Send it to the moon, I tells ya! God already gave us a nuclear waste dump. Yeah, it's going to mess up some love songs, but it's time we put the moon to some use.Matthew D said:Yes it will eventually start to seep into the ground water.. and NO it is not a small problem
Matthew D said:Yes it will eventually start to seep into the ground water.. and NO it is not a small problem
ss01 said:The problem with radioactivity is that it is nearly-eternal. A radioactive substance will remain radioactive for a VERY long time, millenia in some cases. You can't spread it around. There is enough radioactive waste today that if you spread it EVENLY on the whole surface of the globe, the entire place would be a wasteland. It is THAT bad. The idea would be to spread this waste evenly in the whole VOLUME of the earth. Now the guy who invents the technology to do that isn't born yet.
Matthew D said:I don't know how many times I have hear absolutes turn into... well we didn't think it could happen.. AND No I don't base my information from a damn movie.. I do remember hearing when I was a kid that asbestoes was the next best thing to sliced bread and other BS.. alpha-emitting particles do have the ability to mutate DNA and that my friend is a very serious thing.. Someone refresh my memory why did we abandon more than a few nuclear reactor construction sites?
25 years away on dealing with a waste problem.. umm.. I will have to see that to believe that one, not that I think you are lying but I know how that things we thought were coming down the pipe suddenly didn't materialize in the time frame we thought they would.
I know it is stored under a mountain in a area that has not be seismically active for as long as we have been recording but the whole thought of all that waste stored in one area gives me the willies...
I personally wish that Oak Ridge would be able to solve their problems with fusion reactors and then I wouldn't mind nuke power as much..
2.67 for regular here last I checked.jmh80 said:Sorry CDB - I neglected to remember Cali (is that where you are?) has much higher prices than the Gulf Coast.
It's like $2.47-2.55 around here. So, I was comparing to here.
When I saw how much shielding the newer generation of reactors had, I wasn't worried about terrorists. Tracking waste might still be an issue, the reactors aren't.Sir Foxx said:The reactor I worked at can take a direct hit by a 747 and still be intact. You do realize the kind of containment built around these things don't you? 6 to 18 ft of reinforced concrete, 1 to 2 ft of steel, another couple of feet of lead, just to name a few. The outer building(s) will be toast, but the reactor itself will be just fine.
I would doubt it from what I've seen. The things are built like small mountains with Christ knows how many safeties. Plus, there's always risk vs reward. If there's a major chance it could help reduce dependence on petroleum products and a very minor chance a few hundred to a few thousand people might get irradiated, I say build them. Stick one right in the middle of my neighborhood if they want, I'm game.ss01 said:I'll bet that when the exterior buildings of the reactor are all smashed to bits and the inside of the reactor gets shaken HARD by a thousand-ton object flying into it at hundreds of miles an hour, that some part of the management system fails, and the whole thing goes meltdown.
That's the worrisome part. Oh, and if the 9/11 attacks really wanted to REALLY rattle america, they would have tried something like that.
We'll see...![]()
BigVrunga said:hahahaha-that's crazy!!! Ill do whatever I can to decrease my dependance on petroleum products. First step was getting rid of my truck and buying an Accord. Next summer maybe Ill run all my errands on a motorcycle.
BV
Yup, those other countries, what champs. Stagnating in socialist nonsensical borderline poverty when their economies could have advanced quite easily and quickly. And what dullards we are for increasing our productivity and available capital to the point where we have tons of leisure time and tons of ways to occupy ourselves during that time. I can't believe how small minded and bitchy we are when we complain every time our government's own meager attempts at destroying our economy affect this horrible tendency of Americans. You'd think we'd have learned by now.not_big_enuf said:The US is pretty behind and finally now understands what other countries have done for years and years. We want our conveniences and at all costs and when things get harder, we bitch. You all know how it goes... gotta have those cabins and weekend trips hours away, or gotta pull those boats with a truck, or have that room, etc, etc.
