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Mulboyne wrote:...plans to open a "Support Fukishima Store" in Fukuoka, selling produce from the area, have been cancelled. The outlet was intended to provide a route for struggling farmers in the troubled prefecture to reach sympathetic consumers. There were complaints, however, from some saying they feared trucks from Fukushima would bring contamination. Store owners in the mall where the outlet was planned also raised concerns that shoppers might stay away...
Mulboyne wrote:Of course, in the glass half-full scenario, half the prefecture is happy to stay where they are.
legion wrote:and it doesn't include those who have already left
Tepco fucked up an entire prefecture. Next time there is a large quake they should deploy the military to any reactor in the area and shut them down from day one.
legion wrote:Next time there is a large quake they should deploy the military to any reactor in the area and shut them down from day one.
ghostunit wrote:What are you talking about? shutting down a reactor isn't anything like pushing the off button or pulling down a few levers in sequence.
The corium (the mixture of nuclear fuel inside the reactor) becomes increasingly hot whenever it's not being actively cooled. If the control systems are destroyed and not restored in time, a melt-down becomes practically impossible to stop.
I fail to see how an army can improve the situation.
ghostunit wrote:What are you talking about? shutting down a reactor isn't anything like pushing the off button or pulling down a few levers in sequence.
The corium (the mixture of nuclear fuel inside the reactor) becomes increasingly hot whenever it's not being actively cooled. If the control systems are destroyed and not restored in time, a melt-down becomes practically impossible to stop.
I fail to see how an army can improve the situation.
legion wrote:Especially if they are wearing green clothes and carrying metal things.
Coligny wrote:Control system are for normal operation. When the shit hit the fan priority is for cooling with whatever you have on hand (usually water but boric acid can be good too), delivered by whatever means available...
Armies tend to have shitloads of helicopters and trucks able to carry at least water, also most of them have NBC equipment and training. And most of all, they don't give a shit aboot saving the plant putting usually priority into containing accidents.
I think that beat hands down tepco, their dozen of Totoya Probox and cleanup teams frech from Hello Work...
IparryU wrote:are we talking about the JSDF? last I heard that they had to call in the USMC to defuse a land mine...
Coligny wrote:awww... fuck...
IparryU wrote:took about 30 minutes for her to get past her Japanese ignorance to figure out that by conducting experiments on the survivors, dead, land, etc. that it would lead to treatment and recovery of the land there...
Coligny wrote:It's funny because as much of an Uyoku as me bitch usually is, she's reacting in a remarquably smart manner to this clusterfuck not believing 1 second the state propaganda and packing heat at every tv circus show claiming all is good... A bit like her father, not exactly here to make friends if it's with these kind of people...
Might be a bit of a local thing... The municipal hospital refuse to prescribe any newly approved drug for a period of 1 year during which effect on patients from other hospital is monitored... And since she work there instead of the previous university hospital I never once spend a week end in a luxury hotel for some conference paid by pharmacy companies The best they get is weekly sandwiches (not even good) from the company in charge of the computer system... (which is a masterpiece of redundancy with the usual administrative staff... but sufficiently unproperly streamlined that if you remove one or another or if there is the smallest glitch from human or computer absolutely everything break to a standstill...)
IparryU wrote:no medication can be approved unless it was tested on a Japanese.... like they are different from other human beings... but it makes sense to a Japanese if you tell them that...
ghostunit wrote:What are you talking about? shutting down a reactor isn't anything like pushing the off button or pulling down a few levers in sequence.
The corium (the mixture of nuclear fuel inside the reactor) becomes increasingly hot whenever it's not being actively cooled. If the control systems are destroyed and not restored in time, a melt-down becomes practically impossible to stop.
I fail to see how an army can improve the situation.
A computer simulation has shown that the core meltdown of the No. 2 reactor of the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant could almost certainly have been prevented if the injection of seawater to cool the reactor had been started four hours earlier than it was.
The simulation was conducted by a research team led by Tadashi Watanabe, senior scientist at the Japan Atomic Energy Agency. It is scheduled to be presented at a study meeting of the Atomic Energy Society of Japan to be held in Kitakyushu beginning on Monday.
Coligny wrote:I mean after they are approved by the japanese ministry of health...
And... to be honest... drugs approved in the USA are... maybe not as bad as the roundup fiasco... but I won't exactly trust them on th3 spot... (unless i'm a shareholder for the drug company, and not a patient)
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