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GERMAN NEWS: JAPAN will cease attempts to stop meltdown when wind changes direction
My wife's mom just called from Germany..on the news there ( much more upfront then US news) Japan will allow the meltdown to blow as the wind changes back INTO japan so the casualty rate is only around 200k instead of nearly 4 million if cloud flows to West Coast US...Let's just see in 24 hours if this baby explodes for real.
and there are 6 reactors in trouble..this could well be the game changer guys |
They just had on the news in poland that there is no danger even if there is a melt down and that it will only effect around 10-20km around the reactor.
I think its mostly just fear mongering to get more news viewers...take it with a grain of salt. |
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Your wife's mom is full of shit.
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this is scary ;)
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i appreciate the thread, i've spent hours trying to get a handle on what's going on with all this. a lot of mixed/confusing news.
this is the most accurate assessment of the situation that i have found up to this point------ Quote:
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waste man!!
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scare news tactics
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I invite any of you who think a NUCLEAR MELTDOWN is nothing more than fear mongering, to hop a plane and go hang out where the meltdown will occur, then report back a few weeks after it's all over. Please let us know how it all turned out and if you glow in the dark or not.
Meanwhile, Japanese TV is telling their citizens to leave the area. If they can not leave, they are to shut doors, shut windows, turn off fans, seal areas of entry, and do not go outside for any reason. Probably just hype though. Those Japanese like to jump the gun a lot. Quote:
Wiki has taught you well. You need to be on the ground advising those in charge of this disaster of what to do. They clearly have no idea of what is going on and could use some help. :2 cents: Quote:
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I don't know where your wife's mum got the information, but on some reliable german news sites (Spiegel.de, Welt.de, Zeit.de, ...) they're reporting 3 reactors on 2 different locations in trouble.
At the moment they also report that they're not certain what exactly happened and if they can get it under control. So worst-case chernobyl-like desaster COULD be possible, but it could also be possible that they regain control, fix the cooling issues and only a little amount of radioactivity gets out. By the way, allthough only a few thousand died directly in Chernobyl - but there are tens of thousands (if not hundreds of thousands) who got cancer / died of cancer as a long term result of Chernobyl ... |
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my penis glows in the dark
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So 7/11 happened on 9-11-01, Japan nuclear boom - 3-10-11. Add the numbers and you get 12-21-12 - we're all fucked.
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In other news, the US Navy has moved its ships further away from Japan due to having detected airborne radiation some 100 miles from the reactor sites: http://www.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/asiapc...ex.html?hpt=T1 Tests detect radioactivity on 17 U.S. Navy crew members in Japan By the CNN Wire Staff March 14, 2011 5:17 a.m. EDT "(CNN) -- Tests detected low levels of radioactivity on 17 U.S. Navy helicopter crew members when they returned to the USS Ronald Reagan after conducting disaster relief missions in Japan, the military said Monday. No further contamination was detected after the crew members washed with soap and water, the Navy said. In addition, the Navy said the U.S. 7th Fleet has temporarily repositioned its ships and planes away from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant after detecting low level contamination in the air and on its planes in the area, the Navy said. One ship was operating about 100 miles northeast of the power plant when "airborne radioactivity" was detected, the Navy said. The Navy's statement, however, provided some perspective, noting that the maximum potential radiation dose received by ship personnel when it passed through the area was "less than the radiation exposure received from about one month of exposure to natural background radiation from sources such as rocks, soil, and the sun." On Sunday, the USS Ronald Reagan started delivering aid in the coastal regions of Japan's Miyagi prefecture. Crew members, in conjunction with the Japan Maritime Self Defense Forces, conducted 20 sorties delivering aid pallets. Eight U.S. and Japanese helicopters were used to distribute the pallets, according to Sgt. Maj. Stephen Valley of U.S. Forces Japan. Workers are scrambling to cool down fuel rods and prevent a full meltdown in three reactors at the earthquake-hit plant. Radioactive steam has been released intentionally to lessen growing pressure in the reactors." |
Radiation has already been detected 100 miles offshore, they're obviously keeping the reality of this quiet so as not to cause panic.
From BBC "But the US said it had moved one of its aircraft carriers from the area after detecting low-level radiation 160km (100 miles) offshore." |
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Conspiracy theorists rejoice ...
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double post....
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all 3 reactors will burst, and dead wind will kill 40 millions
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japan have an entire ocean on their side .... |
and what kind of effect could have the radiations on the sea ?
and on the polar ice ? |
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What's the distance between Japan and California? Exactly. I remember Chernobyl's effects were felt in Europe, mostly in grain and cattle, but I don't recall people moving out of Europe to escape anything. Besides I'm done producing kids. |
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What's the distance between Japan and Hawaii, Taiwan, South Korea, North Korea, China, and Russia. I'm not asking for the real distance, they are not far. I'm making a point. There may be many others at risk should this get really bad and the winds blow in their direction. |
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this thread is like a delayed reaction playing out in real time.
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For sure not everything is reported in the public news. When the government officials say not worry you really should do that. 3 or more reactors leaking or are in a stage of meltdown is not good. I'm not a scientist but from what I read on the web the shit really hits the fan if it's going to be air born and what the reach will be.
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German is PULLING all personel OUT of Japan |
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welcome to the dumbass awards..you win |
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btw FUEL RODS are exposed, get your bonfires ready, she's about to blow |
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this crisis is a non-issue. yesterday it was a semi-issue, the day before it was a crisis.
y'all are late to the worry party. |
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i'd hate to come across as a know-it-all but if this is a worst case scenario as dirtywhiteboy has said, there will be nowhere to hide. it doesn't matter if you are russian or american the radioactivity would cover the globe.
chernobyl covered the northern hemisphere, maybe more. thta being said, this event is past tense. japanese have a fail-safe on every reactor- flooding it with seawater. guarantees stopping any meltdown. |
from what i read the seawater is just evaporating.
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they won't run out of sea water.
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http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/15/wo...uclear.html?hp
The plant’s operator, Tokyo Electric Power, said late Monday that repeated efforts to inject seawater into the reactor had failed, causing water levels inside the reactor’s containment vessel to fall and exposing its fuel rods. After what at first appeared to be a successful bid to refill the vessel, water levels again dwindled, this time to critical levels, exposing the rods almost completely, company executives said. Workers were having difficulty injecting seawater into the reactor because its vents — necessary to release pressure in the containment vessel by allowing radioactive steam to escape — had stopped working properly, they said. The more time that passes with fuel rods uncovered by water and the pressure inside the containment vessel unvented, the greater the risk that the containment vessel will crack or explode, creating a potentially catastrophic release of radioactive material into the atmosphere — an accident that would be by far the worst to confront the nuclear power industry since the explosion of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant 25 years ago. In reactor No. 2, which is now the most damaged of the three at the Daiichi plant, at least parts of the fuel rods have been exposed for several hours, which also suggests that some of the fuel has begun to melt. If more of the fuel melts before water can be injected in the vessel, the fuel pellets could burn through the bottom of the containment vessel and radioactive material could pour out that way — often referred to as a full meltdown. “They’re basically in a full-scale panic” among Japanese power industry managers, said a senior nuclear industry executive late Monday night. The executive is not involved in managing the response to the reactors’ difficulties but has many contacts in Japan. “They’re in total disarray, they don’t know what to do.” |
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Meltdown threat rises at Japanese nuclear plant Quote:
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