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![]() "Mike Coslo" wrote in message ... Dee D. Flint wrote: Dee, I find myself in the uncomfortable position of agreeing with you, but very much disagreeing with your argument. Uranium miners get ill with apalling regularity. This is part of the overall cost of this method of energy production, unless you are force fitting your argument to include only the power generation stage. There are piles of radioactive tailings around some towns out west. Kids often play on them. http://www.inmotionmagazine.com/miners.html http://www.downwinders.org/cortez.htm These are just a couple examples. Is that directly attributable? Gosh who knows? Cigarettes were "not proven to be deadly until not all that many yars ago, while I have read literature from the 1860's that documented all the effects that tobacco smoking causes. My guess is that if a group of people involved in an activity show statistically significant trends in illness, some activity they have in common just may be responsible. I don't suspect you will understand this, but part of your approach is exactly why people distrust what they are told about NP. It's exactly for these reasons that I keep saying that we have to do the research and not let our emotions and fears sway us. And we do have to make sure we don't do stupid things. Letting kids play on piles of tailings is stupid. Even on non-radioactive piles, they can get hurt as the piles are unstable and slide. Right now, the fear and emotions are preventing us from doing the necessary data gathering and research. Whether or not a person believes in nuclear power, this data is sorely needed. If it's safe, we need to move forward. If it's too dangerous, we need to follow other routes. That judgment should be made on facts not feelings as people are doing today. As far as cigarettes go, the term "coffin nails" goes a long way back. The fact that people chose to hide their heads in the sand and not do the research until relatively recently just goes to show the idiocy of not doing the research. Statistical correlations though must be treated carefully. It doesn't necessarily prove a cause and effect relationship. It can be the case that two (or more) independent items stem from the same cause. Once again, adequate research is needed to determine why two items correlate. For this reason, statistical trends should be used to trigger research not to draw conclusions. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
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