31 March 2011

got brains?

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I could just edit the snot outta this piece and you'd die laughing.
There is no health risk from consuming milk with extremely low levels of radiation, like those found in Washington state and California, experts said Thursday, echoing the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

"When we have a disaster like we've had with a nuclear power plant in Japan, we're probably going to find things that are truly not a public health risk [right along with those that truly are], but I think it's very difficult for the public to assimilate this information and understand the risks [so please don't explain them in public]," said Dr. Wally Curran, a radiation oncologist and head of Emory University's Winship Cancer Center.

The federal agency said Wednesday it was increasing its nationwide monitoring of radiation in milk, precipitation, drinking water, and other outlets. It already tracks radiation in those potential exposure routes through an existing network of stations across the country.

Results from screening samples of milk taken in the past week in Spokane, Washington, and in San Luis Obispo County, California, detected radioactive iodine, or iodine-131, at a level 5,000 times lower than the limit set by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, officials said.

At that level, a person would have to drink 1,000 liters of milk to receive the same amount of radiation as a chest X-ray, said Dr. James Cox, radiation oncologist at Houston's MD Anderson Cancer Center. [Except the radiation from the milk stays in the body well over a thousand times longer than that from a chest X-ray and they stopped giving regular chest X-rays decades ago because the accumulation was very hazardous to your health.]

The I-131 isotope has a very short half-life of about eight days, the EPA said, so the level detected in milk and milk products is expected to drop relatively quickly. [Except if nobody caps it off in Japan, otherwise it just keeps coming.]

"The good news about iodine is, it has a short half-life," said Curran. "It doesn't dwell in any biologic system [except if you want to nitpick about your thyroid], be it an adult, a child, a cow, for any significant period of time, and at those levels there's no evidence that there's any medical significance."

Radiation gets into the milk because it falls on grass eaten by cows. The milk does not itself absorb radiation. [So when we measure the iodine in it, we go measure it in the cow paddies on that glowing green grass and extrapolate from that.]

FDA senior scientist Patricia Hansen also said the findings are "minuscule" compared to what people experience every day.

Washington Gov. Chris Gregoire said tests confirmed the milk is safe to drink.

"This morning I spoke with the chief advisers for both the EPA and the FDA and they confirmed that these levels are minuscule and are far below levels of public health concern, including for infants and children," Gregoire said in a statement.

"According to them, a pint of milk at these levels would expose an individual to less radiation than would a five-hour airplane flight." [And yer kid rides in airplanes for five hours radically more often than he drinks milk, right?]

Similarly, the California Department of Public Health reassured residents that the levels do not pose a threat. [Go back to sleep.]

"When radioactive material is spread through the atmosphere, it drops to the ground and gets in the environment. When cows consume grass, hay, feed, and water, radioactivity will be processed and become part of the milk we drink. However, the amounts are so small they pose no threat to public health," the department said. [We checked the paddies.]

At least 15 states have reported radioisotopes from Japan's crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in air or water or both. No states have recommended that residents take potassium iodide, a salt that protects the thyroid gland from radioactive iodine.

Iodine-131 has been found in Eastern states from Florida to Massachusetts as well as in Western states like Oregon, Colorado, and California, according to sensors and officials in those states.

None of the levels poses a risk to public health, they said.

At high levels [at ANY levels], the isotope focuses on and accumulates in a person's thyroid gland, Curran said. A medical test for thyroid health involves a person ingesting iodine-131 and undergoing a nuclear scan to examine the gland. [Congratulations! You no longer have to drink the iodine first!]

The Japanese plant has been leaking radiation since it was damaged in a tsunami that followed a massive earthquake March 11 [and so has been here sliming Californians for approximately two weeks and yer still not dead so shaddap.]
I could.

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love, 99
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here's yer sign

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Ya think?
In a sign that radiation is continuing to leak from the troubled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, radioactive iodine-131 at a concentration of 4,385 times the maximum level permitted under law has been detected in seawater near the plant, according to the latest data made available Thursday morning.

Japanese authorities were also urged to consider taking action over radioactive contamination outside the 20-kilometer evacuation zone around the plant, as the International Atomic Energy Agency said readings from soil samples collected in the village of Iitate, about 40 km from the plant, exceeded its criteria for evacuation.

The authorities denied that either situation posed an immediate threat to human health, but the government said it plans to enhance radiation data monitoring around the plant on the Pacific coast, about 220 kilometers northeast of Tokyo.

