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Thread: Chernobyl
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06-13-2019, 01:57 PM #151Registered User
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06-13-2019, 02:33 PM #152
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06-13-2019, 02:36 PM #153
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06-13-2019, 02:37 PM #154
You’ll get over it soon.
Shitty fake Russian accents would be worse.
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06-13-2019, 02:42 PM #155Ski edits | http://vimeo.com/user389737/videos
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06-13-2019, 08:09 PM #156
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06-17-2019, 08:41 PM #157
Interesting article in my Sunday Long Reads email yesterday...
https://www.newyorker.com/news/our-c...2621-273540517
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06-19-2019, 10:37 AM #158yelgatgab
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06-19-2019, 12:05 PM #159
That final episode is so good.
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06-19-2019, 04:16 PM #160
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06-20-2019, 10:55 AM #161
Climate change? I thought it was a screed against bureaucratic incompetence and the danger of dictatorial one party rule. Why is everything the fault of climate change these days?
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06-20-2019, 12:16 PM #162
Apologize if this is already here somewhere else, but the Chernobyl series gave me a little more understand of this amazing nonsense:
https://m.theepochtimes.com/the-sovi...n_2230387.html
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07-03-2019, 07:49 AM #163
Chernobyl Has Blown Up Twice
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Still the nuclear lobby bang on about how such a thing could never happen again — ignoring the fact that it did, in 2011 in Japan. It was old Soviet technology, career-climbing bureaucrats and a closed, secretive governmental system that was to blame for Chernobyl they say. Even the show’s creative force and writer, Craig Mazin, he of two Hangovers, felt obliged to insist publicly that the show was not meant to be anti-nuclear and nor is he.
This latter position — given all Mazin must have learned during his years of meticulous research — has surprised some. How could he possibly arrive at such a conclusion?
It’s a rookie error.
Yes, Mazin studied the Chernobyl story in depth. He read Voices from Chernobyl by Svetlana Alexievich and Chernobyl: The History of a Nuclear Catastrophe, by Serhii Plokhy. He became extremely well-versed in what transpired during and immediately after the accident, and the heroic actions of those who saved the world from an even worse outcome.
But unlike those of us in the anti-nuclear movement — and those aforementioned years of slog — Mazin is not an expert in nuclear power outside of what he knows about Chernobyl and the old Soviet Union. He did not spend years studying the US nuclear cabal, or Japan’s. Those weren’t topics relevant to his rightfully heralded masterpiece. He didn’t need to look.
So, as a rookie, Mazin never found out that a captured nuclear regulator, a nuclear industry that routinely takes safety shortcuts to save money, and a government whose officials bang the drum for nuclear power without knowing the slightest thing about its risks, all exist right here, right now in the USA. And in Japan. And likely anywhere where nuclear power operates. And of course an autocratic, unpredictable and secretive government isn’t exactly a Soviet exclusive either. Especially now.
The Fukushima Daiichi reactors that exploded and melted down in Japan in 2011 were not old Soviet designs, they were American — the GE Mark I Boiling Water Reactor (BWR), a reactor so dangerous that even GE’s own engineers said it should never be built. That was back in the 1970s. Now the 28 remaining GE Mark I and II BWRs still going in the US are old and consequently at an even more dangerous phase. Their containments are so tiny that in the event of a serious accident you have to vent their radioactive inventory into the atmosphere to save them.
Fukushima wasn’t as serious as Chernobyl, but a lot of that was luck. The wind was blowing out to sea that day. Then prime minister, Naoto Kan, didn’t let Tepco pull its workforce from the disaster site — which would have led to major meltdowns there, forcing abandonment of the site, leading to radioactive contamination of the nearby Fukushima Daiini reactor site, which in turn would have had to have been abandoned, leading to those reactors melting down…..and so on.
It’s amusing, therefore, to see Matt Wald telling a reporter for a story about the Chernobyl series in which I was also quoted, that a Chernobyl could never happen in the US. For years, we had to contend with Wald’s bias as he masqueraded as a reporter at the New York Times on, yes, the nuclear beat. I vividly remember a private screening by HBO of Rory Kennedy’s documentary about Indian Point, at which I came upon Wald sitting cozily side-by-side with then NRC Commissioner, Edward McGaffigan. McGaffigan, who after the screening inexplicably called the HBO women hosting the event, “bitches,” cast a verbal slur in my direction as well, at which the two of them contentedly smirked. When Wald left the Times to become the Senior Communications Advisor for the Nuclear Energy Institute — the position he currently holds at the industry’s lobbying arm — none of us in the anti-nuclear movement was the least bit surprised.
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https://www.counterpunch.org/2019/07...lown-up-twice/
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07-03-2019, 08:54 AM #164Registered User
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This is incredible movie! Amazing work of the director (screenwriter) and actors.
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07-04-2019, 02:46 AM #165Registered User
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It is a real shame the "Elephant's Foot" was not included in the series?
It is a real shame the "Elephant's Foot" was not included in the series
If you do not know the Elephant's Foot as it is so affectionately referred to as is a massive radioactive mass of corium which melted its way to the basement of the building.
When it was first discovered it was reported to be so radioactive that radiation sickness symptoms would occur within seconds. A few seconds would cut years off your life. More than a few minutes near it and you would die.
To first study it scientists had to view it around corners with a complex set of mirrors.
Arguably one of the most dangerous objects on Earth in all of history.
It's radiation has lowered and scientists are able to be in the same room as it for minutes, but you won't want to wait around and eat your lunch with it.
When watching the Chernobyl tv series I was waiting for it show up, but it never did. I believe I saw someone posted a script on Techgara which showed it was going to have a few moments of fame, but it was apparently cut and that is a real shame.
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07-18-2019, 10:39 AM #166
This PBS Nova episode sprung up on Netflix the other day.
Fascinating stuff
https://www.pbs.org/video/building-c...gatomb-lyqrnh/
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