Filatova Elena Vladimirovna, awesome Russian chick who rides her bike through the poisoned land of Chernobyl, photographs it for us and writes amazing descriptions of her journies. Read it - it's so eerie. I really admire this lady.
Last edited by JBC on Mon Oct 08, 2007 7:31 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Randorama wrote:ban CMoon for being a closet Jerry Falwell cockmonster/Ann Coulter fan, Nijska a bronie (ack! The horror!), and Ed Oscuro being unable to post 100-word arguments without writing 3-pages posts.
Eugenics: you know it's right!
I have never had problems with the dosimeter guys, who man the checkpoints. They are experts, and if they find radiation on you vehicle, they gave it a chemical shower. I don't count those couple of times when "experts" tried to invent an excuse to give me a shower, because those had a lot more to do with physical biology than biological physics
The n00b wrote:It was proven to be a hoax like 3 years ago
Not a hoax besides the "being alone" part -- she had a photographer/advisor with her 95% of the time.
so long and tanks for all the spacefish unban shw <Megalixir> now that i know garegga is faggot central i can disregard it entirely
<Megalixir> i'm stuck in a hobby with gays
It seems to me to accentuate the desolation and tomb-like quality the place has in the mind's eye of many people. None should forget what happened there, a stark warning to nuclear plant designers and operators all across the globe. America got off lucky when Three Mile Island had its failure. Chernobyl is what happens when everything goes wrong.
"Enjoy a nice Brown Betty with DEATH! But, but mostly eat death." ~Crow T. Robot~
America got off lucky when Three Mile Island had its failure. Chernobyl is what happens when everything goes wrong.
America has had it's fair share of accidents too, which were kept secret for the most part until Nuc Navy vets came out with all the stupid shit that happened (dropping nukes into the ocean, subs destroying themselves with nuclear-tipped torpedos, etc..)
An experimental sodium-cooled reactor utilized aboard the USS Seawolf, the U.S.'s second nuclear submarine, was scuttled in 9,000 feet of water off the Delaware/Maryland coast. The reactor was plagued by persistent leaks in its steam system (caused by the corrosive nature of the sodium) and was later replaced with a more conventional model. The reactor is estimated to have contained 33,000 curies of radioactivity and is likely the largest single radioactive object ever dumped deliberately into the ocean. Subsequent attempts to locate the reactor proved to be futile.
Wow, that blows my mind. That thing is still down there! Hahaha!
It does neglect to mention that it's encased in a giant steel box but still, you never know what could happen.
The secrecy as to whether Israel's nuclear programme even existed was a convenient way not to get in trouble with gov'ts for being right accidentally. Cat's out now though AFAIK.