#chernobyl

nowisthetime@pod.automat.click

https://youtube.com/watch?v=Uz6Rd5ZmLrU

This video is short but succinct. It presents some new information about #UFO sightings in the area of #Fukushima preceding and following the #nuclear #disaster in #2011.

There aren’t many unchecked news of UFO/ET reports in Japan save for legendary and some historical records dating back many centuries

but the very Fukushima Prefecture seems to have gathered above average number of sightings and possibly ET Contact over decades ,
it hosts UFO museum and activist club.

https://www.f-kankou.jp/en/discover/sport-culture/706/

Further on , similar observations seemed to have numbered in Chernobyl 1986 during the nuclear disaster and possibly even many years later .
According to local observers ETs have possibly tried to warn humans and intervene at some point as well as took active interest in cleaning the area of radiation and monitoring the process later.

Under the line ..

I was 12 in the same year when Chernobyl happened. Prague is very far from #Chernobyl of course but radiation level were said to be elevated later in that year far to Germany
as atmospheric pressures from the blast and winds eventually carry clouds of radioactive particles over thousands of miles air distance.

I’ve never linked these two together but I had experienced lucid ET visitation in the same year, one or two. I knew I should not tell my mum . It was “too smart” for a kid and I’d have been made fun of and knocked out off it instantly.

It so never happened to me before and many years after till Bodhgaya 2002, that’s 16 years later.

Comes down to observation that most of these “big events” of ET encounters are synchronous to many individuals on different timelines and happen around the same time and different spaces or at the same space but different time though that presumes time-space that can be bent
#quote from #pa

hackbyte@friendica.utzer.de

Should Fukushima Release Radioactive Water?

(long read + video ;))

Kyle Hill - Should Fukushima Release Radioactive Water?

https://youtu.be/UwFoOVyB40s
https://redirect.invidious.io/UwFoOVyB40s

Disclaimer: I might not have as much knowledge about radiation as kyle hill, but still i'm pretty good and deep into this topic for neurodivergent reasons and out of curiosity/interest. ;)

So ..... _that_ they're going to release this water, was a non-issue for me from the get go. Other nations and power plants release _far_ more radioactive residue per year, as fukushima daiichi is going to release. (On top of that, he says that in the video, we have about 8 kilogram of diluted thorium in the oceans. The amount of thorium in the water which will be released over _decades_ is _just_ 3 grams.)

Kyle Hill nicely show up the facts, provided from tepco, but they are in accordance with international scientific standards.

On top of that, he actually takes a tour to the power plant, looks at the cleaned water itself.. And feels confused.

I have to second that. They tried to make american class advertising premium quality bullshit PR.

Going along with kyle, i agree. Still. While ethically not so ideal and perfect. They need to get their word out.

And, there is no viable alternative as to treat the water as best as chemically possible.... and release the remaining bit of thorium we can't get out into the oceans.

For ah so many reasons sadly.

But _ONE_ which is actually the reason, which turned me away from the "nuclear bridge technology" idea and concept.

That we could and should use nuclear power, as a bridge, for powering us while we try to build alternative and regenerative power sources like wind and solar energy.

And _my_ personal reason, why the fukushima daiichi accident actually really and completely changed my mind, is similar to the reason, why they now need to start to release that water.

It's basically business administration and economics.

We can't economically build really safe nuclear power plants, where we include _all_ costs, from the mining for resources, building a plant, purifying fuels, maintaining fuel and plant, recycling fuel as far as possible, and safely dismantle a plant after it's lifetime _and_ store all the irradiated and naturally radioactive stuff until it becomes harmless lead in millions of years.

It's just not possible.

In a perfect utopia, where our main focus would not be the creation of profit, but research and safe handling of technology.. It would maybe be possible.

But in this capitalistic world? No way ever ... sadly, but realistically.

Like, it was the frickin main reason in chernobyl as well as in fukushima:

Both plants essentially failed not just by neglect or bad management. But because at some point, someone took the cheap route..

Costing thousands of ppl their lives and millions of ppl their homes.

That's why i principally think, nuclear energy is a bad idea. We can't handle it safely .. and as long as capitalism rules the world, we never will be.

