Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Outrageous Claims About Fukushima Effects


Want good pictures of Fukushima and willing to read through outright propaganda?

Read David Dixson's  Fukushima, Radiation Health Effects, and Nuclear-Powered Space Exploration
http://permalink.lanl.gov/object/tr?what=info:lanl-repo/lareport/LA-UR-12-23567

This guy has the audacity to argue that the evacuation zone should have been smaller because more people died as a result of the evacuation than will die from radiation exposure!

The guy must have a crystal ball to tell him exactly how many people have died from Fukushima and will die in the future from its radiotoxic emissions.

What a cruel joke. What kind of a person is David Dixson?

Ingesting radioisotopes is very bad for your body. People in Japan and elsewhere who ingested and inhaled radioiostopes, such as radiocesium, radioiodine, uranium, among others, are at increased risks for a range of diseases, not simply cancer.

Moreover, their children and grandchildren may suffer from genomic instability and experience radiation sensitivity, meaning they are more vulnerable to genomic instability because of susceptibilities caused by radiation's direct and indirect effects to their germline cells.

SOME RESOURCES



Goffman, J. W. (1990) Radiation-Induced Cancer from Low-Dose Exposure: An Independent Analysis 1st ed. (San Francisco: CNR Book Division).
Gould, J. M. and B. A. Goldman (1990) Deadly Deceit: Low Level Radiation, High Level Cover-Up (New York: Four Walls Eight Windows).
Hamblin, J. (2007) ‘A Dispassionate and Objective Effort: Negotiating the First Study on the Effects of Atomic Radiation’, Journal of the History of Biology, 40.1, 147-148, 152.
Hirose, T. (2011) Fukushima Meltdown (Osaka, Japan: Asahi Shinsho Books).
Langley, P. (2012) Medicine and the Bomb: Deceptions from Trinity to Maralinga. (Aldinga Beach, South Australia: Paul Langley).
Morgan, W. (2003) ‘Non-targeted and Delayed Effects of Exposure to Ionizing Radiation: I. Radiation Induced Genomic Instability and Bystander Effects In Vitro’, Radiation Research, 159.5, 567-580.
National Research Council (2006) Health Risks from Exposure to Low Levels of Ionizing Radiation: BEIR VII Phase 2 (2006), 323, http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?
            record_id=11340&page=323.
Ozasa, K. Y. Shimizu, A. Suyama, F. Kasagi, M. Soda, E. J. Grant, R. Sakata, H. Sugiyama and K. Kodama (2012) ‘Studies of the Mortality of Atomic Bomb Survivors, Report 14, 1950–2003: An Overview of Cancer and Noncancer Diseases’, Radiation Research, 177, 229.
Stagner, C. (2012). Hidden Tritium (Morgan Hills, CA: Bookstand).
Walker, S. (2000) Permissible Dose: A History of Radiation Protection in the Twentieth Century, (Berkeley, California: University of California Press).
Welsome, E. (1999) The Plutonium Files (New York: Delta).
Yablokov, A., V. Nesterenko, A. Nesterenko, and J. D. Sherman-Nevinger (eds.) Chernobyl: Consequences of the Catastrophe for People and the Environment (New York: New York Academy of Sciences).
 

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