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Comment Re:Perhaps it wouldn’t pass today’s .. (Score 1) 286

Why are you being an asshole to me? Have I offended you personally by having an opinion?

Uranium is a heavy metal. Don't ingest those.

Friend, you say that as if these people have a choice. They don't. It burns at 3000-6000 degrees and oxidizes into an insoluble ceramic aerosol. As an aerosol it is in their air and it is in their drinking water. How do you suggest they avoid ingesting them?

Also a heavy metal. Nothing to do with radioactivity,

Yes, others have pointed that out. However you also said the scare-mongering over depleted uranium being somehow seen as more toxic than lead when its toxicity is still being evaluated in veterans and proving to be quite a serious issue for those exposed to it. So whilst your claim of no one cares about the uranium in granite countertops might be true I'm sure people would feel differently about it being in their air and water supply. Wouldn't you?

I'm sure this is one of the reasons the UN does not sanction their use.

because U238 isn't meaningfully radioactive.

Well I checked this and the science I read doesn't say anything about 'meaningfully radioactive', it says that the effects of U238 radioactivity as an emitter in the body are unclear and there hasn't been a large enough sample size of human beings exposed to U238 to understand the effects it has, on humans.

And to what isn't U238 'meaningfully' radioactive to? How do you know? Did you check the evidence? Because I did.

In the independent research with the most citations it seems that one of the cruelest deception played on the veterans is that uncovering *which* of the symptoms are caused by DU because they were also exposed to other heavy metals in pesticides and herbicides; in vaccines, including anthrax and botulinum toxin; in nerve agents: sari n, cyc losari n, tab un, som an, VX, multip le se ven, and no vac huks (nov ich oks); and in chemicals released from the Kamasiyah toxic chemical depot, which was destroyed by bombing and also subjected to petroleum products from the oil well fires.

So what has this got to do with u283 radiation? It turns out that because veterans were exposed to so many sources of heavy metal toxins it is preventing legal recognition of the harm caused by radiation, not that it isn't 'meaningfully radioactive'. A particularly salient and sobering paragraph from that paper:

Influential papers by physicists and several semi-official governmental organizations have attempted to eliminate DU from consideration by just such analyses (4â"8). These studies are not really independent, since each follows the guidelines, methodology, and risk estimates recommended by the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) (9).

As usual, I'll do the thinking here and join the dots to make it easier to understand the ramifications. As a final act of contemptuous betrayal of the soldiers what the ICRP was attempting to do was set up a research framework that led to the conclusion that the veterans suffering was all in their head. This is news to me too, even I didn't think the Nuclear Industry was that fucking despicable.

That is where your 'claim' that du is not 'meaningfully radioactive' comes from, so perhaps you should check the papers you read for ICRP influence.

How incredibly fortunate for us then, to have such a large sample size to study over the coming years in the populations of Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan and establish what the true radiological effect of depleted uranium is on a population.

No, I'm not going to teach you basic science. This is /., you're expect to do that work yourself.

That sounds like usual cop out for those suffering the effects of of social proof not being able to challenge their belief system with any evidence. I present the science, you say its is bogus, you refuse to present any of your own and then, you insult me for doing so. Same old story.

However the science isn't the only thing you have to study. The legislation, Insurance arrangements, funding bills, mining, operating procedures of the plants, the way regulatory boards interact, reactor decommissioning, spent fuel containment, net energy return, this list goes on. Over the years I have amassed a significant library of information from doing exactly that work, it is quite a fascinatingly complex industry.

Fortunately for you, you only have to look at my previous post that references the US Library of Medicine information on how DU deposits in the body. If you understand the 'basic science' of how radioisotopes analogue nutrients in the metabolism then it will make sense.

If you don't you may wish to consult the work on how the weak beta emitter tritium effects transgenic disease in the human genome precisely *because* it is a weak emitter and the radiation is absorbed in the body from the tritium that tends to accumulate in stomach fat near the reproductive organs.

It was a common myth that the weak beta emission from tritium was also harmless. As it turns out it is harmful - to the next generation of those exposed, i.e. their children.

