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EE_
10th October 2014, 05:14 AM
Astronaut on Space Station: "I’ve never seen anything like it"
CNN: This could be a hypothetical Category 6…
Cloud field would cross entire US… Among strongest we’ve ever seen
NBC: Waves already up to 50 ft.
http://www.jpss.noaa.gov/images/media-gallery/gallery-weather_18.jpg
http://enenews.com/japan-times-monstrous-supertyphoon-course-smash-japan-weekend-cnn-could-be-hypothetical-category-6-cloud-field-stretch-across-entire-among-strongest-storms-weve-nbc-waves-already-high-50-ft-phot

Typhoon expected to make direct hit on Fukushima — Gov’t models show center of Vongfong over nuclear plant next week
http://enenews.com/latest-govt-models-show-typhoon-making-direct-hit-fukushima-center-vongfong-expected-be-nuclear-plant-tuesday-maps

http://media2.s-nbcnews.com/i/newscms/2014_41/707976/141009-syper-typhoon-jsw-720a_161f6286f5ce1b31a41cb85cd74d0e18.jpg

midnight rambler
10th October 2014, 06:12 AM
Holy shit. That should scour the site of any remaining residual radioactive material.

Celtic Rogue
10th October 2014, 06:20 AM
Holy shit. That should scour the site of any remaining residual radioactive material.

The only question is.... Where is all that is all the scoured material going to be going? My guess is it will make things exponentially worse for the surrounding countries and people!

midnight rambler
10th October 2014, 06:29 AM
The only question is.... Where is all that is all the scoured material going to be going? My guess is it will make things exponentially worse for the surrounding countries and people!

Going into 'the environment' = the entire planet but especially the Pacific Ocean.

I failed to include /sarc in that post.

Twisted Titan
10th October 2014, 06:51 AM
If you are not leaving the area .....There is absolutely nothing you can do but get right with your creator.

EE_
10th October 2014, 07:05 AM
If you are not leaving the area .....There is absolutely nothing you can do but get right with your creator.

1/2 of the Japs are Atheists, so I've read. No creator for them.
They will just disappear into nothingness as if their lives never existed and had no importance.

aeondaze
10th October 2014, 07:54 AM
1/2 of the Japs are Atheists, so I've read. No creator for them.
They will just disappear into nothingness as if their lives never existed and had no importance.

And that is different to the believers in what way?

Santa
10th October 2014, 08:00 AM
My guess is 90% of the radiation will wind up in Florida.

gunDriller
10th October 2014, 08:07 AM
And that is different to the believers in what way?

an Evangelical Christian at they gym has been expounding on Christian beliefs -
* it's like a Swiss Army knife - it solves ALL problems.
* if you believe the core points of the mythology, after you die, even if you spent your last years in a state of Dementia, you are whisked off to a place called Heaven.


personally, I believe in God because of something that happened.

but I don't believe the Christian mythology.


it's interesting how the Christian mythology is similar to Muslim mythology.


paradoxically, believing that Muslims are devil-worshippers may be KEY to the US military, so it can send young, mostly Christian, people, mostly from poor rural sections of the country, to be Israel's security guard in the Middle East.


as for this hurricane - a direct hit on Fukushima would be like a direct hit on Chernobyl.

if not managed properly, Fukushima is an ELE (extinction level event.)

it looks like it's not managed properly.


Silver Lining - temporary yen weakness could lead to USD strength and more buying opportunity.

7th trump
10th October 2014, 08:56 AM
That little tiny dot called fukushima cant possibly contaminate the world......look at that satelite photo of the storm and ask yourself if a dot that you couldnt see will kill off the planet.
No possible way....the best thing that could happen was for a hurricane to hit Fukushima directly and spread the problem out to lower the radiation levels to that of back ground radiation.

IMO, its God taking care of the problem.


You people crack me up reading your doom and gloom...........it seems thats all you want is drama in your life....you're all just a bunch of mental "bring me downs".......always looking at the bad side of mthings to bring your selves up.....pathetic!

EE_
10th October 2014, 09:23 AM
And that is different to the believers in what way?

Believers have faith that something bigger then us all, exists...that maybe we are here for a purpose and maybe we are significant in God's eyes. Long term focus.

Non-believers, well, nothing really matters...do what ever you want.
It's all about what you can take out of life now.
No long term focus...only the spec of time we are here.

Horn
10th October 2014, 09:25 AM
Believers have faith that something bigger then us all, exists...that maybe we are here for a purpose and maybe we are significant in God's eyes. Long term focus.

Non-believers, well, nothing really matters...do what ever you want.
It's all about what you can take out of life now.
No long term focus...only the spec of time we are here.

There is a 3rd group of believers who believe they will be saved directly thru their State or God's actions. So much so they are compelled to act upon their beliefs into slaying anything else alive.

They are wholly different and compromise most if not all non-god faring state humanists, and devout religious populations in every civilization across the globe.

