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March 11 is the anniversary for the Fukushima Daiichi disaster of 3 nuclear meltdowns, at least one melt through, and a fire in at least ...
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The weekend edition of the Wall Street Journal reports that PG&E suffered a massive loss of control of the utility's databases, le...
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In 2007, Rick Weiss reported for the Washington Post potential hazards of genetic medicine and the failed regulatory apparatuses designed t...
Currently quite a few experienced and knowledgeable persons are saying that we are closer now to a thermonuclear war than we were during the Cold War. I find that easy to believe. Back then the USA had a more mature and better educated community of persons running the nation. Though they at most deserved two cheers and generally one, the recent and current administrations have deserved none! Often it seems like a sitcom intended as a comedy and entertainment for the housebound,
ReplyDeleteMeanwhile Fukushima rolls on. Since so far no one has figured out a way to make it profitable, it is rarely mentioned anywhere except on a few fugitive sites like this. After all it could impact negatively the nuclear power industry. And who would like to see that? So we shall have a slow burn unless it is intercepted by a fast one, but in either case the future looks bleak.