their exposure, That fixed everything, didn't it.
The nuclear shills and the NRC, etc. use direct exposure to hard radiation as their benchmark. Naturally, very little of that reaches us, so far, but the chance of ingesting minute particles of these isotopes is quite high. Running a Geiger counter over a person will show nothing as the particles are Alpha and Beta emitters. The nuclear shills feel that having a small nuclear generator running in close proximity to, say, lung tissue or intestinal tissue, or perhaps in your blood stream to eventually lodge in your brain or gonads for many years is nothing to worry about and any cancers or birth defects are simply natural occurrences. (Besides, we're all probably already poisoned by DU which has turned up in filters around the world.)
The MSM parrots this and we can all relax and go back to American Idol, completely reassured.
Inspections show that US nuclear reactors, (mostly GE of course) are practically falling apart. corroded valves and piping, exposed wiring, faulty switches. Tritium and other isotopes are leaking into the ground and eventualy to the water table. Nuke says it will be expensive to fix, so NRC tells them, "No problem, fix it when you get around to it." The reactors were designed to last around twenty years before requiring replacement. They were rated at a certain output. Since they can't afford to replace them, even if allowed, they have asked for extensions of another twenty-five years, and permission to boost their output to 125% of their rated capacity. Profit, profit, profit! Little outlay!
Remember, if one of these things pops, the government has limited the liability of the nuke companies. The government will pick up the tab, i.e., tax the victims to reimburse them for their losses. What a deal! The Godfather would love it.
It is about the same deal that BP got. Destroy the ecology of the Gulf, destroy the livelihoods of the residents of the Gulf, pay a small amount of damages, stall the rest for years as EXXON did, "until the plaintiffs have all died off." Then ask the government for, and receive, a new batch of deep drilling permits.
"Nothing personal, just business."
MINI: Great post!
Wayne: I enjoyed yours, too.
Hi Sue, ain't this a friggin shame? Unvelieveable!!!!
Going to Alaska in the morning and try to catch some fish that don't glow in the dark. Gonna try to just forget all of the doom and gloom for five or six weeks. See ya later, have fun and don't let the shills get to ya
Last week Brian Williams stated as a "matter of disclosure" that NBC was "owned by GE."
If memory serves we can take iodine supplements to protect our thyroids (and other organs), but I have no idea how we defend ourselves against ingested radioactive cesium.
Any suggestions?
-30-
"I have no idea how we defend ourselves against ingested radioactive cesium."
Interesting question, OleMan.
I've seen it said that a reverse osmosis water filter will filter out radioactive iodine and strontium, but not cesium because cesium goes into solution.
But RO water filters are used to convert salt water to fresh water, and the salt is in solution.
So if it will filter out salt in solution, it seems an RO filter might, if we're lucky, filter out cesium too.
I have been so saddened by this incident that I've been avoiding reading news about it lately. I am hoping and asking my Representative and Senators that we move away from using nuclear power and most coal power plants. I am hoping will ask my Senators and Representative that we find sustainable energy sources, ones that minimally impact the environment, sources that allow the biosphere to thrive and for us to repair the damage we've caused to the biosphere of Planet Earth.
I want for Planet Earth to be healed, and I am going to ask for this. I am hoping and asking that there is a way for my fellow humans to survive happily and sustainably on apparent Planet Earth.
I will ask that the United States stops considering building more nuclear power plants at this point, and that it finds a way to safely decommission current nuclear power plants. I hoping and asking of my fellow citizens that we are empowered to use the legislative infrastructure effectively, and that we take advantage of this empowerment. Here are a couple of ways to be empowered--let's use them!
Web page providing links to forms to contact your particular U.S. Senators: http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm
Web page providing search tool to help you contact your U.S. Representative: https://writerep.house.gov/writerep/welcome.shtml
"Maybe now that the latest scandal in Washington has subsided, public and media attention will return to this crucial issue, and the U.S. will turn its attention to tackling some of the truly serious problems posed by a continuing reliance on nuclear power."