Horn
10th October 2014, 09:30 AM
Some kind of straight line field effect emanating away from center point there.

Maybe HT or CERN's singularity....

http://gold-silver.us/forum/attachment.php?attachmentid=6862&stc=1


Typhoon Vongfong (Oct 2014)
Touted as the strongest typhoon this season, with sustained winds of more than 200kmh, this Category 5 typhoon has passed over Rota in the Marian Islands, Guam, and is believed to be headed straight for Japan.

Submitted by Macau, Vongfong means "wasp" in Cantonese, and was also used in the 2002 typhoon season. The storm is called Ompong in the Philippines.
- See more at: http://www.straitstimes.com/news/world/more-world-stories/story/whats-typhoons-name-20141010#sthash.OkP75xGn.dpuf

EE_
10th October 2014, 10:09 AM
My guess is 90% of the radiation will wind up in Florida.

Among other things...

In Rickety Boats, Cuban Migrants Again Flee to U.S.

By FRANCES ROBLESOCT. 9, 2014

Photo
Cuban migrants en route to Florida were intercepted by the Coast Guard in August. Those captured at sea are sent back to Cuba. Credit United States Coast Guard


MIAMI — In an unexpected echo of the refugee crisis from two decades ago, a rising tide of Cubans in rickety, cobbled-together boats is fleeing the island and showing up in the waters off Florida.

Leonardo Heredia, a 24-year-old Cuban baker, for example, tried and failed to reach the shores of Florida eight times.

Last week, he and 21 friends from his Havana neighborhood gathered the combined know-how from their respective botched migrations and made a boat using a Toyota motor, scrap stainless steel and plastic foam. Guided by a pocket-size Garmin GPS, they finally made it to Florida on Mr. Heredia’s ninth attempt.

“Things that were bad in Cuba are now worse,” Mr. Heredia said. “If there was more money in Cuba to pay for the trips, everyone would go.”

Mr. Heredia is one of about 25,000 Cubans who arrived by land and sea in the United States without travel visas in the fiscal year that ended on Sept. 30, according to government figures. He, like many others, is also an unexpected throwback to a time that experts thought had long passed: the era when Cubans boarded homemade vessels built from old car parts and inner tubes, hoping for calm seas and favorable winds. As the number of Cubans attempting the voyage nearly doubled in the past two years, the number of vessels unfit for the dangerous 90-mile crossing also climbed.

Not since the rafter crisis of 1994 has the United States received so many Cuban migrants. The increase highlights the consequences of a United States immigration policy that gives preferential treatment to Cubans and recent reforms on the island that loosened travel restrictions, and it puts a harsh spotlight on the growing frustration of a post-Fidel Castro Cuba.

More Cubans took to the sea last year than in any year since 2008, when Raúl Castro officially took power and the nation hummed with anticipation. Some experts fear that the recent spike in migration could be a harbinger of a mass exodus, and they caution that the unseaworthy vessels have already left a trail of deaths.

“I believe there is a silent massive exodus,” said Ramón Saúl Sánchez, an exile leader in Miami who has helped families of those who died at sea. “We are back to those times, like in 1994, when people built little floating devices and took to the ocean, whether they had relatives here or not.”

Although the number migrating by sea hardly compares with the summer of 1994, Mr. Sánchez said the number of illegal and legal Cuban immigrants combined has now surpassed the number of those who arrived during the crisis 20 years ago.

The United States Coast Guard spotted 3,722 Cubans in the past year, almost double the number who were intercepted in 2012. Under the migration accord signed after the 1994 crisis, those captured at sea are sent back to Cuba. Those who reach land get to stay, which the Cuban government has long argued draws many people into making the dangerous voyage.

For the past 10 years, sophisticated smuggling networks were responsible for the vast majority of Cuban migration. A crackdown by the American authorities and a lack of financing available to Cubans on the island have shifted the migration method back to what it was two decades ago, when images of desperate people aboard floating wooden planks gave Cuban migrants the “rafters” moniker.

“We have seen vessels made out of Styrofoam and some made out of inner tubes,” said Cmdr. Timothy Cronin, deputy chief of enforcement for the Coast Guard’s Miami district. “These vessels have no navigation equipment, no lifesaving equipment. They rarely have life jackets with them. They are really unsafe.”

About 20 percent of the vessels used in 2008 were homemade, but this past year, 87 percent of the migrants spotted at sea were riding rustic boats that the passengers had built themselves, Coast Guard statistics show.

Julio Sánchez, 38, a welder from Havana who traveled with Mr. Heredia, said most Cubans do not have the money to pay smugglers, and are instead forced to spend months gathering supplies for their journey.

“In our group, some people gave ideas, some gave money and some gave labor,” Mr. Sánchez said. The trip from a port east of Havana to an obscure Florida key cost them a total of $5,000, a fraction of the $200,000 or more that smugglers would have charged such a large group.

Experts said the recession cut the flow of financing for such journeys, because it was Miami relatives who made the payments. Many of the people arriving now — like those in Mr. Sánchez’s group — have no family in the United States to help pay.