According to the government's nuclear safety agency, the concentration level of radioactive iodine-131 in a seawater sample collected Wednesday afternoon around 330 meters south of the plant exceeded the previous high recorded the day before. In Tuesday's sample, the concentration level was 3,355 times the maximum legal limit.

Hidehiko Nishiyama, a spokesman for the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency, acknowledged there is a possibility that radiation is continuing to leak into the sea, adding, ''We must check that (possibility) well.''

...

The No. 1, No. 2 and No. 3 reactors at the plant are believed to have suffered damage to their cores, possibly releasing radioactive substances, while the fuel rods of the No. 4 reactor kept in a spent fuel pool are also believed to have been exposed at one point, as the reactors lost cooling functions after the March 11 quake and tsunami.
But it gets better. This state of affairs has pushed the prime minister to new heights of statesmanship.
Prime Minister Naoto Kan said Thursday he will look into reviewing from scratch the existing plan to build at least 14 more nuclear reactors by 2030, as a result of the ongoing nuclear crisis.
I really may be forced to subscribe to Hoagland's nutty space wars theory now. No. Really. WHAT could explain this shit short of vicious space invaders holding world leaders hostage to the awesomeness of their weaponry?

I can't think of a thing.

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The gloves are coming off....

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love, 99
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reminder

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I have resisted mentioning this [not] news flash for at least twenty-four hours.
Pro-Gaddafi Forces
We're not killing ordinary people.
We're killing one evil dictator who happens to be
cleverly disguised as thousands of ordinary people.
How much more "transparent" do you think they can get while still not mentioning that Constitution and Morals are compost, right along with our brains?

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love, 99
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30 March 2011

all my doper friends are fired

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This was a helpful bit we could have been consoling ourselves with for weeks!

Sheesh. I have to do everything around here!

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love, 99
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dragg is getting lonely

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I keep hoping he'll take his idiot eyeprints off my blog, and sometimes feel the drunk old pervy janitor has maybe worn himself out, but no such luck. Seems he's suffered an urge to communicate here. I was just going to ignore it, hoping it was simply a momentary blast of ennui, but it seems it isn't momentary, and, believe me, it gets worse, much, much worse. I don't want him to work his way into dropping his turds on you here. So I deleted his comments. If he keeps it up, I will mark them as spam.

No. Seriously. The guy trolls the tubes, looking for what to pretend comes out of his own [pin] head. He loves to impersonate a legal professional, by use of crap he's picked up from legal sites, and almost unerringly completely misconstrues. This becomes pernicious as hell in the halls of groupthink, because the general public is generally ignorant enough about legal matters to believe him. There are actually quite a few who do similarly with any profession you want to pick. I've been darn dejected about the number of them suddenly becoming nuclear physicists, and Dragg is probably working feverishly on that now, too, this very moment, as we speak.

Suffer his blather long enough and you find out he's an expert in an astonishing number of fields. Suffer his blather even longer and you find out he's a drunk old creep just clever enough to find those bits to lethally misconstrue... Moe in a retirement home.

He's probably been banned from the legal blogs. I can't imagine any attorneys putting up with him for long, unless they have a cruel streak and enjoy fucking with him. Whatever. I just know he's got a really bad personality disorder, or two, or ten, a substance abuse problem, one of the most pathetic egos I've ever encountered, and I'd feel darn sorry for him if he didn't persist in spreading his hatred to everyone else he can reach. That is the part that evaporates my compassion.

So, please, if you run across a comment from him here, don't bother to respond, because I will be marking it as spam and returning to suffering his plagiaristic eyeprints in silence. Thank you.

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love, 99
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the other shoe drops

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You will recall the blather early on about needing to change "Fukushima I and Fukushima II" to "Daiichi and Daini"... and then not hearing anything about Daini after the first couple days. Well:
Smoke was spotted at another nuclear plant in northeastern Japan on Wednesday, Tokyo Electric Power Co. said.

The company said smoke was detected in the turbine building of reactor No. 1 at the Fukushima Daini nuclear power plant around 6 p.m.

Smoke could no longer be seen by around 7 p.m., a company spokesman told reporters.

The Fukushima Daini nuclear power plant is about 6 miles from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, where workers have been scrambling to stave off a meltdown since the March 11 earthquake and tsunami knocked out cooling systems there.

After the dual disasters, Japanese authorities also detected cooling-system problems at the Fukushima Daini plant, and those living within a 10-kilometer radius (6 miles) of Fukushima Daini were ordered to evacuate as a precaution.
Maybe they should try the Chernobyl Option on the entire prefecture?

