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Tuesday, May 21, 2013
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    They Don't Believe in Science

    The Wrong Horse

    by | 2, Add your Comment | May 15, 2012

    A Cartoon on how the nuclear power industry, the department of energy and the nuclear regulatory commission just don't careThe apparently irresistible campaign contributions and lobbying that seduced national and state legislators into signing onto privatization and deregulation schemes over the past decades brought us the current economic mess. The push for nuclear power is more of the same, kind of a group-think, ideological commitment unimpeded by critical analysis and driven by an eyes-on-profits fixation. Under-funded anti-nuclear groups across the planet have been trying to make the following points for years about nuclear power:

    • Expensive, not competitive with wind/solar, conservation
    • Creates extremely long-lived radioactive waste with NO storage solution after more than 50 years
    • To terrorists a nuke plant is a pre-positioned nuclear device
    • If nukes are safe why won’t the insurance companies cover them?
    • Use way too much water & create thermal pollution
    • Routinely release toxins into soil, air, river and ground water

    These defects are not adequately addressed by the Department of Energy (DOE), the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) nor the industry, all apparently captured by the above described fixation.

    The dangers of terrorism and insider sabotage at Nuclear sites

    • Nuclear power plants have shown lax security with 50% penetration in mock attacks, even when security KNEW the dates & times of infiltration.
    • Cooling ponds are even more vulnerable than the reactors themselves. The spent fuel in these ponds would burst into flames if exposed to air, dispersing radioactivity widely, creating very long-term dead zones.
    • It is very doubtful whether a reactor could withstand impact from a 911-style airliner attack
    • The obvious should be noted, that wind and solar panels do not spread extremely long-lived toxins when blown up.

    Water Usage

    • The two new reactors contemplated at Plant Vogtle on the Savannah River would use the equivalent of the residential water use of Savannah, Augusta and Atlanta, an impact the NRC, during a time of severe drought, incredibly labeled “not significant”.
    • The water that is returned to the river is at high temperatures, negatively impacting river habitat
    • The water that is lost, 2/3, as vapor, is a global warming gas.

    Proliferation

    Nuclear Power reactors create something that did not exist prior to the nuclear age, plutonium, a substance essential to making nuclear bombs. The separation between nuclear power and weapons, from the point of view of proliferation, is artificial, mere propaganda, an attempt to legitimate nukes rather than a real difference – the “peaceful atom”, “too cheap to meter” etc; In fact the two are sinister partners creating a large question mark over our future. A single ‘puck’ of plutonium (the size of a hockey puck) if properly dispersed, is toxic enough to cause lung cancer in every person on the planet. In a southern nutshell, nuclear power is the wrong horse.

    The weapons program has brought us about 20,000 nuclear warheads, enough to destroy or render the planet uninhabitable. And the belligerent militarism that passes for U.S. foreign policy is teaching countries that wish to maintain their independence or pursue alternative paths to the “free market”, that possessing nuclear weapons may be their only chance of doing so. Incredibly, despite the end of the cold war, many of these weapons remain on hair-trigger alert, ready to launch-on-warning, locked into a lose’em-or-use’em scenario subject to serious malfunction and targeted on cities that pose no threat whatsoever to the United States. This is true insanity.

    It is ironic and revealing that the ideological sector most loudly worshiping at the “free market” alter demands taxpayer subsidies for an industry that cannot compete in that market. The subsidies come in the form of loan guarantees, the costs of long-term storage of waste that is toxic for longer than recorded history, and in the Price-Anderson Act, this latter shifting the main burden of expense from an accident onto the taxpayer. In Japan the Government has no choice, it must assume the expense of dealing with the on-going Fukushima disaster since Tepco is not solvent enough to absorb what it will cost, no company is. As for nuclear weapons, to understand the psychology of the spouse or child batterer is to understand the psychology of militarism and profit obsession. This fear-based psychosis cannot be allowed to bring to a close the great experiment of consciousness. The hard truth for latent activists like this writer, who love nothing more than to leisurely wander in the friendly fields of art and culture, is the bitter fact that power cedes nothing without struggle.

    ###
    • Cartoon by author (Tom Ferguson)
    Tom Ferguson

    Tom Ferguson

    Tom is a painter, a cartoonist, a musician, a thinker and more. View some of his web sites:

    • www.thinkspeak.net (Painting)
    • toons.thinkspeak.net (Political Cartoons)
    • thinkspeak.bandcamp.com (Music)
    • tfthinkspeak.blogspot.com (blog)

     

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    • http://hannah.smith-family.com/ Hannah

      In the dualistic mind of the instinct-driven, two-part nouns always represent antagonistic concepts which cancel each other out, not to achieve union, but conquest.  So, for example, “free market” refers to acquiring free goods (resources) and taking them to market for a profit. If the acquisition requires work, then a subsidy is wanted to compensate for that effort.  Indeed, in the case of oil, a supposedly limited resource (which means it’s not a resource at all), the acquisitors demanded compensation for using it up (depletion allowance).
      The underlying assumption is that man is entitled to exploit what he can.  Stewardship is not a concept instinct-driven humans understand.
      Indeed, the absence of understanding seems characteristic.  The instinct-driven human does not understand the consequences of accumulation, particularly obsessive accumulation, either.  And that, in essence, is the problem with uranium and its derivatives.  Man has brought together particles that are naturally dispersed without fully understanding the consequence of that behavior.
      Accumulation is an instinctive behavior.  All sorts of organisms do it.  Fortunately, most don’t have memory.  So, they soon forget what they’ve collected and some other organism comes along to take it apart.  The problem with humans accumulating isn’t just that they don’t forget and obsessively increase the store, but that their accumulants are frequently deadly to all of organic existence.
      Mindless accumulation doesn’t have to be antagonistic to be deadly.

    • http://www.facebook.com/people/Glenn-Carroll/727166239 Glenn Carroll

      Wow, Tom, you really summed up a very complex topic! Your boiling it down to the consciousness level brought a tear to my eye. You deftly connected the nuclear industry to the 1% game. Bravely said! (Tom Ferguson is President of the board of directors of Nuclear Watch South http://www.nonukesyall.org)

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