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20 March 2011 By
Stephen Lendman It bears repeating.
Government, industry, and major media reports downplay
and deny Japan's unprecedented nuclear disaster,
potentially able to kill millions now living and in
future generations painfully. Nuclear power is a
real life Andromeda Strain. If uncontrollably
unleashed, it's potentially able to destroy life
worldwide under a worse case scenario. In his latest article,
nuclear expert Harvey Wasserman said "the most
devastating thing about (Fukushima) is not what's
happening there now. It's that until all the world's
reactors are shut, even worse is virtually certain to
happen again. All too soon." Fukushima, in fact, may
be the nuclear nightmare he suggests. Globally, 450 reactors
operate, including 104 aging American ones, many with
bad safety records caused by cost-cutting and shoddy
maintenance. Poorly regulated, they're ticking time
bombs, accidents waiting to happen, many plagued by
near-meltdown misses. According to Beyond
Nuclear's Linda Gunter, American utilities have
gambled since the dawn of the nuclear age, NRC
regulators letting them get away with cutting corners,
taking risks, and being lucky hundreds of times.
However, it can't forever avoid a Fukushima-like
disaster. From 1986 - 2006, Greenpeace estimates 200
near-misses. Any loss of power for any reason could
cause one - an earthquake, tsunami, ice storm, or any
number of accidents that can and do happen, including
human error. Even operating
normally, reactors discharge enough radiation daily to
contaminate food, water, air and earth. Further, if a
large city like New York, Chicago or Los Angeles lies
downwind of a meltdown, it would become uninhabitable
forever. Moreover, contrary to
government and industry misinformation, nuclear power
is neither efficient, reliable, cheap, clean or safe.
Annually, it discharges significant amounts of
greenhouse gases and hundreds of thousands of curies
of deadly radioactive gases and elements. They're also atom bomb
factories, a 1,000 megawatt plant producing 500 pounds
of plutonium annually. Ten pounds can destroy greater
New York. Moreover, the link between radiation and
disease is irrefutable, dependent only on the amount
of cumulative exposure over time. As Helen Caldicott
explains: "If a regulatory gene
is biochemically altered by radiation exposure, the
cell will begin to incubate cancer, during a 'latent
period of carcinogenesis,' lasting from two to sixty
years." As a result, a single
gene mutation can and often is fatal. No amount of
radiation is safe, cumulative exposure causing 80% of
known cancers. As long as the
technology exists, humanity is playing an insane game
of nuclear roulette it can't win. It's only a matter
of where and when one or more devastating meltdowns
will occur. At Fukushima, it's virtually certain now
happening, full-scale damage control concealing it.
The only unknown is how bad, whether multiple reactors
are affected, and whether anything's able stop it. According to an
unnamed industry expert, Japanese engineers confirmed
a serious leak in the floor and/or sides of Unit 4's
spent fuel pool, making it impossible to keep its rods
under water. As fast as it's sprayed in, extreme heat
evaporates it. A Los Angeles Times report said a
"breach in the pool would leave engineers with a
problem that has no precedent or ready-made solution."
According to Union of Concerned Scientists physicist
Edwin Lyman: "My intuition is that
this is a terrible situation and it is only going to
get worse. There may not be any way to deal with it."
Most at risk are children and pregnant women. EU energy head Gunther
Oettinger's assessment bears repeating that "We are
somewhere between a disaster and a major disaster."
It's wrong to "exclude the worst. There is talk of an
apocalypse, and I think the word is particularly well
chosen." Nuclear expert John
Large called Fukushima's response "shambolic," saying
advance preparations for disaster weren't made,
adding: "What this means is,
accidents like we are seeing now where there are two
breaches - one involving the reactors, and one
involving fuel ponds outside the reactors - they don't
have plans for it. They don't have a procedure in a
book to turn to." What they're doing may not work.
"This shows the fundamental omission in nuclear safety
culture. What this shows is the basic confidence of
nuclear engineers and operators is flawed." It also shows a
disdainful government/industry disregard for safety.