~♥~
ANNE, i hope you speak with tongue nestled in cheek.
why if no salacious scandal presents itself as needed in a timely manner to capture and titillate the inquiring 'merkin mind, we can create one from thin air! why not? money can be created in the thin air of cyberspace. how hard can it be to blow some little gossip about the rich, famous or politically connected all out of proportion? nbc's merger with british comcast expands general electric's media influence. not only does ge design the nuclear plants, but is one of our biggest defense contractors. http://www.google.com/search?q=general+electric+and+defense+contracts&rls=com.microsoft:en-us:IE-SearchBox&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&sourceid=ie7&rlz=1I7GGLL_en
i watch democracy now! every day and then the evening "news" at nbc. often most interesting are the stories which abc, cbs and nbc won't touch with a ten foot pole. with all the u.s. economic problems from flooding, tornados droughts and fires, (btw, "there's a human" toll, too) a week ago friday brian williams found a chance to touch on some important breaking news but so much going on time had run short.
one hot topic had to do with lady ga ga and the other about how the fashion world was set a twitter with a candid snapshot of the new princess in beautiful dress.
p.s. i include a sampling from the search result page linked above.
~♥~
GE exceeds Enron's score by an astonishing 45%." Defense Contracting Fraud. On July 23, 1992, GE pled guilty in federal court to civil and criminal charges ...
www.corpwatch.org › ... › Company Profiles › General Electric - Cached
►
2. Military Industrial-Complex Contract Values Per Company - General ...
Defense Contract Values Per Company (since 10/30/2006). (Listed by Contract Value Descending) ... 10/1/2008 -, General Electric, $641000000 ...
www.militaryindustrialcomplex.com/totals.asp?thisContractor=General% 20Electric - Cached - Similar
3. GE Aviation tops database of defense contractors | Business Courier
Feb 25, 2011 ... GE Aviation tops database of defense contractors ... defense contractors, measured by the dollar amount of contracts they've been awarded. ...
www.bizjournals.com/.../ge-aviation-tops-database-of- defense.html - Cached
It went down the old memory hole.
Recent data released by Dimitar Ouzounov and colleagues from the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland highlights some strange atmospheric anomalies over Japan just days before the massive earthquake and tsunami struck on March 11.
check it out here: http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/arxiv/26773/
Seemingly inexplicable and rapid heating of the ionosphere directly above the epicenter reached a maximum only three days prior to the quake, according to satellite observations, suggesting that directed energy emitted from transmitters used in the High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) may have been responsible for inducing the quake.
Here are some other "coincidences":
israel invented the Stuxnet virus, which attacks the Seimens hard drive used in nuclear power plants. This virus was created to attack the Iranian plants.
http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/report-israel-tested-iran-bound-stuxnet-worm-in-dimona-nuclear-plant-1.337276
Japan offered to enrich Uranium for Iran: http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3853823,00.html
Fukushima used the Siemens hard drive: http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-20328578.html
An israeli security firm was employed at Fukushima, with their own private line of remote access to cameras inside the facility: http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/israeli-firm-which-secured-japan-nuclear-plant-says-workers-there-putting-their-lives-on-the-line-1.349897
The reason the media is no longer covering Fukushima is quit simply because there isn't anything to cover. Nobody outside the plant boundary was killed or is going to die from the incident. The wildly inaccurate claims by the various anti-nuclear groups were obvious fabrications and even the incredibly left-wing media knows that it has to maintain a few shreds of credibility, so those claims were dropped quickly.
As for why the nuclear renaissance will continue, I'd suggest that you take a look at http://www.accesstoenergy.com/view/atearchive/s76a4089.htm
"Non nuclear energy sources? "The fact that these [soft] energy sources were already proving inadequate in the 17th and 18th centuries does not encourage the view that they are likely to stage a profound comeback in the 21st century." Windmills? Britain alone would require 20 million of them, each with a 100 ft span.
and other articles at accesstoenergy.com
From another good resource: http://www.jerrypournelle.com/view/2011/Q1/view665.html#Friday
"Even more probable is that the anti-nuclear press will go wild, as happened after TMI. TMI was a very expensive test to destruction of a nuclear power plant, with the result that no one outside the plant perimeter was harmed, the worst that happened to those inside the plant perimeter was that badge radiation limits were exceeded and workers were sent home, and the worst fears of the anti-nuclear agitators ought to have been allayed. The worst happened and no one (other than the stockholders) was hurt."
and finally, as to green energy:
http://www.americanthinker.com/2011/03/the_green_dream_is_an_economic.html
That last article sounds eerily like Wyatt Oil and is one reason for my sig:
Atlas Shrugged was supposed to be a warning, NOT a newspaper!