“If I had to save $10,000 with my monthly salary of $17, I would not get here until I was 80 or 90 years old,” said Yannio La O, 31, an elementary school wrestling coach who arrived in Miami last week after a shipwreck landed him in Mexico.

He and 31 others departed from Manzanillo, in southern Cuba, in late August on a boat they built over the course of three months. They ran into engine trouble, and the food they brought was contaminated by a sealant they carried aboard to patch holes in the hull. They spent 24 days lost at sea.

Recent Comments
Southern Boy
4 hours ago

Who can blame them for wanting to flee the yoke of a Communist dictatorship and come to the land of the free and the home of the brave.
Uziel
4 hours ago

The Castro brothers have created a perfect instrument to avoid a Cuban Spring in the streets of Havana. From time to time, allow economic...
hugken
4 hours ago

The United States should never have imposed an embargo and should remove it immediately.The US does not rule the world, it is no business of...

“Every day at 6 a.m. or 6 p.m., somebody died,” Mr. La O said.

Nine people, including a pregnant woman, died and were thrown overboard, and six more got on inner tubes and disappeared before the Mexican Navy rescued the survivors, Mr. Sánchez said. Two more died at shore. Mr. La O said he survived by drinking urine and spearing fish.

Their deaths came as the United States Coast Guard found four bodies floating in the water 23 miles east of Hollywood, Fla. Their relatives in Miami identified their corpses by their tattoos and scars.

Mr. La O became one of the more than 22,500 Cubans who arrived in the United States by land last fiscal year — most of them in Texas. That is nearly double the number who did so in 2012.

Some of those migrants flew to Mexico and then requested entry at the Texas border. Relaxed travel rules in Cuba now allow people to exit the country more freely, a change that experts say plays a part in the surge in Southwest border arrivals. Other people, like Mr. La O, made the first leg of the journey by sea to Central America or Mexico.

Ted Henken, a Cuba scholar at Baruch College in New York, said Washington should be worried about the increase in migration, because it demonstrates that Cuba’s recent economic reforms have failed to help the majority of Cubans, making the nation vulnerable to a catastrophic event.

“If some triggering event or series of events were to happen, like with the Venezuela aid or major unrest, or a hurricane, we could have another ‘balsero’ crisis or Mariel,” Mr. Henken said, using the Spanish word for “rafter” and noting the 1980 boatlift.

A spokesman for the Cuban Interests Section in Washington did not respond to a request for comment.

Michael Flanagan, the deputy chief patrol agent for the United States Border Patrol’s Miami sector, said good weather, particularly the lack of hurricanes in recent years, has played a part in facilitating travel. Although the 91 percent increase in Cuban landings was “significant and it has our attention,” he said, it was not “remarkable.”

“Even if half the people who leave from Cuba do not survive, that means half of them did,” Mr. La O said, speaking from his grandmother’s house in Miami, where he arrived last week. “I would tell anyone in Cuba to come. It’s better to die on your feet than live on your knees.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/10/us/sharp-rise-in-cuban-migration-stirs-worries-of-a-mass-exodus.html?_r=0

EE_
10th October 2014, 10:12 AM
There is a 3rd group of believers who believe they will be saved directly thru their State or God's actions. So much so they are compelled to act upon their beliefs into slaying anything else alive.

They are wholly different and compromise most if not all non-god faring state humanists, and devout religious populations in every civilization across the globe.

Oh, you mean those...Catholics :)

gunDriller
10th October 2014, 10:13 AM
i wonder if Israel has strategy sessions, where they talk about sending Ebola infected immigrants across the US south border, packaging it so it can be blamed on Muslim.

signature of such an attack - a dead Ebola infected Mexican clutching a Koran.

EE_
10th October 2014, 10:39 AM
That little tiny dot called fukushima cant possibly contaminate the world......look at that satelite photo of the storm and ask yourself if a dot that you couldnt see will kill off the planet.
No possible way....the best thing that could happen was for a hurricane to hit Fukushima directly and spread the problem out to lower the radiation levels to that of back ground radiation.

IMO, its God taking care of the problem.


You people crack me up reading your doom and gloom...........it seems thats all you want is drama in your life....you're all just a bunch of mental "bring me downs".......always looking at the bad side of mthings to bring your selves up.....pathetic!

I know this is probably hard for you to believe but...
http://listverse.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/most-dangerous-animal-in-the-sea-sea-snake.jpg
A few milligrams of Belcher’s Sea Snake venom is enough to kill a thousand people, making the sea snake the most dangerous snake in the world in terms of venomousness

Now check this...

1 gram plutonium can overdose ten million civilians
plutonium-239 has a half-life of 24,000 years, plutonium contamination can be permanent
http://www.ccnr.org/max_plute_aecb.html

7th trump
10th October 2014, 11:48 AM
I know this is probably hard for you to believe but...
http://listverse.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/most-dangerous-animal-in-the-sea-sea-snake.jpg
A few milligrams of Belcher’s Sea Snake venom is enough to kill a thousand people, making the sea snake the most dangerous snake in the world in terms of venomousness

Now check this...