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love, 99
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my wish

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I hope you know somebody loves you.
The benefit unpaid labor offers to a business is pretty clear, but it can also give employees needed experience, a reference letter or even a self-esteem boost in a depressing economy.

Cassie Johnson, a 27-year old in San Marcos, Calif., lost her job as an enrollment adviser for an online university in 2009 and was receiving unemployment benefits for a year before finding an assistant manager position at a Starbucks that's so far from her home she spends most of her pay on gas. Since starting a public relations internship in February, she feels a renewed sense of purpose.

"I'm learning a lot and I feel really good about it. I'm happy. I feel relevant. I'm not making any money, so it's tough, but I feel it's setting me up for a career," Johnson says. "I only have $1.50 left in my checking account right now but I'm living with my boyfriend and he's been really good about supporting me."

Sometimes, gratis work can even lead directly to a paid opportunity. Theresa Potter had been a marketing executive for 30 years when, during a career lull, she agreed to work on a few marketing initiatives for free at Coalescence, a Columbus, Ohio-based custom spice blending firm.

"You have amassed a lot of this information and you like to share it. You like to see companies become successful," Potter says.

Potter's year of volunteering at Coalescence paid off when the company's founders asked her to take the reins as president — a salaried position. She felt comfortable taking the job because she'd become so familiar with the corporate culture and business goals.
May your dreams stay big, your worries stay small, and you never need to carry more than you can haul....

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love, 99
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good-ish news at last

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Somewhat internally inconsistent, but I will take it.
The Japanese government has decided to decommission all six reactors at the damaged Fukushima nuclear power plant. TEPCO is also considering the construction of a containment shell at some of its reactors.

Earlier on Wednesday, Tsunehisa Katsumata, a chairman of TEPCO, said the company saw scrapping its four most troubled reactors as inevitable, Kyodo News reports.

However, Yukio Edano, the chief cabinet secretary and top spokesman in the Kan government, went further and suggested that all of the reactors at the Fukushima plant should be scrapped.

"It is very clear looking at the social circumstances. That is my perception," Edano said to a news conference, as quoted by Kyodo News.

In addition, TEPCO is planning to cover the damaged units with a special containment shell made of a high-tech fabric. This cover is aimed at preventing radioactive particles from escaping into the atmosphere, Asahi Shimbun newspaper reports.

Specialists will first apply a unique compound onto all four reactors, to prevent radioactive particles from escaping into the atmosphere, and then will cover units 1, 3 and 4 with the fabric, to enforce the protection.

This decision echoes the steps that Soviet specialists had to undertake in the case of the Chernobyl reactor. It was eventually sealed off within a massive concrete tomb called the sarcophagus. The catastrophe provided valuable lessons in how to deal with a reactor disaster, but also stern warnings about the dangers of nuclear energy.

Japanese workers have been unsuccessfully trying to restore the cooling system at the Fukushima facility, in what is now the worst atomic crisis since Chernobyl. The level of radiation measured in seawater near the site, is now said to be around 3,500 times higher than normal.
I had to double check this, and finally found China chiming in with Russia, so I think things are looking uppish.

Here's a more conservative report, but generally flowing in the same direction, from Japan.

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More from Japan.
The government plans to spray a water-soluble resin over debris at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant to prevent radiation leaks from spreading further, officials said Wednesday.

An unmanned, remote-controlled vehicle will spray the solution in order to affix radioactive substances onto the debris, the officials said.

...

Spraying resin over the debris at the plant is a temporary measure before fundamental measures are taken to contain radioactive substances, the officials added.
I'm going to guess that the arrival of the French experts is beginning to have an impact.
Anne Lauvergeon, president of Areva SA, has arrived in Japan to offer help in resolving the crisis at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, officials at the French nuclear fuel company said Wednesday.

Accompanied by five French nuclear experts, Lauvergeon's visit appears to underline France's full-fledged commitment to assist Japan, which has sought French help in tackling the crisis.

...

Areva is commissioned by Japanese power companies to process uranium-plutonium mixed-oxide fuel, so-called MOX fuel. MOX fuel used at the No. 3 reactor unit at the Fukushima Daiichi plant was manufactured by Areva and was shipped from France.
I don't know if the French will be arguing against burying it all, or for it. The company announced scrapping the four units, and the Japanese government added the other two, and then the French arrived... and the resin spraying shot into the headlines... but at least it's out there on the table for real.

