Communists -Greenies are Lying to You About Nuclear Energy

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There are 2 types of Greenies:

Liars profiting from the grift and dumb motherfuckers being manipulated (useful idiots).
 
Me too — I’m a big fan of big, modular mass‑produced reactors. U.S. submarine nuclear reactors work for 70 years just fine, so why don’t we use them on land? As far as I remember, the Bolsheviks used submarine reactors on land. What about the USA?
Key Nuclear Submarine Incidents
  • K-19 (1961): Known as "Hiroshima" by crew, a cooling system failure led to a reactor meltdown-like scenario; the crew fixed it but died from radiation poisoning.
  • USS Thresher (1963): U.S. nuclear submarine lost at sea reactors remain on the ocean floor.
  • USS Scorpion (1968): U.S. nuclear submarine lost at sea reactors remain on the ocean floor.
  • K-27 (1968): Experienced a nuclear fuel failure in one of its reactors during power tests, killing 9 and injuring 83.
  • K-140 (1968): An uncontrolled increase in reactor power (18 times normal) occurred during repairs.
  • K-431 (1985): A reactor explosion occurred during refueling, killing 10 and injuring 49.
  • K-219 (1986): A missile tube explosion caused a reactor incident; the submarine was scuttled.
  • Kursk (2000): While not a reactor meltdown, a torpedo malfunction caused massive explosions that sank the submarine.
 
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Key Nuclear Submarine Incidents
  • K-19 (1961): Known as "Hiroshima" by crew, a cooling system failure led to a reactor meltdown-like scenario; the crew fixed it but died from radiation poisoning.
  • USS Thresher (1963): U.S. nuclear submarine lost at sea reactors remain on the ocean floor.
  • USS Scorpion (1968): U.S. nuclear submarine lost at sea reactors remain on the ocean floor.
  • K-27 (1968): Experienced a nuclear fuel failure in one of its reactors during power tests, killing 9 and injuring 83.
  • K-140 (1968): An uncontrolled increase in reactor power (18 times normal) occurred during repairs.
  • K-431 (1985): A reactor explosion occurred during refueling, killing 10 and injuring 49.
  • K-219 (1986): A missile tube explosion caused a reactor incident; the submarine was scuttled.
  • Kursk (2000): While not a reactor meltdown, a torpedo malfunction caused massive explosions that sank the submarine.


a nuclear operator receives less radiation than a flight attendant , and ?

ps Makes we wonder if big oil lobbyists, and Bolsheviks imperialists, and Moscow shills were involved in hyper regulating nuclear energy....
 
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a nuclear operator receives less radiation than a flight attendant , and ?

ps Makes we wonder if big oil lobbyists, and Bolsheviks imperialists, and Moscow shills were involved in hyper regulating nuclear energy....
Not concerned with the workers exposure. The problem is making sure they have multiple redundant back-up cooling systems for new & spent fuel pools & reactors to prevent releasing radiation that contaminates a million acres of land for 24,000 years.
 
Russia's Chernobyl disaster taught Germany to fear Nuclear
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Nuclear is the most expensive & gets the most government subsidies.
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How come you dont tell us how they lie?

I'm not a fan of expediting SMR nuclear power.
Some technologies need to have a track record before they get mass produced.
SMRs may be popular but they don't have a long history of successful operation, except in US submarines.

UPDATE


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Fortunately the US government printed the $600 Billion it spent cleaning up Nuclear waste & contamination instead of adding it to our electric bill. That same amount will be spent in the near future on continued cleanup & containment.

US Nuclear cleanup is considered the largest and most expensive environmental projects in the world!

Just means the US needs to let the French and Germans build the plants here, since the American builders decided to be crooked shitheads and use sub-standard materials and low quality illegal alien labor.
 
Key Nuclear Submarine Incidents
  • K-19 (1961): Known as "Hiroshima" by crew, a cooling system failure led to a reactor meltdown-like scenario; the crew fixed it but died from radiation poisoning.
  • USS Thresher (1963): U.S. nuclear submarine lost at sea reactors remain on the ocean floor.
  • USS Scorpion (1968): U.S. nuclear submarine lost at sea reactors remain on the ocean floor.
  • K-27 (1968): Experienced a nuclear fuel failure in one of its reactors during power tests, killing 9 and injuring 83.
  • K-140 (1968): An uncontrolled increase in reactor power (18 times normal) occurred during repairs.
  • K-431 (1985): A reactor explosion occurred during refueling, killing 10 and injuring 49.
  • K-219 (1986): A missile tube explosion caused a reactor incident; the submarine was scuttled.
  • Kursk (2000): While not a reactor meltdown, a torpedo malfunction caused massive explosions that sank the submarine.
K-19: thrown-together submarine, backup systems not installed(!).
Thresher and Scorpion: nothing to do with the reactor.
K-27: poor training, poorly-built systems, and an experimental liquid-metal-cooled reactor that has NOTHING in common with anything in use today.
K-31/431: poor safety practices at the shipyard.
K-219: again, nothing to do with the reactors, water leak in a missile tube caused an explosion due to highly-volatile liquid fuel. Submarine was NOT scuttled, it sank under tow.
Kursk: Torpedo, nothing to do with the reactor.

In other words: even a cursory investigation shows you're not being honest!
 
How come you dont tell us how they lie?

kyzr

0:30
I don't believe it's just incompetence. Looks very much like corruption and straight up treason in the interest of 🇷🇺 foreign powers.


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Finland is smart. Finland don't want to depend on others supplying energy to them. Be like Finland


Finland moves closer to deploying the first small modular reactor in Europe

 

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