1 gram plutonium can overdose ten million civilians
plutonium-239 has a half-life of 24,000 years, plutonium contamination can be permanent
http://www.ccnr.org/max_plute_aecb.html

I've wondered the logic state of some posters and EE has confirmed theres some real dense people having no logic.

Ok EE spread that 1 milligram of snake venom across the globe and see how deadly it is......bet that nobody dies from it.
I suppose since the snake lives in the sea that your logical reasoning would be that the oceans are deadly and polluted with snake venum....Hahahaha!

Hitch
10th October 2014, 11:57 AM
I've wondered the logic state of some posters and EE has confirmed theres some real dense people having no logic.

Ok EE spread that 1 milligram of snake venom across the globe and see how deadly it is......bet that nobody dies from it.
I suppose since the snake lives in the sea that your logical reasoning would be that the oceans are deadly and polluted with snake venum....Hahahaha!

7th, and how small is the ebola virus? One little virus enough to kill a whole human body, impossible! But it is.

EE_
10th October 2014, 12:02 PM
I've wondered the logic state of some posters and EE has confirmed theres some real dense people having no logic.

Ok EE spread that 1 milligram of snake venom across the globe and see how deadly it is......bet that nobody dies from it.
I suppose since the snake lives in the sea that your logical reasoning would be that the oceans are deadly and polluted with snake venum....Hahahaha!

No you're dense, you haven't a clue how potent some substances are.
I'd like to see and experiment with one tiny spec of plutonium put in your beer, and you drinking it.
You'd show us your logic and reasoning, wouldn't you?

General of Darkness
10th October 2014, 12:10 PM
Where's Al when you need him?

http://www.unitedliberty.org/files/images/al-gore.jpg

EE_
10th October 2014, 12:15 PM
7th, and how small is the ebola virus? One little virus enough to kill a whole human body, impossible! But it is.

Right, a tiny little virus, so small you can't see it. The Black Plague wiped out millions of people.

Shami-Amourae
10th October 2014, 12:18 PM
Where's Al when you need him?

http://www.unitedliberty.org/files/images/al-gore.jpg


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Tt8yaNGkL4

Neuro
10th October 2014, 12:51 PM
Among other things...

In Rickety Boats, Cuban Migrants Again Flee to U.S.

By FRANCES ROBLESOCT. 9, 2014

Photo
Cuban migrants en route to Florida were intercepted by the Coast Guard in August. Those captured at sea are sent back to Cuba. Credit United States Coast Guard


MIAMI — In an unexpected echo of the refugee crisis from two decades ago, a rising tide of Cubans in rickety, cobbled-together boats is fleeing the island and showing up in the waters off Florida.

Leonardo Heredia, a 24-year-old Cuban baker, for example, tried and failed to reach the shores of Florida eight times.

Last week, he and 21 friends from his Havana neighborhood gathered the combined know-how from their respective botched migrations and made a boat using a Toyota motor, scrap stainless steel and plastic foam. Guided by a pocket-size Garmin GPS, they finally made it to Florida on Mr. Heredia’s ninth attempt.

“Things that were bad in Cuba are now worse,” Mr. Heredia said. “If there was more money in Cuba to pay for the trips, everyone would go.”

Mr. Heredia is one of about 25,000 Cubans who arrived by land and sea in the United States without travel visas in the fiscal year that ended on Sept. 30, according to government figures. He, like many others, is also an unexpected throwback to a time that experts thought had long passed: the era when Cubans boarded homemade vessels built from old car parts and inner tubes, hoping for calm seas and favorable winds. As the number of Cubans attempting the voyage nearly doubled in the past two years, the number of vessels unfit for the dangerous 90-mile crossing also climbed.

Not since the rafter crisis of 1994 has the United States received so many Cuban migrants. The increase highlights the consequences of a United States immigration policy that gives preferential treatment to Cubans and recent reforms on the island that loosened travel restrictions, and it puts a harsh spotlight on the growing frustration of a post-Fidel Castro Cuba.

More Cubans took to the sea last year than in any year since 2008, when Raúl Castro officially took power and the nation hummed with anticipation. Some experts fear that the recent spike in migration could be a harbinger of a mass exodus, and they caution that the unseaworthy vessels have already left a trail of deaths.

“I believe there is a silent massive exodus,” said Ramón Saúl Sánchez, an exile leader in Miami who has helped families of those who died at sea. “We are back to those times, like in 1994, when people built little floating devices and took to the ocean, whether they had relatives here or not.”

Although the number migrating by sea hardly compares with the summer of 1994, Mr. Sánchez said the number of illegal and legal Cuban immigrants combined has now surpassed the number of those who arrived during the crisis 20 years ago.

