Monday 4 April 2011

Look up, way up, there's some radiation


No, not the sun, you sh*thead.
Fukushima Iodine 131 (8-day halflife) radiation.
It's floating up there.
Coming to a water source near you!
Isn't it amazing how well it floats on air currents?
It could slowly kill all of us.
Anyway, every country has got a dose by now.

In the US, the sickening consumer-society media
is trying to keep people spending, so cannot dare to shock them
with news of radiation.

Ann Coulter, one of the Miss Republican contestants
(see older blog)
has told the US that radiation is "good for you."
It'll melt away pimples, as well as the rest of your facial skin.
[oops. this might have been from a porno]

If Ann Coulter says that radiation is good for you,
three things are certain,
it's coming,
it'll maim or kill you, painfully, and
Ann Coulter has shares in big pharma (potassium iodide pills)
nuclear plants (government welfare)
private hospitals (cancer is costly!).
That's why she's dis-truthing.
Financial interest- D-uuh. Winning! (Sheen-style)

Our bodies make crucial Vitamin D when they come in contact
with radiation from the sun.
But, if we're out and some iodine radiation
floats past,
the iodine can invade our lymphatic system,
unless we take potassium iodide pills first.


"do it in Japan...do it in Iran, do it in Afghanistan" at 2:30

-Costick67 ~(8^P
checkitout:
as usual, the French are first with the news of the radioactive cloud,
from the weather guys!
on Zerohedge:



"If There Were a Reactor Meltdown or Major Leak at Fukushima, the Radioactive Cloud Would Likely be Blown Out ... Towards the US West Coast"
Submitted by George Washington on 03/13/2011 02:29 -0400

Agence-France Presse notes:

California is closely monitoring efforts to contain leaks from a quake-damaged Japanese nuclear plant, a spokesman said Saturday, as experts said radiation could be blown out across the Pacific.
"At present there is no danger to California. However we are monitoring the situation closely in conjunction with our federal partners," Michael Sicilia, spokesman for
California Department of Public Health, told AFP.
"California does have radioactivity monitoring systems in place for air, water and the food supply and can enhance that monitoring if a danger exists," he added.
Experts have suggested that, if there were a reactor meltdown or major leak at Fukushima, the radioactive cloud would likely be blown out east across the Pacific, towards the US West Coast.
"The wind direction for the time being seems to point the (nuclear) pollution towards the Pacific," said Andre-Claude Lacoste of the French Nuclear Safety Authority, briefing journalists in Paris on the Japanese crisis.
Earlier the NRC said it was "examining all available information as part of the effort to analyze the event and understand its implications both for Japan and the United States."