TOP
TEN WAYS Pro-Nuclear MEN STRIKE OUT WITH Anti-Nuclear WOMEN
(updated 2016/03/18)
Yes, this is a shameless attempt to create
some click-bait. Nothing attracts internet traffic as well as putting a complex message
in the format of a ten-point listicle related to dating tips, so I've put this spin
on a list that sums up the pro-nuclear talking points that anti-nuclear
proponents have tirelessly refuted over the years. It wasn't too much of a stretch to put the nuclear energy issue into this format because it can actually be seen as a perverse sort
of mating ritual. One side wants to mess with the other’s genetic material, and
the other has to decide whether to let that happen. Thus nuclear energy
proponents play the suitor to a very skeptical object of attention who wishes
not to have herself or the planet despoiled by radiation. Overconfident about
their weak arguments and rhetorical skills, and underestimating the strength of
counter-arguments, the would-be seducers miss the subtle cues that indicate they
are failing to persuade. They might benefit from reading this list so that they
can start thinking of better rhetorical tricks and pick-up lines, but I suspect
that if there were any, they would have used them by now. Unfortunately, the majority of the population doesn't think too critically about the issue, so the lame arguments have been good enough to fool most of the people
(and most journalists) most of the time.
Read more on this topic in this free book written by Ace Hoffman |
1.
You can use electricity and still be anti-nuclear
Supposedly, one is a hypocrite to be
anti-nuclear if one has ever used an electrical appliance, as if there are no
other ways electricity could be generated, or ways we could use less of it. Jane
Fonda had great big hair in The China
Syndrome way back in 1979 when she played a journalist investigating
corruption at a power plant. The engineers in the story muttered among
themselves about her hypocrisy because they were sure that she couldn't live
without her hairdryer. Dan Aykroyd made great fun of this argument on Saturday Night Live the same year in a
hilarious Point-Counterpoint
segment of Weekend Update:
Who’d be the first to complain when the electricity
goes out, Jane? You and your horde of promiscuous anti-nuclear harpies. I can
just see you now sitting alone in your darkened apartment staring forlornly at
your now useless vibrator. You’ll be humming a different tune then, Jane.
2.
Anti-nuclear people are not unscientific, extremist conspiracy freaks
Someone, somewhere found a map of the 2011
tsunami rippling over the Pacific and declared over the internet that it showed
the spread of Fukushima radiation stretching all the way to Chile. The message
went viral for a while, and nuclear advocates had great fun using it as an
illustration of the irrational panic over the disaster. Anti-nuclear people
were said to be just a bunch of scientifically illiterate conspiracy freaks, incapable
of rational assessment of the risks. The ridicule conveniently ignored the fact
that most of the anti-nuclear movement is serious, well-informed and careful
not to spread bad information. It was actually not too paranoid to suspect the easily-ridiculed
rumors were a deliberate disinformation campaign designed to discredit
legitimate criticism. When the truly awful news coming out of Fukushima isn't so easy to laugh at, the pro-nuclear side decides to lie shamelessly, turn off
monitoring equipment, hide data, deflect attention, or just say nothing.
3.
Nuclear energy is not the solution to global warming
The nuclear industry has been quite
successful in getting the mainstream media to perpetuate the myth that nuclear
energy is carbon free. But the line only works on people who don’t bother to
ask some simple questions. If the pro-nuclear seducer realizes his target knows
too much, he’s likely to become evasive and make excuses to move on. When
pressed on the point, they admit that nuclear does have a carbon footprint, it
involves tremendous ecological and health damage and risks, and—even if these
problems didn't exist—it costs too much to provide a timely and significant
reduction of global warming effects.
4.
Nuclear weapons and nuclear energy are connected
Many have tried to argue that the world
could have nuclear energy after abolishing nuclear weapons. Yes,
hypothetically, it is possible. Thousands of people throughout history have
taken vows of celibacy, so tomorrow it is possible
that the entire population of the world will suddenly want to follow their
example. In the same way, one can argue that nations could continue to mine
uranium and enrich it, and create plutonium in their nuclear power plants, and
never once be tempted to put a little aside for use in a bomb. However, sensible
people are pragmatic when they look for ways to restrain the worst impulses of
human nature, and pragmatism dictates that one should stay several steps
removed from the most dangerous objects of temptation. The idealism of the
nuclear proponents in this argument is remarkable because in most other cases
they view themselves as the hard-headed pragmatists and their opponents as
utopian dreamers. You actually have to be a utopian to insist that the nuclear
industry could be de-militarized yet continue to exist only for peaceful purposes.
5.
