@uturniaphobic There are actual credible reports talking about s. Nevada ground water contamination left from above surface and below ground nuclear testing. there's one just recently from Global Report saying traces are still hazardous in many places. it's here on You tube. much of the strontium 90 (generated exclusively from nuclear detonation) still floats in the upper atmosphere too and in the water. it's probably in our bones and teeth now.
@uturniaphobic It doesn't honor atomic testing; it documents it. There is some considerable difference. I've been to this museum. It doesn't exalt the boundless virtues of nuclear weapons and testing. It's only a history lesson.
@uturniaphobic I don't recall that I did. But whether the Museum does or doesn't, that's a matter for you to discuss with the Curator. I'm not here to tell you how clean the water is. Neither is the Museum. It doesn't go to any length to reassure people that bomb testing was benign. It does just the opposite: It tells of how that episode in history played a role in shaping our culture, which has repercussions in Society to this day. It doesn't heap praise on bomb testing.
Most of the older gentlemen conducting the tours actually worked at the test facilities back in the '50's and '60's.
barriobajaj 10 months ago
there is actually a museum to honer this fiasco?
before praising success perhaps check out the Nevada water tables...they're radiated for the next million years so thank for that, sickos
uturniaphobic 2 years ago
@uturniaphobic the halflife of atomic radiation is only 40 years (the radiation is almost depleated)
marcuspinson 10 months ago
@marcuspinson well by all means... drink up
uturniaphobic 10 months ago
@uturniaphobic will do (the radiation levels are well below hazardous)
marcuspinson 10 months ago
@uturniaphobic There are actual credible reports talking about s. Nevada ground water contamination left from above surface and below ground nuclear testing. there's one just recently from Global Report saying traces are still hazardous in many places. it's here on You tube. much of the strontium 90 (generated exclusively from nuclear detonation) still floats in the upper atmosphere too and in the water. it's probably in our bones and teeth now.
uturniaphobic 10 months ago
@uturniaphobic It doesn't honor atomic testing; it documents it. There is some considerable difference. I've been to this museum. It doesn't exalt the boundless virtues of nuclear weapons and testing. It's only a history lesson.
qed100 1 month ago
@qed100 ok I'd say a true documentation would include ramifications such as the ground water radiation. did you see that mentioned in this museum?
uturniaphobic 1 month ago
@uturniaphobic I don't recall that I did. But whether the Museum does or doesn't, that's a matter for you to discuss with the Curator. I'm not here to tell you how clean the water is. Neither is the Museum. It doesn't go to any length to reassure people that bomb testing was benign. It does just the opposite: It tells of how that episode in history played a role in shaping our culture, which has repercussions in Society to this day. It doesn't heap praise on bomb testing.
qed100 1 month ago
cool fallout grain fed to cows,,,, no wonder why theres mad cow desease
unicron24 2 years ago
that was mental, thank you!
zeffii 2 years ago