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love, 99
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29 March 2011

know anyone okay with our military adventures?

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Make 'em look at these pictures and videos.

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love, 99
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does radiation agree with tulips?

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My tulips are blowing my mind. They almost never bloom because someone, whenever, planted them where they just don't get enough sun, but when they do, it's underwhelming. Seriously. There's only four of them, and they wanly try to shoot up at least a leaf every year, but this year they, all four, have shot up all their leaves and all four have bright red blossoms on them. The forget-me-nots near them are also a darker blue. I'd be singing odes to my compost right now, except compost didn't interest them before and this year there is lots of nice, benign, radiation urging them to new heights.

I'd like you to contemplate that these numbers they set to call "safe levels" are NOT safe. They are merely the levels below which there is no data to prove its malignancy. This is a crucial distinction, and everyone trying to sooth your fears about this matter is deciding for you that it's best not to ALARM you. Alarm has its good points, especially if you are not a pinhead. Yes, yes, it has been established that the United States does have the highest pinhead to average adult ratio on Earth and in history, but shielding you from information that can be crucial to your health ONLY perpetuates that.

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love, 99
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freedom

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You don't stop to think of the freedoms expressed by Muslim women. You believe all the propaganda, but none of the women insisting on their rights. No, no, their husbands or fathers or brothers are talking out their mouths. They don't mean it. Insofar as that is true, it is still none of your business, but it's mostly not true.

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love, 99
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barackhenten's creed: take a long time to dazzle 'em with your bullshit

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Spectacularly late assessment of the blowout... and "lessons learned". I don't know if I can stand to read it. Truly. The decimation of any vestige of sense or good faith action is complete everywhere you turn. This cannot be any actual deviation from that, now can it?

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love, 99
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i love them

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Ravens scare the piss out of bluejays. If you are blessed with one or some, you cease being aggravated to death by bluejays. Ravens are the herald of serenity.

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Watch the Nature documentary. See energy company workers in battling crows in Tokyo, and many other splendid and upsetting things.

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love, 99
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claptrap

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THEY ALREADY DID.

And they're on their way to resume scaring the crap out of Iran.

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love, 99
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thanks to old uncle dave

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I was able to drill through the crap to get us that link.
By measuring the energy of the gamma rays from the filters, [people at University of Washington] have identified exactly which fission products have made their way across the Pacific. And this in turn allows them to make a number of interesting inferences about what has gone wrong at Fukushima. Today, they post the results of the first five days of monitoring on the arXiv.

What they found was small amounts of iodine-131, iodine-132, tellurium-132, iodine-133, cesium-134 and cesium 137.

...

The first comes from the amount of iodine-131 and tellurium-132 which are both short-lived with half lives of 8 and 3 days respectively. That indicates that they must have come from fuel rods that were recently active rather than from spent fuel.

...

[T]hese guys speculate that what they're seeing is the result of contaminated steam being released into the atmosphere.
I recommend you go to the image link and battle it out for yourself, since the assurances of radiation levels being well below what the EPA deems alarming has always been highly suspect, and is about to reach critical mass.

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At length, we have come to the point where there is some indication of the claptrap Secretary Chu was on about at least a week ago, and seemed psychedelic at the time. This might mean No. 2, the unit that appears, from the outside, to be in the best shape, had already melted down when he was talking about it and we just didn't get to hear about it for all these days, OR, and you MUST consider this, it's an attempt at misdirection, a bid to get us to take our eyes off their sacred MOX in No. 3, which is now so mangled that it no longer resembles a former building.

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love, 99
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fancy new gizmo for our covert ops across the globe

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And other astonishing revelations....

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I fell for this headline and ran right over to JAIF to verify the long-overdue seven, but... well... you know....
Japan's prime minister insisted Tuesday that the country was on "maximum alert" [country, maybe; nukes industry, definitely not] to bring its nuclear crisis under control, but the spread of radiation raised concerns about the ability of experts to stabilize the crippled reactor complex.

...

"The removal of the contaminated water is the most urgent task now, and hopefully we can adjust the amount of cooling water going in," he said, adding that workers were building sandbag dikes to keep contaminated water from seeping into the soil outside.

The discovery of plutonium, released from fuel rods only when temperatures are extremely high, confirms the severity of the damage, Nishiyama said.

Plutonium is a highly toxic substance which breaks down very slowly, remaining dangerously radioactive for hundreds of thousands of years [which, you will agree, constitutes extreme "very slowly"].