The banana equivalent and natural background radiation
All potassium on earth consists of a small
percentage of radioactive isotopes. Bananas are rich in potassium, so every
time you eat a banana, you load your body up with a bit of radiation.
Pro-nuclear explainers love to use the banana equivalent to tell people that
they have nothing to worry about when they are caught downwind of a nuclear
accident, or they have to accept a certain amount of radioactive cesium in the
food grown on contaminated land. Potassium is a vital mineral that is always in
our bodies, so we always carry a certain amount of internal radioactive
contamination.
It is sad that so many professional
engineers and scientists are not able to see the flawed logic here, or worse
that they see it but don’t care because they think the argument is good enough
to have an effect on the majority of people who won’t think about the issue too
much. Potassium is always in our bodies, and the amount is always in the
equilibrium that lets our nervous system function normally. Life has evolved
over a billion years to co-exist with this very low level of radiation from a
limited amount of potassium. Although cesium is chemically analogous to
potassium in many biochemical reactions, the body doesn't have a way of keeping
the level of cesium in equilibrium. If it is continuously present in the food
supply, it accumulates in muscles and other tissues and can do serious damage.
It doesn't just cause cancer. It kills cells and can, for example, cause fatal
amounts of muscle atrophy in the heart.
In addition to cesium, nuclear accidents
expose people to other isotopes that get absorbed internally. They pose
specific radiological and chemical risks to different organs of the body. It is
absurd to compare natural radiation exposure to the exposure that happens from
man-made nuclear technologies. There is no banana equivalent.
A variation of the banana equivalent canard
refers to natural background radiation. Various forms of natural radiation
exposure (from high altitude flying, for example) are compared to the types of
contamination that are caused by the nuclear industry. Nuclear advocates
deliberately speak only about the external gamma radiation dose, always
deflecting, or deaf to, questions about internal contamination. However, people
living in a contaminated environment want to know specifically what damage will
be done, for example, by the strontium in their bones or the plutonium in their
gonads.
6.
The total supply chain matters
The belief that nuclear energy is safe and
carbon free relies on keeping people focused on nuclear fission, and not on how
nuclear fuel is created or what is to be done with it after it is used. When
nuclear waste must be discussed, nuclear experts ignore the larger volumes of
mining waste and depleted uranium that have been left in tailings ponds, dumped
in mine shafts, or spread more widely through the ecosystems around mines or in
war zones where depleted uranium weapons have been used. Ideally, we should be
asking questions about collecting and permanently isolating mining wastes from
the environment, just as we do about storing used nuclear fuel, but the
solution to the latter problem has been so elusive that no one in the nuclear industry
wants to talk about the former. As with most of the items in the list, the
attitude in the industry is to assure that the public maintains an awesome
regard for the wizard while asking no questions about the man behind the
curtain.
7.
A nuclear waste solution does not exist
The nuclear industry likes to say that a
solution is at hand, but they’ve been saying this for a long time. Nuclear
power plants have existed for over fifty years, yet no country has built a
permanent, functioning repository for nuclear waste. A few have been built, but
waste containers in them failed just as critics predicted they would. The
failure to construct repositories is often blamed on NIMBY politics, which is
surely a factor, but the truth is that projects like Yucca Mountain in Nevada
have been cancelled because of technical uncertainties about whether waste
containers can stay intact for hundreds of thousands of years, and whether geological
features will be reliably stable over the same length of time.
Another supposed solution for nuclear waste
is that the next generation of nuclear reactors will burn up nuclear waste or
leave only short-lived waste products. The problem is that the next generation
is actually the last generation. Fast neutron reactors and thorium reactors
have been built over the decades, and they have failed or been abandoned in
development in almost every case. Only Russia successfully operates a couple
fast neutron reactors, while France, the US, the UK, Japan and Germany have all
wasted billions of dollars on this technology. Rebuttals to the next generation
proposals raise objections in terms of long-term management of the complex
technology (the need to dismantle and build new reactors long into the future
in order to "burn up" all the existing nuclear waste), ecological issues related
to mining thorium, high costs, long development timelines and political
acceptance.
There is also the possibility that present marketing
campaigns are no more than elaborate Ponzi schemes that have come into existence
at a time when central banks are “printing” money and letting it slosh around
in the financial system (as opposed to putting it in consumers’ pockets). You
know something is fishy when you see banner ads suddenly appearing frequently that
tell how you too can learn how to invest in thorium, “the future of nuclear
energy.”
8.
Flawed models for health surveys
The established norms for radiation safety
were created by the military and civilian nuclear complex which had no motivation to support research that would produce unfavorable data. Dissenting
scientists were continually sidelined, and the official view came to focus on
external gamma radiation and cancer, whereas victims are more concerned about
the long-term effects of internal alpha and beta radiation, and about both
cancer and the non-cancerous health effects of radiation.