So the jury is still out on the effects of radioactive uranium compounds like U-238 an alpha emitter with rare spontaneous fission that undergoes 12.4 atomic transformations (submicroscopic explosions) every second, each giving off one alpha particle with energy between 4.15 and 4.2 MeV (million electron volts) in random directions, that when it decays by spontaneous fission releases approximately 40 times more energy than in nuclear decay, will do to DNA that only requires 10 electron volts to break, but I doubt the news is good.

It is certainly not something I'd like hanging around in my testes. Would you?

You're scare-mongering about an imaginary boogieman and need to be shunned from polite conversation,

You haven't provided a good example of polite conversation only moral superiority and dogmatic skepticism.

Maybe I'm wrong about veteran suffering toxicity over radiation poisoning however I doubt it. I just think it hasn't been identified yet. You think it is less toxic than lead and there are no effects from the radiation. I think that there is an effect from the toxicity and a subsequent transgenic affect caused by the radiations of U238 being absorbed in the human body that affects the offspring of those exposed.

Considering the models are only for death from cancer under ideal circumstances and not reproductive damage then it would seem it might be a worthwhile place for investigation.

Frankly, I can't see how anyone can support these weapons considering the suffering they impose. You have to be specially qualified to handle it and isolate it from the environment in the US so why is it ok to spread it elsewhere?

just like the anti-Vaxxers, the anti-GMO crowd, the "no irradiated food" crowd and the rest of them.

Just the same way I might put you in with evengelical christian or extremist muslims who will scream and abuse you for questioning their god. I'm open to having my position challenged when presented with the right information but that is not what you have been able to achieve here.

I do feel a bit foolish for upmodding you in the past though, for subjects we agree on and hope you are able to return to form soon. I find the cuntishness disappointing, a little tedious and juvenile. If you have some useful information to share we may be able to have a more civilized conversation.

Comment Re:Perhaps it wouldn’t pass today’s .. (Score 1) 286

Well, if you have any facts to back up your claims that du isn't harmful in the body you're welcome to present it because your rhetoric is unconvincing.

Depleted uranium is not meaningfully radioactive.

First of all we are talking about depleted uranium's behavior as a radio isotope once its absorbed in the body, not the radiation it emits when it is outside the body - where it is harmless.

Not to mention those "on the receiving end" of a 10 kg projectile travelling at ~1000 meters per second don't suffer for long at all. When you start comparing bullets to nuclear bombs, you should really stop and realize you don't know what the fuck you're talking about.

Once the projectile has hit its target (or not) the du doesn't cease to exist. It is smashed and burned into varying size chunks of du all the way down to dust. So those targeted don't suffer for very long however those who breath in the dust do, including those who fire the weapons. I could say the same for your discussion of radiation vs radionuclide, however I choose to politely point out the facts, rather than launch into a rant.

Science more; don't come back till you do.

Ok, There is plenty of science. It is a commonly held myth that because du is harmless outside the body, it is harmless *inside* the body but it isn't.

I took this from the U.S Library of Medicine describing the effects of radionuclides in the body and it applies to a range of radionuclides, including u-238. From my understanding the main vector for absorbing u238 is inhalation, specifically uranium oxide however there are others. Only 10 electron volts of energy is required to break DNA or other molecules in the body. U238 is a alpha particle emitter of 4.2 million electron volts (MeV) per particle there is very little doubt as to the damage it does:

Systemic contamination will occur following ingestion, inhalation, skin absorption, or wound contamination of radioactive material. Following absorption, a radionuclide crosses capillary membranes through passive and active diffusion mechanisms and then is distributed throughout the body. Rate of distribution to each organ is dependent on organ metabolism, ease of chemical transport, and the affinity of the radionuclide for chemicals within the organ. The organs with the highest capacities for binding radionuclides are the liver, kidney, adipose tissue, and bone due to their high protein and lipid makeup. Each radionuclide has a unique half-life, with half-lives ranging from extremely short (fraction of a second) to millions of years. Samples of some radionuclides and their half-lives are: Tc-99m: 6 hours; I-131: 8.05 days; Co-60: 5.26 years; Sr-90: 28.1 years; Pu-239: 24,400 years; U-238: 4,150,000,000 years.

That makes the rest of your screed lies, bullshit, and stupidity. you should really stop and realize you don't know what the fuck you're talking about. You're an embarrassment to Slashdot, and that's a really low bar.

