![]() Thunder Bay mayor says buring nuclear waste is 'a bone-headed move'Provincial Politics | 207450 hits | May 07 11:14 am | Posted by: OnTheIce Commentsview comments in forum Page 1 You need to be a member of CKA and be logged into the site, to comment on news. |
Who voted on this?
|
I saw a recent documentary where they visited various sites, and measured the background radiation. The levels measured in Pripyat, Ukraine (Chernoybl) were actually less than you'd find right next to a nuclear storage silo at a nuclear plant in the US, and far less than you'd experience in an aircraft at 30,000 feet. But people still fly. ¯\(°_o)/¯
The levels in the Spanish town of Palomares are far higher than the tourist infested beaches of Guarapari, Brasil, which registered at 170 milliseverts, versus the Fukushima, Japan exclusion zone at 20 milliseverts. But Fukushima isn't a tourist destination for some reason. ¯\(°_o)/¯
600 feet underground aught to be pretty safe.
Irrational fear of the unknown, I guess.
When they pronounce it "nukular" it's time to change the channel.
The panic that sets in when someone says 'nuclear' is almost funny.
I saw a recent documentary where they visited various sites, and measured the background radiation. The levels measured in Pripyat, Ukraine (Chernoybl) were actually less than you'd find right next to a nuclear storage silo at a nuclear plant in the US, and far less than you'd experience in an aircraft at 30,000 feet. But people still fly. ¯\(°_o)/¯
The levels in the Spanish town of Palomares are far higher than the tourist infested beaches of Guarapari, Brasil, which registered at 170 milliseverts, versus the Fukushima, Japan exclusion zone at 20 milliseverts. But Fukushima isn't a tourist destination for some reason. ¯\(°_o)/¯
600 feet underground aught to be pretty safe.
Irrational fear of the unknown, I guess.
680 meters below ground.
Irrational, especially when they've been storing it above ground in a small town right by the lake.
Bon Appétit Southern Ontario!