The United States Coast Guard spotted 3,722 Cubans in the past year, almost double the number who were intercepted in 2012. Under the migration accord signed after the 1994 crisis, those captured at sea are sent back to Cuba. Those who reach land get to stay, which the Cuban government has long argued draws many people into making the dangerous voyage.

For the past 10 years, sophisticated smuggling networks were responsible for the vast majority of Cuban migration. A crackdown by the American authorities and a lack of financing available to Cubans on the island have shifted the migration method back to what it was two decades ago, when images of desperate people aboard floating wooden planks gave Cuban migrants the “rafters” moniker.

“We have seen vessels made out of Styrofoam and some made out of inner tubes,” said Cmdr. Timothy Cronin, deputy chief of enforcement for the Coast Guard’s Miami district. “These vessels have no navigation equipment, no lifesaving equipment. They rarely have life jackets with them. They are really unsafe.”

About 20 percent of the vessels used in 2008 were homemade, but this past year, 87 percent of the migrants spotted at sea were riding rustic boats that the passengers had built themselves, Coast Guard statistics show.

Julio Sánchez, 38, a welder from Havana who traveled with Mr. Heredia, said most Cubans do not have the money to pay smugglers, and are instead forced to spend months gathering supplies for their journey.

“In our group, some people gave ideas, some gave money and some gave labor,” Mr. Sánchez said. The trip from a port east of Havana to an obscure Florida key cost them a total of $5,000, a fraction of the $200,000 or more that smugglers would have charged such a large group.

Experts said the recession cut the flow of financing for such journeys, because it was Miami relatives who made the payments. Many of the people arriving now — like those in Mr. Sánchez’s group — have no family in the United States to help pay.

“If I had to save $10,000 with my monthly salary of $17, I would not get here until I was 80 or 90 years old,” said Yannio La O, 31, an elementary school wrestling coach who arrived in Miami last week after a shipwreck landed him in Mexico.

He and 31 others departed from Manzanillo, in southern Cuba, in late August on a boat they built over the course of three months. They ran into engine trouble, and the food they brought was contaminated by a sealant they carried aboard to patch holes in the hull. They spent 24 days lost at sea.

Recent Comments
Southern Boy
4 hours ago

Who can blame them for wanting to flee the yoke of a Communist dictatorship and come to the land of the free and the home of the brave.
Uziel
4 hours ago

The Castro brothers have created a perfect instrument to avoid a Cuban Spring in the streets of Havana. From time to time, allow economic...
hugken
4 hours ago

The United States should never have imposed an embargo and should remove it immediately.The US does not rule the world, it is no business of...

“Every day at 6 a.m. or 6 p.m., somebody died,” Mr. La O said.

Nine people, including a pregnant woman, died and were thrown overboard, and six more got on inner tubes and disappeared before the Mexican Navy rescued the survivors, Mr. Sánchez said. Two more died at shore. Mr. La O said he survived by drinking urine and spearing fish.

Their deaths came as the United States Coast Guard found four bodies floating in the water 23 miles east of Hollywood, Fla. Their relatives in Miami identified their corpses by their tattoos and scars.

Mr. La O became one of the more than 22,500 Cubans who arrived in the United States by land last fiscal year — most of them in Texas. That is nearly double the number who did so in 2012.

Some of those migrants flew to Mexico and then requested entry at the Texas border. Relaxed travel rules in Cuba now allow people to exit the country more freely, a change that experts say plays a part in the surge in Southwest border arrivals. Other people, like Mr. La O, made the first leg of the journey by sea to Central America or Mexico.

Ted Henken, a Cuba scholar at Baruch College in New York, said Washington should be worried about the increase in migration, because it demonstrates that Cuba’s recent economic reforms have failed to help the majority of Cubans, making the nation vulnerable to a catastrophic event.

“If some triggering event or series of events were to happen, like with the Venezuela aid or major unrest, or a hurricane, we could have another ‘balsero’ crisis or Mariel,” Mr. Henken said, using the Spanish word for “rafter” and noting the 1980 boatlift.

A spokesman for the Cuban Interests Section in Washington did not respond to a request for comment.

Michael Flanagan, the deputy chief patrol agent for the United States Border Patrol’s Miami sector, said good weather, particularly the lack of hurricanes in recent years, has played a part in facilitating travel. Although the 91 percent increase in Cuban landings was “significant and it has our attention,” he said, it was not “remarkable.”

“Even if half the people who leave from Cuba do not survive, that means half of them did,” Mr. La O said, speaking from his grandmother’s house in Miami, where he arrived last week. “I would tell anyone in Cuba to come. It’s better to die on your feet than live on your knees.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/10/us/sharp-rise-in-cuban-migration-stirs-worries-of-a-mass-exodus.html?_r=0
I would say that those who have the ingeniouty to build a boat on a monthly salary of $17, that is capable to cross 90 miles of sea, would probably be a great contribution to the society they land in, vs someone who buys a boat with money relatives abroad sent them...

crimethink
10th October 2014, 02:21 PM
No you're dense, you haven't a clue how potent some substances are.
I'd like to see and experiment with one tiny spec of plutonium put in your beer, and you drinking it.
You'd show us your logic and reasoning, wouldn't you?