Given the success of other government initiatives I don't know why people are so hesitant to let them develop alternative energy. Maybe because tons and tons of resources will be squandered and lost in the process because of the lack of accountability in such programs, but go figure. As for the market delivering such resources, it will when they become more economical compared to the alternatives. I don't get people who complain about high oil/gas prices and then demand more capital be poured into developing alternative energy sources. It's the high price of oil and gas that will spur such research and development. It's the government's constant nudging of the petroleum industry towards a present oriented business model and other interventions that's the main cause of these price fluctuations. If they hadn't been doing that the price of oil would have still fluctuated but would have been a hell of a lot smoother, and were it to finally rise because of diminishing reserves or increasing demand, the same thing would occur. Other resources would become more economical to develop.Bah, I just bought an SUV a few months ago... but my wife and I carpool to work now and save TONS of money. It's too bad we didn't wake up sooner and demand different cars running on different energy sources. It's also too bad we don't use public transportation nor put the money we should into developing it.
who told you that? have you ever been to europe in your life?CDB said:Yup, those other countries, what champs. Stagnating in socialist nonsensical borderline poverty when their economies could have advanced quite easily and quickly. And what dullards we are for increasing our productivity and available capital to the point where we have tons of leisure time and tons of ways to occupy ourselves during that time. I can't believe how small minded and bitchy we are when we complain every time our government's own meager attempts at destroying our economy affect this horrible tendency of Americans. You'd think we'd have learned by now.
In the end there's nothing to admire in this particular situation in the European countries. Their policies are actually quite idiotic.
Adjusted for inflation and excluding temporary price spikes due to market uncertainty, mostly from wars in the middle east, embargos and unstable political situations in other areas where supplies originate, the prices of gas and oil haven't risen much if at all. That doesn't mean other factors can't make price 'rises' due to this or that factor harder to bear, but the situation is more complex than looking at the price then and now.not_big_enuf said:The point is that we, as the consumer, can't do anything about it so why complain about it? We take for granted that we are on top of the food chain and yes, we have given ourselves every right to have every convenience. Gas prices have been on the rise for years but until it directly hurts us we do little about it.
Spoiled? No. Spoiled implies you're getting something you didn't work for and don't really deserve. Americans have busted their asses for years and historically are one of the most productive populations that ever existed. Our productivity is for the most part in line with our energy consumption. Americans have every right to complain at the pumps, they just usually have no idea why they should be complaining. They blame ExxonMobile, not the government and their own stupidity in voting for people who have regulated, inflated and warred us into a pseudoshortage.Sorry, it just irritates me that I hear constant complaints but few do little but keep going to the pumps. We live in a country where we DO get whatever we want and have so much we forget about it. Spoiled? Yep. But at least I realize it.
Many times. I have family all over the continent. Most of whom live in tiny houses or apartments and who hold jobs which, if they held them in America, would allow them to afford a much higher standard of living. Perhaps the statement was a bit hyperbolic, but the fact remains heavy socialistic and flat out socialist policies cause the squandering of vast amounts of resources and cause a permanent missallocation of resources that leads to a semipermanent economic recession. The more extreme the socialist forces, the more extreme the recession until it falls apart in an overall collapse.judge-mental said:who told you that? have you ever been to europe in your life?
I don't recall saying we should keep with the oil. I do recall saying several times that market forces should be allowed to work as they do for every other resource. This would allow the smoothing out of price fluctuations as speculators cut current production in anticipation of future needs. This would also allow a realigning of the overalll business models used by petroleum companies so they are not so present oriented. A good start would be to eliminate freedom of the seas, allow ownership of offshore resources, stopping subsidies and tax breaks for exploration, etc.not only that, oil (As we know it) will run out at about 2030. lets see you than talk about how we should keep with the oil.
jmh80 said:You want to bankrupt oil companies?
You want people to lose jobs? I'm sure that would do wonders for gas prices huh?
You got a Delorian that runs with a Mr. Fusion that I don't know about? You can just trash like Dr. Brown to run your car?
People want cheap gas. They want cleaner burning gas. They also do not want chemical processing plants anywhere near they live. These 3 goals are not quite the same. You obviously need to locate a plant where you can attract quality workers. And cleaner burning gas requires more complex equipment that costs plenty of money. This equipment does not allow for more throughput of motor gasoline. So, being that we are all public companies and we don't have arcane price caps as in China, end product prices will rise as gas becomes cleaner.
BigVrunga said:Freaking crazy! Its over $3.00 at some stations where I live. Funny thing is, some stations are charging upwards of $3.30 and others are still $2.85 or so. What's up with that??
BV
5.67 in atlanta
Jesus H. Christ I thought I was getting robbed at $3.07 for the cheapest gas I could find.Beelzebub said:5.67 in atlanta![]()
D_town said:It costs OPEC $4 a barrel to produce and market, and they are selling it for about $70 a barrel. Just doesn't seem right. It was just 6-7 years ago that we were paying about 99 cents a gallon.
The Netherlands, family in Delft and Amsterdamn. Cousins in London, and some aunt in Sweden I haven't seen since I was twelve. but I do remember she was a lawyer or whatever they call them in Sweden, and lived in an apartment, not a home. My father tried to explain to me why at the time, I didn't get it until later.judge-mental said:what countries are those, if I may ask?