"If you inhale it, it's there and it stays there [for a darn short] forever," said Alan Lockwood, a professor of Neurology and Nuclear Medicine at the University at Buffalo and a member of the board of directors of Physicians for Social Responsibility, an advocacy group.
Why do we bother clicking these links?

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How many people have insisted the United States would start WWIII before the crash? I've lost count.

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Quoth jo6pac: Nothing to see here. Move along.

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I very seriously despise Bernard-Henri Lévy. Period.

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Take a few moments for pretty HERE.

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You gotta thank the aliens who engineered us for this much at least.

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love, 99
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harvard princeton yale bullets bombs and broccoli

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[click image, mp3, twenty minutes]

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love, 99
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i want you to take another look at this

[click image, left to right, four, three, two, one]

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I am upset that Digital Globe has not published any more recent images than this, but, really, all you need to do is study this image carefully, put it together with what you know about radiation, and what you know about physical reality, and you can tell for sure the crap coming over the news wires is balderdash. This is every bit as egregious as the Gulf Blowout, and more. WHAT is really going on?

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This image is from two days ago. Note that No. 3 looks considerably worse even than the horrifying it was ten days ago.




<—— No. 1





<—— No. 2




<—— No.3





<—— No. 4



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As Americans focus on March Madness and Dancing With the Stars instead of the radioactive plume spreading all across the country, the US EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) is attempting to make the mainstream media cover up of the Fukushima cloud a bit easier.

The agency now notorious for its infamous claim that the air was safe to breathe after 9/11 is now seeking to raise the PAGs (Protective Action Guides) to levels vastly higher than those at which they are currently set allowing for more radioactive contamination of the environment and the general public in the event of a radioactive disaster.

PAGs are policies established by the EPA that guide the agency in enforcing the various environmental laws such as the Clean Air and Water Act in the invent of a radioactive emergency such as a nuclear/dirty bomb or factory meltdown like that occurring in Japan.
Hey, it's like the debt ceiling, get it?

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love, 99
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fred on joe

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When I griped about yet another of Joe's brilliant restatements of the obvious to Dave many hours ago, I did not know Joe had just died. I might've clucked about the loss or waxed optimistic about him having been spared so much or dug around for more of his brilliant restatements, because they have always been good, but, instead, I'll just refer you to his friend and say, kaaazzaaaaart, Joe.

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love, 99
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28 March 2011

subliminals

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Pfeh.
Not looking for sympathy here, but the life of a political reporter isn’t all champagne and canapes. Consider our man Scott Powers, who was sent over to the Winter Park home of Alan Ginsburg this morning as the designated “pool reporter” — aka scribe — for the fundraiser where Vice President Joe Biden is appearing on behalf of U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla.

Turns out the veep hadn’t arrived, but about 150 guests (minimum donation $500) were already in the house. So to prevent Scott from mingling with the crowd, a member of Biden’s advance team consigned him to a storage closet — and then stood outside the door to make sure he didn’t walk out without permission.
An aide has apologized.

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Corbett Report podcast on cause of nukequake....

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All protestors and all riot cops are police....

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Don't watch this....

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Selected paragraphs:
Radiation levels that can prove fatal were detected outside reactor buildings at Japan’s Fukushima Dai-Ichi plant, signaling a partial fuel meltdown and complicating efforts to contain the worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl.

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Plutonium-239, a byproduct of fission used in nuclear weapons, was found in soil samples taken on the plant site March 21 and March 22, Tokyo Electric said in a statement today. Two of the five samples contained more plutonium than known to have been deposited by atmospheric nuclear-bomb fallout and probably came from the damaged plant, according to the statement.

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Plutonium was part of the fuel mix in reactor No. 3. Used fuel rods from other reactors may also have been a source of the material, Edwin Lyman, a radiological specialist for the watchdog group Union of Concerned Scientists, said on a conference call with reporters. Plutonium inhalation causes lung, liver and bone cancer, according to the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
I object strenuously to the term "partial meltdown". Obviously, it is meant to convey that not all the fuel in a reactor has melted and gone walkabout, but it very blatantly downplays the seriousness of any walkabout nuclear fuels... and, in this case, the worst of them.

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You are letting them
Five of the six biggest container shippers are maintaining routes to Tokyo and Yokohama after the U.S. Navy said radiation on vessels from the leaking Fukushima Dai-Ichi nuclear plant can be scrubbed off with soap and water.

