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Troubling Similarities Between Japan's Nuclear Problem vs. 3-Mile Is. RE: Press coverage

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posted on Mar, 12 2011 @ 09:36 PM
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I posted this in the ongoing nuclear issue thread, but I figure it might warrant a separate discussion so it doesn't derail the news in that thread.

Al Jazeera is reporting that:


Japan's nuclear safety agency rated the accident at four on the international scale of zero to seven. The 1979 Three Mile Island accident in the United States was rated five, while the 1986 Chernobyl disaster was a seven.


...which made me start wondering how comparable is what we're seeing to the TMI incident, so we could predict what kind of risk people are at. I Wikipedia'd it, and smelled a rat trying to cover up accurate death counts - with 'mild' comparisons to what an X-ray exposes you to, and no lawsuit saying that there were increased reported cancer rates in the area over 30 years, has gotten past a federal judge. Then I read this amazing article written in 2009 that says the whole TMI incident is a massive government/corporate cover-up. And this is where I started seeing some interesting similarities to what's going on in Japan, press-wise (sorry if this is a long quote, but it's relevant):


As news of the accident poured into the global media, the public was assured there were no radiation releases.

That quickly proved to be false.

The public was then told the releases were controlled and done purposely to alleviate pressure on the core.

Both those assertions were false.

The public was told the releases were "insignificant." But stack monitors were saturated and unusable, and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission later told Congress it did not know---and STILL does not know---how much radiation was released at Three Mile Island, or where it went. Using unsubstantiated estimates of how much radiation was released, the government issued average doses allegedly received by people in the region, which it assured the public were safe. But the estimates were utterly meaningless, among other things ignoring the likelihood that high doses of concentrated fallout could come down heavily on specific areas.

Official estimates said a uniform dose to all persons in the region was equivalent to a single chest x-ray. But pregnant women are no longer x-rayed because it has long been known a single dose can do catastrophic damage to an embryo or fetus in utero.



The public was told there was no melting of fuel inside the core.

But robotic cameras later showed a very substantial portion of the fuel did melt.

The public was told there was no danger of an explosion.

But there was, as there had been at Michigan's Fermi reactor in 1966. In 1986, Chernobyl Unit Four did explode. The public was told there was no need to evacuate anyone from the area.

But Pennsylvania Governor Richard Thornburgh then evacuated pregnant women and small children. Unfortunately, many were sent to nearby Hershey, which was showered with fallout.


...And some lessons that we need to learn, and keep an eye out for in the aftermath of this disaster:


The public was assured the government would follow up with meticulous studies of the health impacts of the accident.

In fact, the state of Pennsylvania hid the health impacts, including deletion of cancers from the public record, abolition of the state's tumor registry, misrepresentation of the impacts it could not hide (including an apparent tripling of the infant death rate in nearby Harrisburg) and much more.

The federal government did nothing to track the health histories of the region's residents. In fact, the most reliable studies were conducted by local residents like Jane Lee and Mary Osborne, who went door-to-door in neighborhoods where the fallout was thought to be worst. Their surveys showed very substantial plagues of cancer, leukemia, birth defects, respiratory problems, hair loss, rashes, lesions and much more.


It goes on. Seriously, MSM and Japanese government, if this is going to be a serious problem, TELL US NOW please & thank you.



posted on Mar, 13 2011 @ 12:08 AM
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It is good to see that you have done your research and can quite easily see that it is a problem and a health risk. The issue for the government and media is what is more important, the good name of a dangerous industry or the health of the population? There is going to be a lot of flack if the power was suddenly switched of, however if higher than average numbers of people just gradually die off and get sick it is easier to mask as your investigations have shown. There is an another option with alternative energy, yet this can lead to an alteration of the current power balance as there are many stories of technology suppression to maintain this status quo. Some of these alternative energy sources are starting to get a foot hold and are getting some support, but there is still a long way to go. The problems with nuclear and oil energy are growing as more dependence is placed on them. While this event in Japan is very troubling, hopefully it helps with eliminating these extremely lethal and very lengthy dangers.



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