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![]() "Dwight Stewart" wrote in message link.net... "charlesb" wrote: Keep in mind the fact that fossil-fuel burning plants pollute while working perfectly. Unlike the nuclear plants, they don't have to wait for an accident in order to cause a problem. Most would consider the massive amounts of nuclear waste (from spent fuel, contaminated building materials from closed plants, and so on) a "problem." People over many generations will have to deal with those waste products. And, of course, this environmental polution is far worse than anything generated by fossil-fuel burning plants. So, your claim above ("unlike the nuclear plants...") is patently false. Nope. The nuclear plants do not necessarily have to pollute in any significant way, as there are effective, economical methods for containing and reprocessing nuclear waste. Once you burn fossil-fuels though, you have instant pollution injected directly into the atmosphere and the process continues to generate toxins as long as the burning process goes on. They end up everywhere. Shut the fossil-fuel burner down, and it takes a number of years for the pollution it has already produced to become absorbed into the general environment. It doesn't just go away, it gets spread around, absorbed, and dissipated. That would work just fine if there was just one or two fossil-fuel burning power plants, but the unpleasant fact is that there are thousands of them around the world. The third-world countries especially like the "let's burn something" level of technology, because it is something that they can readily understand, despite being protien-deprived as children and not having much by way of an education. Strictly speaking, there is no pollution-free method of obtaining significant amounts of power. Of the available alternatives, nuclear is the cleanest and safest by far, and its continued development will eventually lead us to fusion power. Of course there will always be mindless chicken-little bleating from those who obtain the latest scientific facts from Mother Earth News, Cosmo, or the National Enquirer, but if you discount this fruitcake element, you'll find that most people in the U.S. are intelligent enough to understand the issues, and can make informed, rational decisions if you give them half a chance. Yes, there is a vocal minority who are convinced that the sky is falling. The fact that they get together and agree among themselves does not mean that their hysteria has any basis in fact. It really only means that though they may be wigged out, at least they are not lonely. Taken out of the context of their conspiracy of agreement and placed within a population of normals, they sooner or later find that they are not so sure that the sky is falling after all. - Except for the hard-core wiggees of course, whose only hope would be some form of shock therapy. Charles Brabham, N5PVL |
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