Think about this: the pea-sized brain of a "Christian" Zionist is so deadly it could ignite a world-ending nuclear war, because it "thought" that "god" "wanted it to happen."

7th trump
10th October 2014, 02:50 PM
Right, a tiny little virus, so small you can't see it. The Black Plague wiped out millions of people.

My premise was, which you cant follow, is to dilute the radiation so its just back ground radiation.
Dilute your snake poison on the same scale and the snake poison on a global scale wont even register....hence why I referenced the silly joke of you believing sea water being poisonous by little snakes.
If you cant follow along then keep your pie hole shut.
The best thing to happen to Fuku is a monster of a hurricane to dilute the radiation into the atmosphere as quickly as possible than keeping it in concentrated clouds of water or air where things will surely die in its path.
Gee...reasoning just doesn't dwell in this forum, but ignorance and fear sure seems to be whats for dinner.

7th trump
10th October 2014, 02:54 PM
Think about this: the pea-sized brain of a "Christian" Zionist is so deadly it could ignite a world-ending nuclear war, because it "thought" that "god" "wanted it to happen."

You sure seem to know a lot about everything...........which red flags you as someone who's a jack of all and master of none.

So much for putting me on ignore...seems you want to start drama through other posters.

midnight rambler
10th October 2014, 03:26 PM
Donald Trump has a crack smoking habit, who'd have thunk it? /sarc

Neuro
10th October 2014, 03:48 PM
You sure seem to know a lot about everything...........which red flags you as someone who's a jack of all and master of none.

So much for putting me on ignore...seems you want to start drama through other posters.
Contrary to you he knows a lot, and has a sound mind! It is a really bad idea to spread the radioactive matter of Fukushima! The best is to contain it and shield it!

EE_
10th October 2014, 04:03 PM
My premise was, which you cant follow, is to dilute the radiation so its just back ground radiation.
Dilute your snake poison on the same scale and the snake poison on a global scale wont even register....hence why I referenced the silly joke of you believing sea water being poisonous by little snakes.
If you cant follow along then keep your pie hole shut.
The best thing to happen to Fuku is a monster of a hurricane to dilute the radiation into the atmosphere as quickly as possible than keeping it in concentrated clouds of water or air where things will surely die in its path.
Gee...reasoning just doesn't dwell in this forum, but ignorance and fear sure seems to be whats for dinner.

I'd like to make a request to the forum moderator to change 7th Trump's title from "great value carrots" to "nuclear disaster expert".
It's quite an honor to have someone of his caliber on board here at gsus!

midnight rambler
10th October 2014, 04:09 PM
I'd like to make a request to the forum moderator to change 7th Trump's title from "great value carrots" to "nuclear disaster expert".
It's quite an honor to have someone of his caliber on board here at gsus!

I'm thinking Donald Trump should be submitting his analysis of the Fukushima calamity to enenews, I'm sure they'd appreciate his highly qualified expert opinion.

woodman
10th October 2014, 04:31 PM
That little tiny dot called fukushima cant possibly contaminate the world......look at that satelite photo of the storm and ask yourself if a dot that you couldnt see will kill off the planet.
No possible way....the best thing that could happen was for a hurricane to hit Fukushima directly and spread the problem out to lower the radiation levels to that of back ground radiation.

IMO, its God taking care of the problem.


You people crack me up reading your doom and gloom...........it seems thats all you want is drama in your life....you're all just a bunch of mental "bring me downs".......always looking at the bad side of mthings to bring your selves up.....pathetic!

Man, you aren't seeing things clearly. Have you ever seen how thin the atmosphere is compared to the globe itself? Like a condom on a penis. A little radioactivity goes a long way. Plutonium is forever. Most poisonous substance on earth. A gram could kill us all if delivered properly.

midnight rambler
10th October 2014, 04:49 PM
Man, you aren't seeing things clearly. Have you ever seen how thin the atmosphere is compared to the globe itself? Like a condom on a penis. A little radioactivity goes a long way. Plutonium is forever. Most poisonous substance on earth. A gram could kill us all if delivered properly.

Radiation is being given a bad rap. We all get bombarded with solar radiation everyday and that's not killing off everyone.

Cebu_4_2
10th October 2014, 05:17 PM
http://youtu.be/ejCQrOTE-XA

http://youtu.be/ejCQrOTE-XA

7th trump
10th October 2014, 05:17 PM
Man, you aren't seeing things clearly. Have you ever seen how thin the atmosphere is compared to the globe itself? Like a condom on a penis. A little radioactivity goes a long way. Plutonium is forever. Most poisonous substance on earth. A gram could kill us all if delivered properly.

A gram...really?