I was polite to you yet you feel perfectly justified in being a cunt to me. I just thought you didn't know and it was a difference of opinion. I've come to expect this as a fairly typical response from someone without much in the way of fact available to counter my arguments and they just attack me instead. If you can't back up what you say with fact, or change my mind, then why be a cunt to me instead?

Comment Re:Perhaps it wouldn’t pass today’s .. (Score 0) 286

Especially the scare-mongering over depleted uranium being somehow seen as more toxic than lead is entirely political theater ungrounded in any science.

As a weapon depleted uranium is one of the most insidious and makes landmines look positively benign in comparison. It may be ok when used in crockery or bench tops when kept sealed up however when it is fired from a tank its pyrophoric properties make it particulate in the environment and it becomes a serious threat.

Veterans of both gulf wars suffering 'Gulf War Syndrome' are, in reality, suffering from inhaling radioisotopes, i.e. radiation poisoning. A 1998 report by the U.S. Agency for Toxic Substances confirms that inhaling DU causes symptoms identical to those claimed by many sick vets with Gulf War Syndrome. So they may not be casualties of the war in Iraq, but they suffer for the rest of their lives when they get home due to their own government's policy to deploy du weapons, which is a war crime under UN conventions. That's the effect on the soldiers just for firing the weapons.

However the people on the receiving end of the weapons will suffer for much longer. That is because it is not immediately toxic to full grown adults who ingest it, only to their children. Since du's half life is measured in billions of years Iraq and Afghanistan will suffer these deformities for all subsequent generations. So will Veteran's families.

For a comparison, about 50 kilograms of uranium were used to bomb Japan and over one thousand tons of DU in Iraq. This is how nuclear waste is being used and what a 'dirty' nuclear war looks like. I don't think the claim that there is no grounding in science has a basis however the effects are plain to see. I agree that it is political theater, based on concealing and deceiving people into what is being done in their name.

Comment Re:The real disaster (Score 1) 224

You would think that.

Many people have bought into the myth that the nuclear event at Fukushima was a human disaster of epic proportion,

The official report from the Japanese government says that it was a "wholly man made disaster". That's from the chairman in the introduction. That's the flaw core to your OP.

The second is you fail to see that the Nuclear disaster is still unfolding and that its scope is still undefined. No one is ignoring those outside the exclusion zone or giving them the finger. What you fail to appreciate is that the situation at Fukushima is so dire and immediate, that it threatens the entire northern hemisphere with a plutonium fire from the fuel rods stored there. Were you to understand that, you wouldn't have said your OP because you would realize that it is the workers at Fukushima that are still working to avoid that, that *you* are giving the middle finger to them after they have lost so much.

What the ignition of 6000+400 fuel rods in unit 3 cooling pool (at last count) means to people is plutonium fire that releases enough plutonium oxide and chloride to be an extinction level event. Comparable to an asteroid hitting the earth. Hard to get your head around it, isn't it? So go ahead - trivialize it.

That is why it is completely appropriate to obsess with this disaster. You are ignorant of the true scale of this MAN-MADE disaster, its origins, threats, consequences and continue to show why your OP was made in complete ignorance of the actual facts.

Which you refer to as FUD.

Comment Re:The real disaster (Score 1) 224

You continue to say things to provoke an emotive response instead of speaking in facts, evidence or available science. Then, instead of discussing the characteristics of the materials you launch into the moral superiority that come from evoking such a response.

You were provided the Japanese Government's official report into the accident that countered your OP and then accused me of spreading FUD when I took the time to explain what radionuclides were and why your assumptions were flawed.

Even then, no fact from you. No counter argument, no facts of your own, just more trolling. I was kind to you by offering you the benefit of the doubt on more than one occasion because I thought I may have been unreasonable to call your OP bollocks. Instead you responded to with more trolling.

None of which will help fix the Nuclear Industries problems, especially if you don't believe there are any. That is why you are complicit in the softening the regulations that would have improved safety to prevent another accident. If you spent anytime examining this massive subject you would understand why it is important. Another accident will mean the end of the Nuclear Industry and the we will have all of its problems but none of its benefits. Have you ever lobbied to *improve* nuclear industry safety? Are you prepared to say there won't be another accident? Thought not.

