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  1. “Atomic Insights is interested in moving towards a resolution on the issue. We hope that we can attract opponents into an honest, respectful and ongoing discussion that helps to alter the world’s radiation health paradigm.”

    If you plan to do it with respectful discussion, you might have to cull the herd here, a bit, Rod.

    Thats what I found most impressive about Michael’s oration. It was well worth watching, if only to note how he points a finger, without seeming spiteful, or even adversarial.

    He actually epitomizes the kind of individual that is the target of derision here. A liberal Californian greenie. His ending comment about “love”, would, I can virtually guarantee, prompt more than a few snickering, snide, and abusive retorts here about “liberals”. His talk is a tutorial for many here. I strongly doubt they’ll learn by it, though.

    If there’s any bone I’d pick with his talk, it is his failure to note the dismal state of the nuclear energy’s PR, and the absence of any real historical campaign to alleviate the public’s fear of radiation. While the naysayers were weaving this web of deception that he describes, the NE industry sat on its hands. The industry is partially culpable for this misguided perception of radiation, just as surely as the naysayers are.

    But overall, I’m glad to have watched it, and will pass it on.

    1. “If there’s any bone I’d pick with his talk, it is his failure to note the dismal state of the nuclear energy’s PR, and the absence of any real historical campaign to alleviate the public’s fear of radiation.”

      I guess the alleviation of the fear of radiation is akin to earning trust. That can be a very difficult proposition.

      I wonder about the future of any grassroots pro-nuclear organization. To defend nuclear can be looked upon as defending large impersonal corporations. I don’t know of a precedent where large corporate entities have been defended from beneath. I would think the only hope is to convince one of the large environmental groups. That would sell credibility to the public.

      It was a good talk.

  2. Well, Gov. Cuomo’s State of the State message will include a target to close Indian Point in 2021 because it’s an “imminent peril to millions of people.” Hopefully ANS and NEI and other nuclear power organs will justify their existence and get on ball helping to sell the record of nuclear power in this NYC metro area. The nuclear community should realize that IP is a flagship of trust in the safety of nuclear power to run in any large population density area, and that abolishing it seals the deal of the public perception that nukes can’t be run a thousand miles of any city. The (“clean”) coal and wind and solar communities today have no fears that they’ll be going away because nukes are.

    James Greenidge
    Queens NY

    1. Is there actually some chance that “ANS and NEI and other nuclear power organs will justify their existence…” ?
      The impression I get from some of the top people is that they’re still playing the “let’s befriend the antinukes, and maybe they’ll eventually like us…”
      Alternatively, some of them simply refuse to climb down from their proverbial Ivory Towers, to engage the opposition in their own – decidedly dirty – game.
      Is there “hope for humanity” ?

  3. Michael is one of my heroes, as is Rod.
    I had not known quite the level of filthy fossil carbon support for Sierra Club’s and “Friends” of The Earth’s opposition to nuclear.

    My own calculations amount to a proof that the so called “renewable” energy sources, with the possible slight exception of geothermal IF you’re near the Ring of Fire, are UTTERLY worthless. Cutting back nuclear power when the wind is blowing saves you absolutely nothing.
    At the moment, receiving 100 MW of actual power from a 150 MW wind “farm” means you had better have a gas turbine running at 100 MW short of its full capacity.
    California, since the year 2001 when the system paid ransom level fees for “spinning reserve” and fired its governor as a scapegoat, ought to know better than to rely upon intermittent power, no matter how “free” it is after you’ve paid a fortune and sacrificed square miles for it.

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