How many above ground nuclear detonations between the US and Russia did we do in the 50's and 60's....and there wasn't any mass die off.
How many under sea detonations was there?
How about Chernobyl?
There they found the melted rods exposed to the atmosphere at chernobyl....and I think they still are.
I bet thousands of detonations went on between the US and Russia.

And you are worried about a hurricane hitting Fuku that would do the world a favor instead of billowing mass clouds of concentrated radiation?
I think God is about to help clean up the mess man has created at Fuku before more concentrated lethal levels of radioactivity is released.
And everything in the atmosphere is scrubbed with rain and falls to the ground where it can be buried by years of sentiment.
No big deal!

Santa
10th October 2014, 05:29 PM
Seven spoonfuls of powdered plutonium mixed into a gallon of Fukushima typhoon and whadya get?

7th Trump Koolaide.

woodman
10th October 2014, 07:05 PM
A gram...really?

How many above ground nuclear detonations between the US and Russia did we do in the 50's and 60's....and there wasn't any mass die off.
How many under sea detonations was there?
How about Chernobyl?
There they found the melted rods exposed to the atmosphere at chernobyl....and I think they still are.
I bet thousands of detonations went on between the US and Russia.

And you are worried about a hurricane hitting Fuku that would do the world a favor instead of billowing mass clouds of concentrated radiation?
I think God is about to help clean up the mess man has created at Fuku before more concentrated lethal levels of radioactivity is released.
And everything in the atmosphere is scrubbed with rain and falls to the ground where it can be buried by years of sentiment.
No big deal!

Read my post better. I said if it was apportioned properly there is enough to dose us all. My main contention is that idiots like you fail to see the seriousness of radioactive contamination. How would you like your child to die young because you just had to have nuclear power? Fuck the nuke plants and fuck the idiots who think it is alright to forever pollute our world with exotic elements that have never been part of our genetic experience until the advent of the nuclear age.

woodman
10th October 2014, 07:07 PM
A gram...really?

How many above ground nuclear detonations between the US and Russia did we do in the 50's and 60's....and there wasn't any mass die off.
How many under sea detonations was there?
How about Chernobyl?
There they found the melted rods exposed to the atmosphere at chernobyl....and I think they still are.
I bet thousands of detonations went on between the US and Russia.

And you are worried about a hurricane hitting Fuku that would do the world a favor instead of billowing mass clouds of concentrated radiation?
I think God is about to help clean up the mess man has created at Fuku before more concentrated lethal levels of radioactivity is released.
And everything in the atmosphere is scrubbed with rain and falls to the ground where it can be buried by years of sentiment.
No big deal!

By the way, a nuclear detonation is extremely clean compared to the filth spewed by a nuke plant. Totally different. Apples to oranges.

osoab
10th October 2014, 07:09 PM
http://youtu.be/ejCQrOTE-XA

http://youtu.be/ejCQrOTE-XA

This is an excellent vid.

7th trump
10th October 2014, 10:22 PM
Read my post better. I said if it was apportioned properly there is enough to dose us all. My main contention is that idiots like you fail to see the seriousness of radioactive contamination. How would you like your child to die young because you just had to have nuclear power? Fuck the nuke plants and fuck the idiots who think it is alright to forever pollute our world with exotic elements that have never been part of our genetic experience until the advent of the nuclear age.

I read your post perfectly the first time.
Just who is it you are identifying when you say "just had to have nuclear power"?
I don't know of anyone who just has to have nuclear power....its was here way before I was born...and I doubt if theres any other cleaner energy out there to replace nuclear.
Sure accidents happen, poor decision to put a nuclear plant next to a shore line. Nuclear is clean compared to coal or any other gas, liquid or solid.....and the cheapest by far.
I'm no idiot...the atmosphere is loaded with radioactive contamination....way before nuclear power was achieved.
Find any geiger counter and tell us how many rads you hear as normal background noise.

Yep......and right now Fuku isn't apportioned correctly and is dosing areas where the clouds blow.
As it stands Fuku is billowing radiation at high levels....it needs to be diluted and dispersed so it can be managed. The storm coming is Gods way of "I'll take care of this".

expat4ever
10th October 2014, 11:34 PM
In from the oceans, it does creep
looks like a monster, unleashed from the deep
A path of destruction, in its wake it will leave
granting the Earth one final reprieve

woodman
11th October 2014, 03:13 AM
I read your post perfectly the first time.
Just who is it you are identifying when you say "just had to have nuclear power"?
I don't know of anyone who just has to have nuclear power....its was here way before I was born...and I doubt if theres any other cleaner energy out there to replace nuclear.
Sure accidents happen, poor decision to put a nuclear plant next to a shore line. Nuclear is clean compared to coal or any other gas, liquid or solid.....and the cheapest by far.
I'm no idiot...the atmosphere is loaded with radioactive contamination....way before nuclear power was achieved.
Find any geiger counter and tell us how many rads you hear as normal background noise.