I've already demolished your argument, debunked your claims, you made, at the expense of those who are suffering the effects of the Fukushima Nuclear fallout exclusion zones. I offered you an opportunity to back away from those comments gracefully in the hope you would discuss things intelligently.

You say "Nobody expects exact numbers" but won't accept that it is an unknown, that it *is* a uncertainty but that the impact isn't. You say I'm long winded but fail to make the connections required to discuss specifics.

Your trolling pretty much shows people, like me who think it might be possible to fix the Nuclear Industry, that the problem is a human one, every time.

Comment Re:The real disaster (Score 1) 224

NO, you do not.

I understand perfectly that you either simply don't understand the real world risks relative to things we experience in our daily lives, or simply refuse to acknowledge them.

I understand the risk's impact enough however, I'm not prepared to accept your invitation to guess at other factors because there is not enough data being collected to make that assessment. Can you tell me the which radio isotopes are in the water leaked from Fukushima daily? I thought not. How can you possibly discus the risk if you can't demonstrate you have an understanding of the basic principles involved? I don't know if you do. uuuhhhh radiashun, you fraid! Get real.

NO, you present FUD with no real world implication, risk, probability, or any relevant comparison to anything. That is what FUD mongers/followers do. You either buy into it due to ignorance, or willingly distribute it due to an agenda.

So you say that explaining the difference between radiation and a radionuclide, and what bio-accumulation is, is FUD. Well I suppose it is for you because the gap in your understanding has been replaced with quite a simple explanation. I can assure you the effect is quite real and unless you scan every meal, you will never know. So let's examine your statement at bit further.

You're suggesting I answer a question with a massive scope, a huge amount of variables, no context and many vectors. Which vector should we discuss? The spent fuel pool of fukushima reactor 3? A fire in the wood not decaying around Chernobyl? Russia's Plutonium lake? Palo Verde? Tritium effluent? Which of the many 'real world implication' vectors should we discuss? All of them combined?

I've explained the impact of the risk in general terms.

As for the potential or probability - it is already started occurring. Google "du babies, iraq" this is what u-238 does to children forming in the womb and what they look like when they are born. The source doesn't matter, it doesn't discriminate who it affects once it is in the environment.

Perhaps you can compare this suffering to pregnancies just failing for those affected. Japan and some of the US now faces the impact of risk from the fallout from Fukushima. Perhaps you can just call it Nuclear war Lite, I don't know how to compare it to anything because it will go on for as long as it takes to decay through its halflives. So it's probably worse.

However, you missed the magnitude of the impact. To re-iterate, I made it clear that there wasn't enough data collected on how much radionuclide effluent was in the environment OR how much was leaking daily. So since I have to join the dots for you, what that means is it is not possible to determine the magnitude of the risk to be anything more than 'above zero risk' for these impacts, we need more data to be collected and published. It's not an unreasonable request.

As for my agenda, it's to learn and share all I can. I don't know everything, however I am not stupid and I have learned everything I can because I believe it is an important topic which, unfortunately, you treat trivially. The Nuclear Industry is extremely complex in many ways. Fascinating, complexly interesting technology that is ultimately pointless if it kills us.

As for your agenda, it looks like you are a garden variety Nuclear troll fanboi, and not a very interesting one at that.

So, how much risk to you think there is...surely you have some sense?

You ask me 'If I have a "sense" for the risk, and I have shown the impact of *one* radionuclide (U-238). Show me the data for the rest and then we can talk. A rational examination of the impact is concerning enough for me to have these conversations. If you can't connect to your humanity enough for you to see why, then you have bigger problems than I can help you with.

So I re-iterate, not enough data is being collected and distributed on what quantity of which radio isotopes have been released. This is a big problem that needs to be resolved.

Answering such a deliberately resource intense question becomes a question of, would it even matter to you and I don't think it would. This is because you have demonstrated that you are a dogmatic skeptic by not acknowledging the official report and answering in relation to your comments. If an actual Japanese government report is not enough for you, no proof is possible with you, you'll just call if FUD anyway, then, try to provoke an emotional response to attempt to discredit what facts have been presented whilst producing none of your own. The troll agenda to frustrate. This is the division people like you cause in such an important subject. Way to go asshole.

Either way, it makes this discussion a waste of time.