From the very beginning, doctors on the
ground in Hiroshima protested against the censorship and the neglect of some of
the observed health effects, by both the American Occupation and the Japanese
government. In subsequent years, any time researchers found illnesses related
to nuclear accidents, their findings were dismissed because they didn't fit the
established “Hiroshima model” that was, besides being flawed, based inappropriately
on a unique event in terms of bomb type, population affected, geography, soils
and weather conditions.
9.
False analogies to other risks
Hey, life is dangerous, right? Nothing
ventured, nothing gained. We take risks just get to a workplace every day. The
average schmuck puts so much tobacco, booze, drugs and bad food into his body
that it is hypocritical of him to worry about a few atoms of tritium in the
drinking water. So the argument goes, but pointing out humanity’s tendency
toward self-destructive risk-taking doesn't seem to support the pro-nuclear
argument. This reasoning also conflates the risks that people freely choose to
take with those that are imposed on them, or imposed on people yet to be born
far into the future. Furthermore, even though it is natural to take risks, we
have lines we will not cross in order to achieve our goals. If we are not
pathological, we don’t sell our children into prostitution, or hire hit men to
eliminate our rivals. The continuing accumulation of nuclear waste at nuclear
power stations is the same sort of moral line many people do not want to cross.
We don’t want to gain a benefit from anything that leaves future generations
with this hazard.
10.
No one has died from radiation at a nuclear power plant
Your point being???
The point doesn't seem relevant to
anything, but even for this statement to be true, it has to be so narrowly
defined that it loses whatever persuasiveness it might have. OK, no nuclear
plant worker has ever died from acute radiation sickness during a nuclear
emergency, but in order to celebrate this achievement, we have to say the
firefighters who died at Chernobyl weren't officially nuclear plant workers. And,
of course, the pro-nuclear lobby follows a capitalist ideology that easily
dismisses Chernobyl as an anomaly created by an inferior political system. That
line of thinking lost its power when three General Electric reactors melted
down in capitalist Japan.
The statement is also true only if we
exclude the two radiation deaths that occurred in 1999 in the Tokaimura accident
in Japan. Those workers don’t count because they were mixing fuel at a nuclear
facility but not at a nuclear power plant. The list of exclusions goes on like
this. More importantly, any honest discussion of nuclear energy has to include all
of its effects, including those that are inseparable from the military
applications. Uranium is mined, processed and enriched to make fuel for both reactors
and bombs, and the depleted uranium is used in weapons. Millions of people have
been, and will be for a very long time, affected by the radiation that has spilled
out of the activities of the nuclear industry, though no one can put a
definitive number on the toll of death and disease. Additionally, the narrow
focus on fatalities at nuclear power plants is also an absurd distraction from
the sacrifice zones, social disruption, national security anxiety and social
engineering that the nuclear age brought with it.
Further reading
I
haven’t footnoted and referenced the points made here. Readers who want to question
or know the basis of the information above can begin with these sources:
Svetlana Alexievich, Voices from Chernobyl (Picador,
2006).
Chris Busby, " It's not just cancer! Radiation, genomic instability and heritable genetic damage," The Ecologist, March 17, 2016.
Kate Brown, Plutopia: Nuclear Families, Atomic Cities and the Great Soviet and American Plutonium Disasters (Oxford University Press, 2013).
Y.I. Bandashevsky, “Non-cancer illnesses and conditions in areas of Belarus contaminated by radioactivity from the Chernobyl Accident.” Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference of the European Committee on Radiation Risk, Lesvos Greece, May 5-9th 2009. Brussels: ECRR.
Helen Caldicott (editor), Crisis Without End: The Medical and Ecological Consequences of the Fukushima Nuclear Catastrophe (The New Press, 2014).
Stephanie Cook, In Mortal Hands (Bloomsbury, 2009).
Gabrielle Hecht, Being Nuclear (MIT Press, 2012).
Shuntaro Hida, Under the Mushroom-Shaped Cloud of Hiroshima: A Memoir by Shuntaro Hida, M.D. World Citizens for Peace, 2006. (Free book, published online).
Takashi Hirose, Fukushima Meltdown: The World’s First Earthquake-Tsunami-Nuclear Disaster (Createspace, 2012 Amazon e-book).
Ace Hoffman, The Code Killers. 2008. (Free e-book, pdf format).
Joseph Mangano, Mad Science: The Nuclear Power Experiment (OR Books, 2012).
Gar Smith, Nuclear Roulette (Chelsea Green Publishing, 2012).
Eileen Welsome, The Plutonium Files (Dell Publishing, 1999).
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