Imagine the price future generations will pay,
especially if unstoppable radioactive emissions spread
globally. Moreover, entombing Fukushima like Chernobyl
can't be done until spent fuel rods are cooled.
Otherwise, they'll melt and burst through enclosure.
As a result, restoring power is crucial, whether or
not possible dependent on the extent of damage done
that minimally is considerable after four explosions,
fires and over a week of extremely high heat. On March 19, New York
Times writers Ken Belson and Hiroko Tabuchi headlined,
"Japan Confirms High Radiation in Spinach and Milk
Near Nuclear Plant," saying: Above safe levels were
found, "the first confirmation (that Fukushima
contaminated) the nation's food supply," making none
of it safe to eat. Claiming only milk and spinach were
affected is false. Emitted radiation doesn't choose
targets. It lands everywhere, poisoning everything it
strikes. Nonetheless, cabinet secretary Yukio Edano
claimed otherwise, adding that "levels (found) do not
pose an immediate threat to your health." He lied. Ingested
irradiated substances cause considerable harm,
depending on amounts consumed. On March 19,
Washington Post writers Chico Harlan, Joel Achenbach
and David Nakamura headlined, "A week after disaster,
doubts about Japanese government's grip on crisis,"
saying: Sacramento, CA
detectors registered Fukushima radiation, US
officials, like their Japanese counterparts,
downplaying the risks instead of warning of their
harmful effects. Prime Minister Naoto Kan's "words
came amid doubt that the nation's leaders have a firm
grip on the nuclear crisis. The government and (Tokyo
Electric) have issued a thin and fitful stream of
information about the radiation-spewing plant,"
downplaying serious hazards. Moreover, reactors
besides Fukushimas are troubled. Others include a
Tokai one and three at Onagawa. On March 13, a state
of emergency was declared at the facility after high
radiation levels were recorded. The Tohoku Electric
Power Company said readings were 700 times above
normal" but still low. In fact, normal ones are too
high. Admiral
Hyman Rickover's Warning about Nuclear Power In his January 1982
congressional testimony, the Father of America's
Nuclear Navy warned about nuclear power dangers,
advocating its abolition, saying: "I'll be
philosophical. Until about two billion years ago, it
was impossible to have any life on Earth; that is,
there was so much radiation on earth you couldn't have
any life - fish or anything." "Gradually, about two
billion years ago, the amount of radiation on this
planet (reduced enough to) make it possible for some
form of life to begin....Now when we go back to using
nuclear power, we are creating something which nature
tried to destroy to make life possible....every time
you produce radiation, (a) horrible force (is
unleashed), and I think there the human race is going
to wreck itself. (We must) outlaw nuclear reactors. It
is important that we control (destructive) forces and
try to eliminate them." "In this broad,
philosophical sense, I do not believe that nuclear
power is worth the present benefits, since it creates
radiation. You might ask, why do I design
nuclear-powered ships? Because it is a necessary evil.
I would sink them all." "From a long-range
standpoint - I am talking about humanity - the most
important thing we could do at present is to have an
international meeting where first we outlaw nuclear
weapons. Eventually, we could outlaw reactors too." A Final
Comment On November 8, 2010,
nuclear expert Karl Grossman headlined, "The Push to
Revive Nuclear Power," saying: "I'd like to start
with the bottom line: the problem with nuclear power
is - in one word - radioactivity." "Splitting (the atom)
is called fission....If these fission products are let
loose in an accident - or are released without an
accident (including "routine emissions" explained
above) - and they are absorbed by the body, they can
(and often do) cause cancer and other diseases. They
kill" painfully. "Some of these poisons
remain hot with radioactivity for thousands, some
millions of years. During this time they must be
isolated from life or they'll destroy" it. "The extreme dangers
of atomic energy were understood," yet development and
proliferation happened anyway, too often cutting
corners dangerously. As a result, all nuclear plants
are unsafe. Why? Radioactivity. Released into the
environment, it kills. Can we "put the
nuclear genie back into the bottle," asked Grossman.
"We can and must," replaced by "energy we can live
with." The alternative is too grim to imagine. Stephen Lendman
lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and
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