How let's see...apparently no one in nato plans on drinking any water in Libya anytime soon. All they want is the oil. By the way you shot this video in your automobile. Does it run on biodiesel? I personally enjoy the silence from the herd over somebody crying crocodile tears over these resource wars and then funding them by filling up their tank with petrol. This is the part where I get to call you a wanker. cheers
hahahaaaa. i can see he is very pissed. depleted uranium is very useful as ammo. it burns very hot and very dense. very effective at taking out heavy armor vehicles. u expect shooting the armor tanks with an AK-47? come on dude. #LOL
It's the stuff that's left over after they take the hot stuff out, to 'enrich' the uranium used in most reactors. It emits radiation at a much slower rate. They use it because it's about twice as heavy as lead, just the thing when you want to take the turret off a tank.
The greatest health risk from large intakes of uranium is toxic damage to the kidneys, because, in addition to being weakly radioactive, uranium is a toxic metal. Uranium exposure also increases your risk of getting cancer due to its radioactivity. Since uranium tends to concentrate in specific locations in the body, risk of cancer of the bone, liver cancer, and blood diseases (such as leukemia) are increased. Inhaled uranium increases the risk of lung cancer.
@libyanjihad Yes, but it is being used out in a desert. Alpha radiation is kinetic. How long does it last? Not long. Soon, the dust settles, and the lump sits, weakly radioactive. If it's in a settlement, it gets cleaned up. The danger is chiefly breathing in a radioactive particle, but the risk quickly declines.
I think you're only looking at what could happen, rather than what does happen.
Uranium can enter the body when it is inhaled or swallowed, or under rare circumstances it may enter through cuts in the skin. Uranium does not absorb through the skin, and alpha particles released by uranium cannot penetrate the skin, so uranium that is outside the body is much less harmful than it would be if it where inhaled or swallowed. When uranium gets inside the body it can lead to cancer or kidney damage.
@Liftorangejuice No, ist´s an alpha radiation emitter. When the DU ammunition is used, a lot of respirable dust is created which is quite dangerous for the local people. The last thing you want in your lung ist an alpha emitter.
theres nothing we can do. [so I surfed on past here, lol]
TheValkarth 5 days ago
These are the End of Days............More bigger Wars will be done in coming future
shazlionusa 10 months ago
How let's see...apparently no one in nato plans on drinking any water in Libya anytime soon. All they want is the oil. By the way you shot this video in your automobile. Does it run on biodiesel? I personally enjoy the silence from the herd over somebody crying crocodile tears over these resource wars and then funding them by filling up their tank with petrol. This is the part where I get to call you a wanker. cheers
drewzillasaurusrex 10 months ago
hahahaaaa. i can see he is very pissed. depleted uranium is very useful as ammo. it burns very hot and very dense. very effective at taking out heavy armor vehicles. u expect shooting the armor tanks with an AK-47? come on dude. #LOL
KhmerD0g 10 months ago
Do you know the meaning of the word 'depleted'?
It's the stuff that's left over after they take the hot stuff out, to 'enrich' the uranium used in most reactors. It emits radiation at a much slower rate. They use it because it's about twice as heavy as lead, just the thing when you want to take the turret off a tank.
Just saying ...
BugsMr123 11 months ago
Thumbs up
elbowrinkles 11 months ago
Fuckin -A
sussexchemtrails 11 months ago
The greatest health risk from large intakes of uranium is toxic damage to the kidneys, because, in addition to being weakly radioactive, uranium is a toxic metal. Uranium exposure also increases your risk of getting cancer due to its radioactivity. Since uranium tends to concentrate in specific locations in the body, risk of cancer of the bone, liver cancer, and blood diseases (such as leukemia) are increased. Inhaled uranium increases the risk of lung cancer.
Older people are already dying
libyanjihad 11 months ago
@libyanjihad Yes, but it is being used out in a desert. Alpha radiation is kinetic. How long does it last? Not long. Soon, the dust settles, and the lump sits, weakly radioactive. If it's in a settlement, it gets cleaned up. The danger is chiefly breathing in a radioactive particle, but the risk quickly declines.
I think you're only looking at what could happen, rather than what does happen.
BugsMr123 11 months ago
Uranium can enter the body when it is inhaled or swallowed, or under rare circumstances it may enter through cuts in the skin. Uranium does not absorb through the skin, and alpha particles released by uranium cannot penetrate the skin, so uranium that is outside the body is much less harmful than it would be if it where inhaled or swallowed. When uranium gets inside the body it can lead to cancer or kidney damage.
libyanjihad 11 months ago
dude..uranium is just a metal - no radiation at all...it is as noxious as plunb
Liftorangejuice 11 months ago
@Liftorangejuice No, ist´s an alpha radiation emitter. When the DU ammunition is used, a lot of respirable dust is created which is quite dangerous for the local people. The last thing you want in your lung ist an alpha emitter.
hmpeter 11 months ago
not many people are willing to get upset.
Barklord 11 months ago