Sam Botta: I asked you the secret of lifetime love (two years before)… And you said your man at the time adores you… Tanya Roberts: My man died 18 months ago after 25 years of a beautiful marriage, I grew up with him, and he did adore me, I adored him, and that’s what happens, I’m lucky to have had 25 years of outrageous love and friendship. SB: How did you get through the pain? TR: If I didn’t pull myself together I wouldn’t have been able to keep him alive and take care of him, that’s what you do. It’s Nothing heroic you just do it. You don’t want to see the one you love totally screwed up.. and you manage. I love you. www.imdb.me/livefearless IMDB.COM: www.imdb.com Tanya Roberts came from modest beginnings in the Bronx, New York, the daughter of a pen salesman (Irish) and a mother (Jewish) who were divorced before she reached high school. Tanya dropped out of high school at age 15, got married and hitchhiked around the country until her mother-in-law had the marriage annulled. She met psychology student Barry Roberts in New York while waiting in line to see a movie. A few months later, she proposed to him in a subway station, and they were married. .. Beautiful love story. Secretly hope. Live life with the kind of love that lasts. The memories, the hopes, the dreams. Never forgetting. Video Rating: 3 / 5
Heather Childers takes a look inside the walls of the damaged nuclear plant in Japan, where a team known as the “Fukushima 50″ is working furiously to prevent a nuclear meltdown. The team is actually comprised of 180 men who are fighting fires and explosions and manually pumping sea water on to the overheated reactors. Radiation levels inside the plant are so high that humans cannot be exposed for longer than 15 minutes at a time. For more from the Fox News Insider, check out www.foxnewsinsider.com. Video Rating: 4 / 5
Fukushima is a problem for every person in this world. It will be leaking radiation into the ground and sea for a very long time. This will effect every country on earth eventually, The U.S. will be hit hard. Cancer rates will spike. It could be 50-100 years until the fuel rods are removed. The radiation is in the groundwater around Fukushima. Plants will be radiated which will spread to everything that eats plants, also fish are radiated. It’s not the type of radiation that just disapears after a few weeks but the kind that sticks around for thousands of years. The MSM said everything was fine but they can’t be trusted.
Best answer:
Answer by itsamini1 miscarriage rates on the west coast have already skyrocketed. This is much worse than Chernobyl because at least they were eventually able to bury it in concrete.
Operators at the Fukushima Daiichi plant’s Unit 1 scrambled ferociously to tamp down heat and pressure inside the reactor after the 8.9 magnitude quake and the tsunami that followed cut off electricity to the site and disabled emergency generators, knocking out the main cooling system. Ryohei Shiomi said Saturday that officials were checking whether a meltdown had taken place at the Fukushima Daiichi plant. Some 3000 people within two miles of the plant were urged to leave their homes, but the evacuation zone was more than tripled to 6.2 miles after authorities detected eight times the normal radiation levels outside the facility and 1000 times normal inside Unit 1′s control room. The government declared a state of emergency at the Daiichi unit — the first at a nuclear plant in Japan’s history. But hours later, the Tokyo Electric Power Co., which operates the six-reactor Daiichi site, announced that it had lost cooling ability at a second reactor there and three units at its nearby Fukushima Daini site. This file photo shows the Fukushima Daiichi power plant, which had its cooling system fail Friday after a massive earthquake caused a power outage This file photo shows the Fukushima Daiichi power plant, which had its cooling system fail Friday after a massive earthquake caused a power outage The government quickly declared states of emergency for those units, too, and thousands of residents near Fukushima Daini also were told to leave. The United State has offered to …
Going into the wee hours of the morning after finishing tidying up. Fukushima – Life on the Fly 12 – Mayor X Speaks www.youtube.com Fukushima – Life on the Fly – 12 to 13 – Mayor X Speaks www.youtube.com Fukushima – Life on the Fly – 13 – Mayor X Speaks www.youtube.com … Video Rating: 5 / 5
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Lemoniz Nuclear Power Plant was a nuclear power plant under construction in Lemoniz, Spain in 1983 when the Spanish nuclear power expansion program was cancelled following a change of government. Its two PWRs, each of 900MWe, were almost complete but were never operated.
Central Nuclear de Lemoniz, Basque Country, Spain
Image by almighty g0d
Lemoniz Nuclear Power Plant was a nuclear power plant under construction in Lemoniz, Spain in 1983 when the Spanish nuclear power expansion program was cancelled following a change of government. Its two PWRs, each of 900MWe, were almost complete but were never operated.
