Video & Multimedia
Related: About this forumInside The Most Dangerous Place On The Planet, Fukushima Exclusion Zone
Published on Oct 26, 2015
In this video Luke Rudkowski and Tim Pool give you a brief recap of their trip inside the Fukushima exclusion zone that is still closed down. We go over the dangers of the situation, what we saw and our breakdown of the entire situation. More detailed and exclusive content to come from both of us.
Radiation Levels Are Off The Charts In Fukushima
Published on Oct 25, 2015
In this video Luke Rudkowski takes you inside Fukushima, as he gives you a sneak peak at the upcoming content that he will be creating. As you can see in the video a safe level of radiation on a geiger counter is 0.23 but his geiger counter showed 39.3 inside the exclusion zone which we only gained access to through an evacuee who was picking up his belongings.
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TrollBuster9090
(5,954 posts)Chalk up another instant Ghost Town, thanks to nuclear power.
newfie11
(8,159 posts)Only Enenews is reporting the radiation levels on cesium 137 hitting the beaches in Alaska and the west coast of America.
The Dead Sea bird and sea life washing up on shore shows something is happening to the ocean.
Our news media reporting nothing!
hunter
(38,311 posts)Sadly, people are much more dangerous than nuclear waste.
I'd rather live in Fukushima than any place populated by violent people. Maybe it's not a good place to raise children, but my kids are grown.
So far as man-made chemical toxins, there are many places that are far, far worse than Fukushima, places heavily contaminated with mutagens and carcinogens that have a half-life of FOREVER. A toxin is a toxin, radioactive or not.
From my perspective high-energy industrial civilization and overpopulation is the problem, and Fukushima is just another industrial accident of many, and not an especially deadly one.
Yet another expensive mess to clean up.
The ongoing catastrophe of fossil fuel use (including f--cking "natural" gas) will kill this world civilization as it is killing people now, so I suppose the problem is self-limiting.
A million years from now there will be nothing left of us but a curious layer of trash in the geologic record.
That makes me an optimist. (Blame my formal training as an evolutionary biologist.) No matter how bad a mess of the world we humans make, no matter ninety percent of all species go extinct, then ours will most certainly be among them. Once we are gone life on earth will begin diversifying again.
The planet has suffered disruptive exponentially growing innovative species before, and will do so again.
I would like to save what's left of the natural world we now enjoy, but I can't even convince people in my own family that automobiles and jetliners and suburban homes with central air conditioning are gifts of the devil.