Getting that out.... Kyle Hills video is really good and gives a few things to think about .... not just for today, but for the future too. ;)

And still ... they need to get rid of all that treated water... Again, for freaking economical reasons... _meh_

#Fukushima #Daiichi #Kyle #Hill #Nuclear #Accident #Radiation #Thorium #Ocean #Water #Bridge #Technology #Chernobyl #Radioactive #Radioactivity #RandomShit ;)

faab64@diasp.org

American Chernobyl is not worth mentioning by fhe fake environmentalist "liberal" minister

It's like a bad copy of USSR under the first days of #Chernobyl, but 3 weeks after the worst environmental disaster in IS modern history, the right wing media and those who caused the relaxed regulations and anti union legislation are winning the propaganda war against the stupid and somehow criminal Biden administration.

It's just unbelievable how badly they are handling this and how united and agressive are the right wing trolls to put the blame of the disaster caused by Trump and conservatives changes in safety requirements for hazardous material transport and outdated, unsafe and faulty private train transport in the US.

#Environment #Buttigieg #Ohio #Catastrophe #Chernobyl #Propaganda #Capitalism #Trump #Trains #Accident

faab64@diasp.org

#Ohio town rues chemical #train derailment as 'our #Chernobyl'

For East #Palestine residents John and Lisa Hamner, life as they knew it came to a screeching, flaming halt at 20:55 on 3 February.

It was that day that a toxin-laden train derailed just metres from their successful garbage truck business, which they'd grown from five customers to more than 7,000 over an 18-year period in and around this close-knit Ohio town.

"It's totally wrecked our life," he told the BBC, choking back tears in the parking lot of his business, where the stench of chemicals and sulphur from the derailment remains powerful.

"I'm at the point now where I want out of here," he added. "We're going to relocate. We can't do it no more."
#Pollution #Capitalism
https://www.actvid.com/watch-tv/watch-the-last-of-us-full-92254.9346987

nowisthetime@pod.automat.click

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https://youtube.com/watch?v=0JiqBNqH3rA

The #train #derailment and subsequent #chemical #explosion in East #Palestine, #Ohio is being described by many as “devastating” and potentially “America’s #Chernobyl.” Mind you, not by Norfolk Southern, the rail company responsible or the Biden administration, which took a full ten days before making even a statement about the catastrophe. But a #catastrophe it appears to be nevertheless, and in 21st century America it’s likely that the powerful interests responsible won’t be held accountable while the poorer victims will bear the brunt. Guest host Aaron Maté and Americans’ Comedian Kurt Metzger discuss Norfolk Souther’s offer of $25,000 as compensation for the people of East Palestine, which amounts to roughly $5 per resident.

berternste@pod.orkz.net

Atoms and Ashes by Serhii Plokhy review – why another nuclear disaster is almost inevitable

The Guardian

A grim account of the downhill slide of atomic power since its heyday in the 1950s illustrates why it can never be the solution to global heating.

Once hailed as a source of electricity that would be too cheap to meter, atomic power has come a long way since the 1950s – mostly downhill. Far from being cost-free, nuclear-generated electricity is today more expensive than power produced by coal, gas, wind or solar plants while sites storing spent uranium and irradiated equipment litter the globe, a deadly radioactive legacy that will endure for hundreds of thousands of years. For good measure, most analysts now accept that the spread of atomic energy played a crucial role in driving nuclear weapon proliferation.

Then there are the disasters. Some of the world’s worst accidents have had nuclear origins and half a dozen especially egregious examples have been selected by Harvard historian Serhii Plokhy to support his thesis that atomic power is never going to be the energy saviour of our imperilled species. (...)

“Nuclear power is too costly and it takes too long to build a reactor and it is inherently unsafe not only for technological reasons but also because of the risk of human error.” (...)

[T]he nuclear industry has gone past its spring and summer years and should be allowed to reach a useful but limited autumn before it is quietly forgotten as a dark global experiment that should not be repeated.

‘Atoms and Ashes: From Bikini Atoll to Fukushima’ by Serhii Plokhy is published by Allen Lane

Complete article

Photo of nuclear explosion
A digitally altered image of a US nuclear weapon test at Bikini Atoll, July 1946. Photograph: United States Department of Defense

Tags: #books #nuclear_power #atom #atomic_power #nuclear_disaster #nuclear_weapons #global_heating #global_warming #climate_change #climate_crisis #energy #nuclear_energy #nuclear_disasters #electricity #radiation #atomic_waste #nuclear_waste #Chernobyl #Three_Mile_Island #Fukushima #Windscale #Bikini_Atoll #hydrogen_bomb_test #radioactive_cloud #Pacific #Kyshtym #Urals #plutonium #radioactivity

yazumo@despora.de

Tschernobyl/Ukraine


Heute Morgen um 1:23 Uhr Explodierte Reaktor-Block 4 des Kernkraftwerks Tschernobyl. Das nahe der 1970 gegründeten ukrainischen Stadt Prypjat liegt.