Please click on “cc” button to show English subtitles. Prof. Kunihiko Takeda is a professor in mechanical engineering at Chubu University. On May 18, he appeared as a witness to give testimony to the Committee on Science and Education in Japan’s Lower House in the Diet. He had worked for a private chemical company for more than 25 years, spending some years as director of uranium research center, before entering into academic world. Since March 11 accident, he has aggressively criticized the government and TEPCO both in media and on his own blog. His blog (Japanese only) is widely read partly because he always explains things and gives radiation-related advices in easy-to-understand language. One of his most compelling blogposts is translated by EX-SKF blog: ex-skf.blogspot.com Translation and captioning by tokyobrowntabby. German-subtitled version is here: www.youtube.com Video Rating: 5 / 5
Economics of Dependence on Foreign Oil – Rising Gasoline Prices – Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming – 2007-05-09 – AS PRICES BREAK RECORDS, PERSONAL STORIES FROM BUSINESSPEOPLE, FARMERS, BUS DRIVERS REVEAL ECONOMIC TOLL OF AMERICA’S OIL DEPENDENCE. WITNESS TESTIMONY: Sylvia Estes, Pipeline and Industrial Group, Virginia Beach, VA; Michael Mitternight, Factory Service Agency, Metairie, LA; Terry Thomas, President and CEO, Community Bus Services Inc., Youngstown, OH; Donn Teske, Farmer and President, Kansas Farmers Union, McPherson, KS; John Felmy, Chief Economist, American Petroleum Institute. Video provided by the US House of Representatives. Video Rating: 4 / 5
Eric Schmidt speaks at a forum jointly hosted by Google and the Pittsburgh Technology Council on September 23, 2009 in Pittsburgh, PA. Video Rating: 4 / 5
An expert says that radiation could be released from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in about 2 and half days if the injection of cooling water into reactors is halted for any reason. Masanori Naito, director in charge of nuclear safety analysis at the Institute of Applied Energy, was speaking to NHK about the revised plan to bring the troubled plant under control. The Japanese government and Tokyo Electric Power Company, the plant’s operator, announced the plan on Tuesday. The government and TEPCO said in a joint assessment that the target of the first stage of the original plan —- to steadily reduce the level of radiation being released from the plant —- has been met over the past 3 months. They said the amount of radioactive substances spewing from the No.1 to No.3 reactors has been cut to one 2-millionth of the peak recorded just after the nuclear accident in March. The effort to stabilize the nuclear facility now shifts to the second stage, when workers will focus on further cutting the release of radioactive substances over the next 6 months. Emphasis will be on reactor cooling systems that recycle contaminated water. The goal is to achieve cold shutdown by reducing reactor water temperatures to below 100 degrees Celsius. Naito says nuclear fuel levels at the plant have dropped below one-tenth of what they were immediately after the accident, but warns of remaining risks. He says the government and TEPCO should explain these risks to nearby residents and … Video Rating: 0 / 5
Image by almighty g0d
Lemoniz Nuclear Power Plant was a nuclear power plant under construction in Lemoniz, Spain in 1983 when the Spanish nuclear power expansion program was cancelled following a change of government. Its two PWRs, each of 900MWe, were almost complete but were never operated.
Central Nuclear de Lemoniz, Basque Country, Spain
Image by almighty g0d
Lemoniz Nuclear Power Plant was a nuclear power plant under construction in Lemoniz, Spain in 1983 when the Spanish nuclear power expansion program was cancelled following a change of government. Its two PWRs, each of 900MWe, were almost complete but were never operated.
Image by Emily OS
This looks like Greenpeace propaganda… but it’s not a nuclear plant. It’s the Brunot’s Island Power Plant. I think it burns "clean" coal…
The sun, on the other hand, is a gigantic nuclear furnace.
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This is a perfect private beach in a nuclear plant.
Chernobyl
Image by Blacklili
Sarcófago sobre el cuarto reactor.
Fears of a full-scale nuclear reactor meltdown are increasing as Japanese authorities use military helicopters to dump water on the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station. The water appears to have missed its target and failed to cool the plant’s reactors and spent fuel rods. “The walls of defense are falling, with the melting of the cores, the collapsing of the—we’re expecting the collapsing of the vessels. And then, with these damaged containments, these are all open windows to the atmosphere,” says Paul Gunter of Beyond Nuclear. Some experts say US reactors are safer than those in Japan. But investigative journalist, Karl Grossman, notes a 1985 report by the National Regulatory Commission acknowledged a 50 percent chance of a severe core accident among the more than 100 nuclear power plants in the United States over a 20-year period. Headlines : “Serious Danger of a Full Core Meltdown”: Update on Japan’s Nuclear Catastrophe Report from Sendai: Fears of Radioactivity Are Hampering Relief Efforts Hiroshima Organizes Scientific Teams and Medical Treatment Centers to Receive Victims of Radiation Poisoning Prominent Japanese Environmentalist Keibo Oiwa Urges Global Movement to End Nuclear Power and Confront the “Crazy System Based on Greed, Anger and Ignorance” Original Website : democracynow.org www.democracynow.org Video source file : ewheel.democracynow.org The original content of this program is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No … Video Rating: 5 / 5
Radiation levels from Japan’s nuclear units can be found here: Reactor Units 1,2,3,5&6: atmc.jp Unit no. 4: atmc.jp Here, www.woweather.com , you will find a wide range of data about the cloud spread radiation. EPA Radiation Monitoring: www.epa.gov Radpro Conversions: www.radprocalculator.com Sievert: www.britannica.com (referenced below) “sievert (Sv), unit of radiation absorption in the International System of Units (SI). The sievert takes into account the relative biological effectiveness (RBE) of ionizing radiation, since each form of such radiation—eg, X-rays, gamma rays, neutrons—has a slightly different effect on living tissue. Accordingly, one sievert is generally defined as the amount of radiation roughly equivalent in biological effectiveness to one gray (or 100 rads) of gamma radiation. The sievert is inconveniently large for various applications, and so the millisievert (mSv), which equals 1/1000 sievert, is frequently used instead. One millisievert corresponds to 10 ergs of energy of gamma radiation transferred to one gram of living tissue. The sievert was recommended in 1977 by the International Commission on Radiation Units and Measurements (ICRU) as a substitute for the rem, the long-standing special unit for measuring biological absorption of radiation. The average person receives about 2.4 mSv per year from natural radiation such as radon gas, thoron gas, and cosmic rays. A chest CT scan results in a dose of 6.8 mSv. The US Nuclear Regulatory Commission … Video Rating: 5 / 5