Yep......and right now Fuku isn't apportioned correctly and is dosing areas where the clouds blow.
As it stands Fuku is billowing radiation at high levels....it needs to be diluted and dispersed so it can be managed. The storm coming is Gods way of "I'll take care of this".

You really think God is going to get involved here? Man, you are ignorant. The universe we know is set up with certain immutable rules. God wrote the program and everything is going to follow as it must. I don't personally know whether or not it would be a positive to have Fuku wiped out or not. Thinking about it, I'd say no, but what do I know? I just don't think that trivializing nuclear contamination is very intelligent. I am not personally worried about it. Nothing I can do and we are all dead men walking anyway. I'd like to think that I have done my best to leave a world behind that is worth inhabiting for future generations. People like you think it is ok to spew filth and degrade this precious planet because end times are coming anyway. Just plain stupid.

Spectrism
11th October 2014, 08:00 AM
That little tiny dot called fukushima cant possibly contaminate the world......look at that satelite photo of the storm and ask yourself if a dot that you couldnt see will kill off the planet.

Duhhh... it already has. We are all eating and breathing Fuku poison. Just because you can't see it or feel it does not mean it isn't eating at your muscles right now. Maybe a spot is in your heart. But who cares, right? If it only cuts you down by 10% no big deal.




No possible way....the best thing that could happen was for a hurricane to hit Fukushima directly and spread the problem out to lower the radiation levels to that of back ground radiation.


Actually, the best thing would have been for the moron Japs to contain the radioactive materials... and before then, ensure this could not happen. The best thing that could happen would be to round up the GE CEO/Chief Engineers/business managers and send them over with the Jap decision makers to march into that mess and die. GE knew this was a faulty design and some engineers (who lost their jobs) warned about it.


IMO, its God taking care of the problem.

Ultimately, yes. But this is how the problem of mankind is dealt with:
Gen 3:17 And He said to the man, Because you have listened to the voice of your wife, and have eaten of the tree about which I commanded you, saying, You shall not eat from it, the ground shall be cursed because of you; you shall eat of it in sorrow all the days of your life.
Gen 3:18 And it shall bring forth thorns and thistles for you, and you shall eat the plant of the field.
Gen 3:19 By the sweat of your face you shall eat bread until your return to the ground. For you have been taken out of it; for you are dust, and to dust you shall return.




personally, I believe in God because of something that happened.

but I don't believe the Christian mythology.

No, you have no basis in truth because you are not a lover of the truth. You are among the many millions of mindless drones who have accepted the programs of the world and loved deception above truth. Even in your denials you can't get the facts straight.



it's interesting how the Christian mythology is similar to Muslim mythology.


Similar? You mean like cars are similar to stars?



paradoxically, believing that Muslims are devil-worshippers may be KEY to the US military, so it can send young, mostly Christian, people, mostly from poor rural sections of the country, to be Israel's security guard in the Middle East.


You bought into the anti-jew meme familiar to this forum and wear that as your badge of honor... even to the point of kissing muslim ass. You are a confused little boy.



as for this hurricane - a direct hit on Fukushima would be like a direct hit on Chernobyl.
if not managed properly, Fukushima is an ELE (extinction level event.)
it looks like it's not managed properly.


How is a typhoon or complete nuclear plant meltdown "managed properly"?




Ok EE spread that 1 milligram of snake venom across the globe and see how deadly it is......bet that nobody dies from it.
I suppose since the snake lives in the sea that your logical reasoning would be that the oceans are deadly and polluted with snake venum....Hahahaha!

How about we keep that mg of snake venom in the snake? Its deadliness comes from being injected into the blood... not in the water. Nuclear radiation is a bit different and so is a virus a different concept as well.



Think about this: the pea-sized brain of a "Christian" Zionist is so deadly it could ignite a world-ending nuclear war, because it "thought" that "god" "wanted it to happen."

Those who taint the pure truth with anything else have allowed poison to enter them. No christian wants to see nuclear war. Where you get that idea is not from the bucket of truths, but the pit of hell. And there are very few christians, regardless of the many groups who wear or are accused of being christians.

A christian is one who knows and is known by the Messiah. It is the person under the authority of Messiah. Signing up with a club or going to regular meetings or performing some rituals... none of that counts for anything.

Cebu_4_2
11th October 2014, 11:29 AM
So what ever happened to the typhoon?

midnight rambler
11th October 2014, 12:06 PM
So what ever happened to the typhoon?

On track for a direct hit on Fukushima on Tues.

http://www.jma.go.jp/en/typh/images/zoom5l/1419-01.png

http://enenews.com/latest-govt-models-show-typhoon-making-direct-hit-fukushima-center-vongfong-expected-be-nuclear-plant-tuesday-maps

Spectrism
11th October 2014, 02:35 PM
My silly ass prediction: this typhoon will whip up a dose of radioactive fallout that will be widely reported across Canada.

Cebu_4_2
14th October 2014, 05:36 AM
Any updates? Using that enenews site will get you the latest info, from yesterday...