02. 2011年4月26日 01:05:58: EGaQ73B5yp
ーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーー http://blog.imva.info/medicine/doorBeyond That Door Posted by Mark Sircus - Director on 25 April 2011 Filed under Medicine, World Affairs http://blog.imva.info/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/clip_image0026.jpg
Beyond that door is death. It’s death’s door and it has brought us a new hell on earth. What’s behind this door and several others like it is so hot, in terms of death, that its effects can be seen 10,000 miles away. Though thanks to the media we almost forgot about this and other similar doors and the nuclear meltdowns that are occurring right here right now on planet earth. Today you have to be a hound dog to sniff up any credible news about what is actually going on at that destroyed nuclear plant. It’s very scary how the media has clamped down on most of the news so it seems like multiple nuclear meltdowns are not a big deal. On April 21 radiation levels stood at up to 110 microsieverts per hour in the air in the town of Okuma in Tokyo (http://jen.jiji.com/jc/eng?g=eco&k=2011042100886), some 3 kilometers southwest of that door you see above. If a person is exposed to this quantity of radiation for about nine hours, the cumulative dose is estimated to reach one millisieverts, the annual safety limit set by the government. Do the math. In just 30 days a person living there would have a lethal dose! http://blog.imva.info/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/clip_image001.jpg On Sunday, April 24, 2011 Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) disclosed a map of radiation levels at the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. Radiation levels around the No. 3 reactor building, which was damaged by a powerful hydrogen explosion, are higher than in other locations, and 300 millisieverts per hour of radiation was detected in debris on a nearby mountainside. Stand near that and 30 hours later kiss life goodbye. Work started on April 6th to remove contaminated rubble that had been obstructing the restoration process. TEPCO says much of the debris around the former office building has been removed, and it has started clearing the rubble around the No. 3 and No. 4 reactors. Enough debris has been removed to fill 50 containers, and it is being kept in a field on the mountainside. The radiation levels one meter away are 1 to 2 millisieverts per hour. Gee that would be a walk in the park meaning we could hang around endlessly until 20 days go by and then we too are radioactive toast. Okay so let’s translate that into a bit of practical reality for people 10,000 miles away on the east coast of the United States. We’re getting pretty far away from that damn door and yet its nuclear wretchedness is reaching around the world just like Chernobyl did. Radiation a Personal Account ------------------------------------ I am a retired biologist who used to work in radiation biology. Just wanted to share with you what we’ve been doing lately. We live in the mid-Atlantic area of the U.S. We have a Geiger counter and have been testing daily for radiation (am and pm) since the Fukushima incident. Since March 11, our numbers normally are 25-30 cpm inside and 31-35 cpm outside (Geiger counter sits at an open window). This is within background radiation numbers. When it rains, the numbers rise to about 35 cpm for inside and 40 cpm for outside. Our grass reads around 50 cpm. I noticed today after I did some weeding (sunny day) and washing my hands that they read around 50 cpm. I had to wash them 3-4 times before the reading went down.
Also noticed a couple of dandelions looking abnormal (their stems were twice as thick as others and heads were joined). Never saw that before. We had ordered kelp granules from the company Maine Coast three weeks ago. We typically use kelp in our foods, and this was a bigger order than usual because of the nuclear incident. Just got the shipment today! We tested the bags of kelp for radiation and they tested 182 cpm! We called the company but they had their answering machine on, stating that they won’t be open until April 25th because they’re doing inventory. We plan to return the kelp! Noticed the expiration date is April 16, 2013, which makes us wonder if they filled the order after the Fukushima incident (maybe April 16, 2011?). Patty ------------------------------------------- Life with Geiger counters will become much more common in our futures as well as nuclear weather reports. They might as well have ripped a hole into another universe with so much hell to be released each month for as long as we can see into the future. Best-case scenario at this point would be several years of relentless radiation buildup around the world but most particularly in the northern hemisphere where it will be increasingly difficult to get uncontaminated food. Let’s not even think of worst-case scenarios for not many of us will be around for long if such were to occur. Authorities will keep everything under their hat for as long as humanly possible to avoid panic and migrations. With financial collapse on the horizon, private citizens will not be able to afford any movement anyway and will have to dig in and weather the radiation. With the help of the media, the entire populations of the north are caught like deer in the headlights and are totally unaware of and unprepared for this increasing nuclear radiation. In case no one has informed you, radioactivity makes it harder for our bodies to live. Today’s Nuclear News
The Number 4 spent fuel pool stores 1,535 fuel rods (http://www3.nhk.or.jp/daily/english/25_12.html), the most at the nuclear complex. TEPCO says it will inject 210 tons of water into the pool on Monday, after finding on Sunday evening that the temperature in the pool had risen to 81 degrees Celsius. The utility firm had earlier limited the amount of water being injected into the pool to 70 tons a day, saying the weight of the water could weaken the reactor building, which was already damaged in last month’s hydrogen explosion. On Friday, TEPCO found that the pool’s temperature had reached 91 degrees, so it began injecting 2 to 3 times the amount of water. TEPCO says the pool’s water temperature dropped to 66 degrees on Saturday after water was injected, but started to rise again, to 81 degrees. The operator says the water level in the pool was 2.5 meters lower than normal after 165 tons of water was injected on Sunday. Conclusion But there is absolutely nothing to worry about! Doctors are not worried that iodine deficiency will make you much more vulnerable to death rays in the form of radioactive iodine, which your thyroid will mop up like a sponge. But what do doctors or our friendly governments care? --------------------------------------- I have been trying to get a prescription for iodine from a medical doctor, but I can’t find one that will do it. They tell me BS like you don’t need it; it’s dangerous to take supplemental iodine without a battery of thyroid tests, and a bunch of other BS ad nauseum. I used to be able to get it over the counter at a drugstore, but no longer. I need to find an MD with common sense that will actually help me. ---David Ostrander --------------------------------------- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9YJaaVAQ5lE&feature=player_embedded
This is a gift from Brazil of a music that was first presented live in 1974 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o4VFZQirRGU&feature=related). Brazil has sung out against atomic energy and thus we have only one reactor in this huge country. I have translated the lyrics below. I hope people can appreciate with their hearts this musical message. The Rose of Hiroshima (Vinícius de Moraes / Gerson Conrad) Think of the children Mute, telepathic Think of the girls Blind, inaccurate Think of the women Routes changed Think of the wounds As warm roses But oh, do not forget of the rose, the rose The rose of Hiroshima The hereditary rose The radioactive rose Stupid and invalid The rose with cirrhosis The atomic anti-rose with no color no parfum, No rose, no anything. image Photograph: Robert Brook/Alamy/Alamy http://blog.imva.info/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/clip_image0021.gif Radiation Hell at the disused plutonium reactors at Sellafield, England are a “slow motion Chernobyl”(http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/apr/19/sellafield-nuclear-plant-cumbria-hazards) according to Greenpeace campaigners against nuclear energy. The BBC says (http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A2922103), “There are about 440 operational reactors in 32 countries, generating 16 percent of the world’s electricity. Only 27 new reactors are under construction, mainly in Eastern Europe and Asia. Not one of the remaining 22 countries with nuclear power is currently building any new reactors, including the USA, Canada and all of Western Europe. The western world has put its nuclear power program on hold. This is arguably due at least in part to the Chernobyl accident and the ensuing perception that no matter how small the risk, it is just not worth it.” (http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/dna/h2g2/A2922103/ext/_auto/-/http:/www.world-nuclear.org/wgs/decom/database/php/reactorsdb_index.php) ーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーー |