I read an article written by a MIT doctor and it really upset me.
After lengthy explanation on the structure of the nuclear reactor and phenomena taking place inside, he concluded,
-what is happening in Japan is really nothing
-everything is under control
-nuclear power generation in Japan is and will be totally safe
I am not a nuclear physicist. Honestly I cannot tell which part of his explanation is wrong.
But his conclusions are totally unacceptable because what he said are against everything we eyewitness. If it is nothing, why the hell tens of thousand people had to evacuate? If everything is under control, why the chopper had difficulty to get to the point? If it is safe, why US marines had to get out of the "dangerous area"? Or will he say that they are all liars and only he is telling the truth?
How he was smart at MIT does not matter here. He's got a wrong education.
My father told me life is more important than money and health is above wealth.
That's the good education.
But these educated idiots got it all wrong. They would say 'Well, that's debatable.'
Or if 100 people died from radiation, they would say "Oh, it is sad but how many accidents happen in a year? Maybe once in every 20 years... 100 people in 20 years, that's nothing compared to how many people got killed in car accidents. So we must admit that it is an incredibly safe energy." They are no-good. Because their parents did not tell them right or wrong.
If that's not the case, it is even worse. In US, many scientists are receiving research money from private companies. The companies are the sponsors for them.
I remember that when I visited Michigan State University on business some years ago, I was amused to see most of the laboratories there had their stenciled plates with the names of sponsor companies (GM, Chrysler etc.) It is not a surprise if a nuclear physicist has some relation with beneficiary companies in the nuclear industry. So they lie for them. It is a kind of moral hazard. God, forgive them.
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