Sunday, March 13, 2011

How Long To Serve In The Navy To Get A Pention

Emotionality global

The story of Fukushima (and problems of other reactors in Japan) makes me feel breathless. Why I love Japan, not because I think that this story has relevance in a very long war / against nuclear power. I'm not afraid
dellla more central than it has earthquakes. If you want some 'accounting gruesome you can live with it now: it kills more coal, dams or nuclear power? One answer is here, but data are questionable, and certainly there are estimates that show the contrary. Just as it makes no difference if one of the silent killers are worse than cigarettes and radiation (also obvious answer here). Building nuclear plants is just one of the things that make us more vulnerable in the event of natural disaster: to live in houses built of stone buildings from dozens of plans, from putting gas in the house to travel on trains that go 300 km / h. It seems that there is nothing more irresponsible than progressing in the scale of civilization.
The real choice that individuals, nations and humanity needs to make is: the atom is a necessary evil or unnecessary? As time passes, the more I am convinced that there is no objective, rational and scientific way that can give precedence to an option over the other. The controversy

our politicians (but just for once have a real mirror of what you hear on the street and in homes) are not different from those seen around the world: France Greens call for anti-nuclear referendum to block everything. In the United States are already certain that the renaissance is wanted by Obama at sunset. In Germany, the tenor of the discussion is similar. Chatter, as the central means for them to turn off the light. In the book, the thesis on the effect of accidents on the future of the industry is clear: Chernobyl killed an industry that is dying for the collapse of oil prices. The situation now is very different, the picchista in me is convinced that oil to three digits (for a long time) will make us forget about the atomic fear of those days.

what will happen in Italy, but in way worse. More from us that pragmatism will win the apathy. The majority of the population is against it, but it will be so lazy as not to vote in the referendum only weeks after the administration. A victory (not final) for nuclearists but yet another defeat of the capacity not to think of Italians as a nation.

0 comments:

Post a Comment