A.P Moeller-Maersk A/S, Mediterranean Shipping Co. and CMA CGM SA, the top three, are still serving Japan’s two busiest container ports, 2 1/2 weeks after an earthquake and tsunami damaged the Fukushima plant, 220 kilometers (135 miles) to the north. Among the top six shippers, only Hapag-Lloyd AG, the No. 4, is diverting vessels to docks in the south of the country.

The Japanese government is allowing ships to sail as close as 30 kilometers to the stricken reactors, and the International Maritime Organization, a United Nations agency, says operations in and out of Japan can continue as normal, with levels of radiation presenting no medical basis for imposing restrictions.

“These are extremely low levels and are easily cleaned off,” Commander Jeff Davis, a spokesman for Seventh Fleet, which is helping with recovery efforts, said by yesterday by telephone. “Even if they weren’t, they still wouldn’t rise to the level where they would cause any harm to human health.”
kill us.

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love, 99
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27 March 2011

dignity

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Poor man.
To our son, his excellency, Mr Barack Hussein Obama.

I have said to you before, that even if Libya and the United States of America enter into a war, god forbid, you will always remain a son. Your picture will not be changed.

Al-Qa'eda is an armed organisation, passing through Algeria, Mauritania and Mali. What would you do if you found them controlling American cities with the power of weapons? What would you do, so I can follow your example.
He thinks Obama has the first part of a clue.

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Guess who wants Syria to be next....

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love, 99
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i finally find 'out there' and it's back there

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This is Jim Marrs over a year ago, and I was hoping to find a bunch of good things at the site, but it seems the show is defunct. There seem to be, though, fifty archived podcasts anyway.

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love, 99
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you shouldn't need reminding

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We cannot survive if we consume food with these levels of radiation.
We cannot survive if we consume water with these levels of radiation.
We cannot coexist at all with these dangerous levels of radiation.
You would think this is a no-brainer,
yet we insist on continuing down this path regardless.


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love, 99
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i've always loved her for shaking dubya off her

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But that is not a good basis for judging her as a leader. Still, I can't shake my washing machine mentation as the interests of truth and propaganda compete in every goddam news account I see. I'm heavily in agreement with anti-nukes people everywhere, and always, but I also can't seem to get a fix on Merkel in the scheme of things. At least half the time she seems to be doing the right thing... like yanking all German forces from the Libya war... and, whether it was just political acumen or a genuine rethinking of policy, taking German reactors off line. So I'm ambivalent as heck about this. I'm not ambivalent about al Jazeera becoming as useless to us and as useful to the PTB as any in mainstream media, though. So, consider me still sloshing around in the soap.

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love, 99
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a view from the washing machine

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I do not recommend reading entire news wire articles.
Officials say they still don't know where the radioactive water is coming from, though government spokesman Yukio Edano earlier said some is "almost certainly" seeping from a damaged reactor core in one of the units.

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A top TEPCO official acknowledged it could take a long time to clean up the complex.

"We cannot say at this time how many months or years it will take," Muto said, insisting the main goal now is to keep the reactors cool.

Workers have been scrambling to remove the radioactive water from the four units and find a place to safely store it. Each unit may hold tens of thousands of gallons of radioactive water, said Minoru Ogoda of Japan's nuclear safety agency.

Safety agency officials had been hoping to pump the water into huge, partly empty tanks inside the reactor that are designed to hold condensed water.

Those tanks, though, turned out to be completely full, said Hidehiko Nishiyama of Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency.

Meanwhile, plans to use regular power to restart the cooling system hit a roadblock when it turned out that cables had to be laid through turbine buildings flooded with the contaminated water.

"The problem is that right now nobody can reach the turbine houses where key electrical work must be done," Nishiyama said. "There is a possibility that we may have to give up on that plan."

Despite Sunday's troubles, officials continued to insist the situation had at least partially stabilized.
It's bad enough when you go in for the snippets. Only snippets seem to correlate with something distantly connected to actual.

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I took the "geiger counter" link off my sidebar, not just because it was better labeled "radiation monitor", but because the radiation monitors are not registering anything quantifiable except in the very widest sense. The government [which includes universities because of funding considerations] and the nukes plants are the only ones with equipment up to the job, and they're not telling... even where they still have functioning monitoring equipment. If you want to put yourself through it, here's the citizens' network and here's the feds'....

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love, 99
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from back in 2006

[click image, video, one hour]

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A Tsarion interview with the Think Or Be Eaten guy... and then a 2008 interview on Outside The Box....

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love, 99
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