Indeed. Your troll was exposed for what it was and rendered ineffective. Your emotive points made at the expense of people you don't even know shows that there is no despicable point you won't make to promote confusion and ill will amongst this discussion.

I even gave you several opportunities to redeem yourself. Why?

Because I'm not even anti-nuclear, you just assumed I am. I'm just not your brand of pro-nuclear and I support the right type of reactor development. I don't say "shut them down" I say if you have to have them run them safer and do it properly publish the right data so the appropriate decisions can be made. Build the right spent fuel containment facility. People like you really highlight the fact of why there have been so many nuclear accidents and that maybe, the issue isn't the technology. Your one line trolls and the US push for softening of Nuclear Safety demonstrate that maybe humanity just isn't mature enough to handle Nuclear Power.

Programming

Should We Really Try To Teach Everyone To Code? 291

theodp writes: Gottfried Sehringer asks Should We Really Try to Teach Everyone to Code? He writes, "While everyone today needs to be an app developer, is learning to code really the answer? Henry Ford said that, 'If I had asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses.' I view everyone learning to code as app development's version of a faster horse. What we all really want — and need — is a car. The industry is falling back on code because for most people, it's the only thing they know. If you want to build an application, you have to code it. And if you want to build more apps, then you have to teach more people how to code, right? Instead, shouldn't we be asking whether coding is really the best way to build apps in the first place? Sure, code will always have a place in the world, but is it the language for the masses? Is it what we should be teaching everyone, including our kids?" President Obama thinks so, telling Re/code at Friday's Cyber Security Summit that 'everybody's got to learn to code early' (video). But until domestic girls (including his daughters) and underrepresented groups get with the program(ming), the President explained he's pushing tech immigration reform hard and using executive action to help address tech's "urgent need" for global talent.

Comment Re:The shaping of a Worldview (Score 1) 309

Watch Pandora's Promise and stop trying to kill off humanity please.

Yes I watched it, it is a potent example of the type of propaganda the Nuclear Industry releases so thanks for pointing it out. There were many disingenuous claims, but these stuck out:

  • Misleading people into the difference between radiation and radionuclides.
  • WHO reports: Claiming you *have* to believe there is a conspiracy about the reports when IAEA has interdiction rights over the WHO publishing Nuclear Industry reports and that funding was cut to study the longer health implications of the fallout from Chernobyl.

People will choose simple lie over a complicated truth and the "documentary" is a good example of that.

Case in point, the behavior of radionuclides in the environment and the relationship of radionuclides to cancer is not mentioned at all. Cynically implying that the need to store Nuclear Waste is not a requirement, that all of it would fit in a football field - what they didn't say is that if you attempted to do that it would result in a plutonium fire that would destroy us as a species simply because that proximity is the principle that allows nuclear reactors to work.

In exactly the same way previous generations left us a carbon legacy I see that the documentary is a good example of Not In My Generation, a NIMG, where all of the externalities of the Nuclear Industry can be passed to future generations and we get the electricity, which is great, if you don't care about anyone else except yourself.

Given the choice between an Academy Award and Peer Reviewed science, I think the science has more credibility.

Comment Arguments for $0 (Score 4, Informative) 208

I use this a lot in my shell scripts, mainly in a prepackaged usage message that I fill out as the script progresses to refer to its name. However you still have to type the name of the script to be able to use it from the shell otherwise $0 won't exist with any meaningful context. Other arguments like $1, $2 or even $* I use getopts - no use going overboard when processing arguments.

Comment Re:carbon cost of a nuclear generating plant (Score 1) 309

Nuclear plants definitely have a larger carbon cost to build. This is easily seen from the necessity of concrete containment structures - which produce a lot of carbon dioxide from the manufacture of cement (~6% of global CO2 emissions are from cement plants). Their high capital cost must reflect to some degree a high energy cost (and thus higher CO2 production cost) as well.

In addition to this, there is a high carbon cost involved in the mining of uranium due to the amount of ore that has to be crushed. I do have the math around, however this alone amounted to a staggering one third of the lifetime output of a new AP-1000 reactor, IIRC.

The next carbon sink was the enrichment process which is also a highly energetic and carbon intense process due to the electricity it consumes. Reactor decommissioning come into this as well and is also quite high and consumes another one third of the output, again IIRC.

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