Tschernobyl-Reaktor

Das zerstörte Atomkraftwerk in Tschernobyl in der damaligen Sowjetunion (jetzt Ukraine a.v.m.): Eine Luftaufnahme wenige Tage nach dem Reaktorunglück am 26. April 1986 (picture alliance / AP Photo / Volodymir Repik) aus einem Artikel des Deutschlandfunk


Das war vor 36 Jahren, am 26. April 1986.

Es war der bisher schwerste "Unfall" in einem Atomkraftwerk. Vor Fukushima, in dem es am 11. März 2011 nach einem Erdbeben in den Blöcken 1 bis 3 zu einer Kernschmelzen kam. Die Probleme die zu dem "Unfall" führten, waren im Vorfeld bekannt, wurden aber ignoriert oder besser gesagt unterdrückt.
Die nahe gelegene ukrainischen Stadt Prypjat musste darauf hin Evakuiert werden.
Zum leid der Menschen aber zu spät!
Die genaue Zahl der Opfer dieser Katastrophe ist nicht bekannt, gehen aber Schätzungen zur folge von Hunderttausenden Todesfälle im direkten Zusammenhang und im weiteren verlauf von Millionen Menschen mit gesundheitlichen Spätfolgen aus.
Die umliegenden Länder wurden von dem "Unfall" nicht Informiert. Erst als am Montag den 28. April 1986 das 1200 Kilometer entfernten Kernkraftwerk Forsmark in Schweden erhöhte Strahlenwerte feststellte, wurden Vermutungen laut das es sich um ein Atomkraftwerk aus der Sowjetunion handeln muss. Die dies am selben Tag, wenn auch beschwichtigend, zu gab.
Erst am 29. April 1986 nahm die Sowjetische Führung das Wort Katastrophe in den Mund.


Autoscooter


Wir verdanken Waleri Legassow das es nicht schlimmer gekommen und das wir heute wissen was passiert ist. Die damalige Führung der Sowjetunion hielt die Informationen zurück und verpasste Legassow bei der Internationalen Atomenergieorganisation (IAEO) in Wien eine Maulkorb. Sein Bericht überzeugt die IAEO dennoch.


Waleri Alexejewitsch Legassow


Am Morgen des 27. April 1988 erhängte Legassow sich. Er hinterließ uns aber Tonbänder in denen er die Ereignisse zusammenfasste und Namen von Verantwortlichen nannte.

Um einen Eindruck von den Ereignissen zu bekommen, empfehle ich die Home Box Office (HBO) Serie Chernobyl. In ihr werden die Ereignisse in drastischer Form nach gezeichnet. Natürlich sind die Ereignisse zusammen gefasst. Das wird am Ende der Serie aber auch erklärt.
Trotzdem empfinde ich sie als ein gutes Mittel um sich, in einem Filmischen Kontext, dem Thema Emotional anzunähern. Ansonsten findet mensch im Internet zum Glück genug Informationen zu dem Thema.


In Gedenken an alle Opfer dieser und anderer Atomarer Katastrophen!

Es gibt keine Sichere und Saubere Nutzung von Atomenergie!


#prypjat #chernobyl #tschernobyl #ukraine #sowjetunion #atomkraftwerk #explosion #nuklearkatastrophe #katastrophe #legassow

frigor@diasp.org

Chernobyl: Kuleba, potential radioactive leaks within 48 hours; International Atomic Energy Agency denies it
1:43 p.m. "Within 48 hours there could be radioactive leaks" as a result of the damage caused to the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, which is at a standstill." This was stated by Kiev's foreign minister Dmitry Kuleba on Twitter.

"The backup diesel generators have a capacity of 48 hours to power Chernobyl. Subsequently, the cooling systems of the nuclear fuel storage plant will stop, making radiation leaks imminent. Putin's barbaric war endangers the whole of Europe. It must stop immediately!" writes Kuleba.

At 2:29 p.m., IAEA Director-General Rafael Grossi said that "developments at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant," which was disconnected from the power line after the Russians took control, "violate the fundamental safety pillar of ensuring uninterrupted power supply."

The International Atomic Energy Agency, however, assured that it "does not see any serious impact on safety". "The IAEA affirms that the thermal load of the spent fuel storage pool and the volume of cooling water at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant are sufficient for effective heat removal without the need for power supply," it said in a statement.
Source: AGI
#Chernobyl #Ukraine