Comment I'll just leave it here... (Score 1) 511
(Chat between a customer and EA rep, regarding SimCity issues)
(Chat between a customer and EA rep, regarding SimCity issues)
Explain to them what a rem is, and how the sun gives you more radiation in a day than most people will experience, with the exception of medical imaging devices and flying on high-altitude airplanes, throughout their lives.
But that^ is still contrary to "above all, no lies. No propaganda. Just the truth, detailing what we do know, what we do not know, and where any potential problems may be." right after it (almost like you just can't help it, go in the direction of glorifying nuclear) - you can't have it both ways, it would provoke a justifiable backlash and ridicule (and probably reminding also, yeah, of a bit insane approach to nuclear in the past)
You mention how we receive radiation when stepping outside - actually, we receive radiation also when inside of course, many buildings have quite elevated levels of radon for example. But it's a baseline, it's insincere to essentially dismiss additional sources.
With the concern about small & distributed nuclear reactors that I voiced there, the point wasn't so much about the technology, but about the talent of people to frak things up - particularly at the level of small town utilities. Not about the technical side - but governance, delegation of responsibility, etc.
And FFS, people have even a hard time of accepting that dumping millions of tons of CO2, that the planet kept in its lithosphere, can disrupt the balance; or, from a looser related field, with something having so much support, so much evidence, as biological evolution. We're not really close to the level of maturity which small reactors everywhere would demand, if we'll ever be.
Also, by which standards would we really judge such reactors to be safe safe, and their operators sufficiently (5yo level) smart? Those used with Fukushima / in Japan? (it also was essentially counted among "nothing can go wrong")
(also, you might be too optimistic about their potential impact - say, kinda like blanketing of an area with small explosives tends to be much more destructive than one gargantuan (that's also the case with MIRVs & their warheads); similar effects could manifest themselves, over long periods of time, for many small vs. few large power plants)
BTW, there's this fascinating, to me, phenomena with many of the devotees in the style of AC: this place is generally quite dismissive of Chinese or Indian technical prowess...
(well, at least I have an impression how the latter group is so large that it must include many from the former)
Heck, I've seen some people treating nuclear power plants as some kind of self-sustaining organism which should cover essentially as much of the planet as it can (supposedly everything needed for that goal coming from
I see nuclear as likely (not certain
But it won't do much as long people will just want more, more, more without restraint; without recognizing what's good enough, nuclear won't change much. There is no sane reason for the observed 2-3x differences in resource usage between places with very alike standards of living (I'd argue that some of the more frugal one of this graph are actually much nicer than the most wasteful)
In a comment nearby you express hope that the number of humans won't drop (and precisely bottlenecks are major evolutionary pressures BTW)
Anyway, it's self regulating, first world has below-replacement fertility rates, which seems to be natural for our species once you hit level of reasonable prosperity.
If you don't like it, there's XFCE for you - it has been branded as the 'proper' DE by Torvalds himself.
For me, Unity allows for less clutter, faster access to files and software, more real estate. What it could do, is use Mutter instead of Compiz - it's faster and less bloated. (Gnome-shell uses it)
Show them how hard it is for something to undergo an uncontrolled nuclear fission reaction, show them how the danger of fallout and radioactivity is inversely related to time. Explain to them what a rem is, and how the sun gives you more radiation in a day than most people will experience, with the exception of medical imaging devices and flying on high-altitude airplanes, throughout their lives. And above all, no lies. No propaganda. Just the truth, detailing what we do know, what we do not know, and where any potential problems may be.
So just before "no lies. No propaganda" you essentially advocate... "supportive" disinformation, great. I mean, surely you must know there are different kinds of radiation - those reaching us from the Sun much easier to manage, not really comparable to what is at hand here, not even ionizing (even if UV might slightly resemble such, in its biologically damaging potential; still, much easier manageable).
Pretending like all kinds of radiation are the same can serve also nuclear devotees, it seems... really, perhaps the education should start with them.
Witness how their rhetoric unfolded during Fukushima: at the beginning, we had "so, we have a bit of a situation, X happened, but surely not X+1" - but wait few days or so, and suddenly it was "so, X+1 happened, but surely not X+2"
Such things don't breed trust, not one bit. More - that is an evidence of issues (of whatever kind), justifying concerns (which can be also framed in a less dignified term "fear") about "environmentally sound operation" or "careful" - a very visible example of somewhat "uncontrolled nuclear fission reaction" despite major efforts of a place seen as among most technically adept
The thing with "careful disposal of the waste" - it turned out to be much bigger problem than anticipated; not so much the technical side of it, but political and cost considerations, making the nuclear much less attractive than it seemed, justifiably blunting the early enthusiasm (seriously, look back at those early times, people had a bit insane approach
And the inverse relation of time vs. the danger of fallout and radioactivity isn't much of a consolation for those in the "wrong" place and time (which could be made somewhat more likely by massive adoption of many miniature reactors - I mean, we are talking here about the approach, costs & responsibility distribution more akin to water or sewerage, in how they are municipality services
Now, I'm generally the first to lament the colossal waste of one local abortive attempt, and I can seriously consider moving to the backyard of a nuclear power plant my place probably needs to build in a decade or two (well, not literal "backyard" if only because that would still be a noisy industrial plant; but many likely benefits all around of such neighborhood, among them possible voluntary expulsion of large part of stupid people)
But don't pretend the devotees (essentially a sort of "nuclear cargo cult") aren't a problem, too - an image one, at least, in the name of willingness to overlook issues.
Look at the first AC reply to your post - pretending like pebble bed reactors are proven tech; but for example ignoring how they share one major problem with RBMK (Czernobyl) reactors - they are essentially giant stakes of coal; how actual test reactors so far weren't entirely encouraging, anyway. Or: it's all because of anti-nuclear lobby (as if there weren't any powerful entities involved in nuclear industry, in turn pushing suboptimal solutions which benefit primarily them?). Also, the TMI is the only incident worth remembering it seems. And, obviously: thorium worship (as if actual research institutes, industrial entities and countries invested in nuclear weren't actively investigating this one for a long time now).
Oh, but he believes...
Doubt is a pain too lonely to know that faith is his twin brother. - Kahlil Gibran