Californië, een apocalyps van vuur, plus een boodschap voor dwaze nucleaire energie lobbyisten

In
het volgende artikel vertelt Harvey Wasserman over de enorme branden
in Californië een goed geschreven verhaal over een vreselijke
gebeurtenis, waar intussen volgens de laatste berichten al meer dan 50 mensen het slachtoffer van zijn geworden…….. Bosbranden die één op één te maken hebben met de door de mens
veroorzaakte snelle opwarming van de aarde. Met deze enorme bosbranden komen er duizenden tonnen CO2 vrij en ook dat doet het klimaat verder opwarmen….. (om maar te zwijgen over de gifstoffen die ook bij bosbranden vrijkomen en de luchtvervuiling verder vergroten >> ook daar spreekt Wasserman over…)

Opperschoft Trump had het gore lef om de bosbouw in Californië de schuld te geven, terwijl de klimaatverandering ervoor heeft gezorgd dat de bossen kurkdroog zijn* en dus bij het minste geringste in brand ‘vliegen….’ Trump heeft een aantal natuurparken opengesteld voor commerciële activiteiten, waardoor de kans op bosbranden in de toekomst nog verder worden vergroot….. 

Dit alles terwijl Trump de door de mens veroorzaakte klimaatverandering een leugen durft te noemen, zelfs nadat al lang bekend is dat Exxon en Shell uit eigen onderzoek respectievelijk in de 70er en 80er jaren van de vorige eeuw wisten dat de verbranding van fossiele brandstoffen zorgt voor een relatief snelle klimaatverandering……. Deze georganiseerde misdadigers van de oliemaffia stopten deze rapporten diep weg in een kluis, waarna ze ‘klimaatsceptische’ wetenschappers inhuurden, die e.e.a. ontkenden…… (de top van die bedrijven zou moeten worden vervolgd door het Internationaal Strafhof [ICC] in Den Haag!!)

Wasserman
spreekt ook over de ramp met de kerncentrales in het Japanse
Fukushima, waar men voor de kust van Californië een paar jaar
geleden al tonijn ving die fiks was besmet met radioactiviteit (en niet geschikt was voor consumptie), radioactiviteit die te
herleiden was naar de Fukushima rampencentrales…… Terecht stelt Wasserman
nog eens dat de ramp in Fuskushima in feite voortduurt, dagelijks nog
stromen daar grote hoeveelheden zwaar radioactief besmet water in de
oceaan……. 

Californië zelf heeft overigens nog 2 stokoude
centrales in Diablo Canyon (toepasselijke naam), centrales die een
enorme ramp kunnen veroorzaken bij een zware aardbeving en dat bijna
op de San Andreasbreuk (-lijn)……. Eén van de vele feiten die pleiten tegen kernenergie is het feit dat er geen verzekeringsmaatschappij is die een (nieuwe) kerncentrale wil verzekeren, me dunkt een teken aan de wand……

Voorts haalt Wasserman ook de laatste schietpartijen in de VS aan (dagelijks worden er in de VS meerdere mensen vermoord met vuurwapens, echter alleen de meest ‘sensationele schietpartijen’ komen in het nieuws). Kortom Wasserman wijst op alle gevaren waaraan VS burgers dagelijks bloot staan.

California
Apocalypse: Fire and Fury

California fires

In
today’s America, random mass murder has merged with ecological
devastation.

by Harvey
Wasserman

November
12, 2018

Fifty
years ago, in my twenties, I often hitchhiked the Pacific Coast
Highway through Southern California. I slept on pristine beaches,
swam in the ocean, and spent endless hours watching seals and
dolphins ride the waves just a few yards offshore.

A
favorite spot was in Santa Monica, where Sunset Boulevard meets the
sea at Will Rogers State Park. This gorgeous stretch of white sand,
framed by the Santa Monica pier to the south and the Malibu Hills to
the north, seemed like paradise.

Today,
fulfilling a lifelong dream, I live in the San Fernando Valley, a
forty-minute drive from the Pacific, half of which is through
beautiful Topanga Canyon.

This
past Friday, I set off for my weekly bike ride along the beach. As
usual, I parked at Will Rogers and rode my bike south down the
concrete path about six miles to the Venice Pier. The final stretch,
through Venice Beach, featured a constant cloud of the 
cannabis smoke
that now flows free and easy in the land of legal pot.

At
the end of a peaceful afternoon, I rode north back up to Will Rogers
(always into the wind) to watch the sunset and take a dip in the
ocean, which was, as expected this time of year, warmer than the air.

But
this evening there was something else—an unwelcome terror. Over the
ridge, in Malibu and Calabasas, fires were raging, engulfing the
entire range of hills and valleys to the north in smoke. The flames
were clearly visible as I rode along, all too aware that at that
moment, fellow humans were dying, homes and livelihoods were being
consumed, and for many people not much different from me, the world
was ending.

Earlier
in the week, in nearby Thousand Oaks, yet another crazed gunman 
shot
up
 yet
another bar, killing eleven people. Some of the victims
were 
survivors of
the Las Vegas shooting a year ago, where more than fifty people died.
Now they died here.

I
thought about the ocean waves, once so pure, now laced with unseen
traces of Fukushima. The March 11, 2011, earthquake there caused
three meltdowns and four hydrogen explosions that blew radiation into
the air and water 
far
in excess of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
.
The three melted cores still seeth underground. A constant flow of
liquid carries untold isotopes into the Pacific as Tokyo Electric
has 
failed for
nearly a decade to permanently cool them.

That
witches brew of some of the world’s most lethal substances has long
since arrived here. Years ago tuna caught off the coast of California
were found to be 
carrying significant
doses of identifiable Fukushima contaminants.

I
swim anyway. I don’t know how much radiation is in those waves. But
it’s there, as are the twin nuclear reactors just four hours drive
north at Diablo Canyon near San Luis Obispo. Thousands of us have
been arrested protesting those reactors, capable of making this
entire region a dead zone, especially once hit by the “Big One”
earthquake we all know will eventually come.

The
awful glow of the deadly fires shine through massive clouds of soot
and smoke. It’s like nothing I’ve ever seen, a hellish reality in
a paradise I once took for granted.

The
following afternoon, I find solace in a few blessed hours with my
darling grandchildren, playing in an idyllic suburban backyard under
pristine blue skies.

And
then it arrives. The soot and smoke of the Woolsey fire smacks us in
the face. The flames have 
already torn
through Santa Susana, a toxic wasteland whose lethal
pollutants—including radioactive isotopes from ten small
reactors—may be pouring over Los Angeles. At least twenty-five
people have already 
died in
the inferno, several of them roasted to death in their cars, caught
by the rapidly moving flames. Many more are still missing.

Fallout
from the fires cover us with a filthy, acrid fallout.

Only
fate has thus far protected me and my family from the poisonous
contamination and the killings—the sudden death that seems poised
to strike at random anywhere we live, work, and play. In today’s
America, random mass murder has merged with ecological devastation.

There
is much we can do about both of these sources of terror. Meaningful
gun control. Limiting fossil fuel and nuclear emissions. Finally
switching totally to renewable energy.

But
the path to security is narrowing. Breathe the air, look at your
kids, think about being in a crowded public room, and know that the
need for meaningful, powerful, and effective citizen action is more
immediate than ever.

Tags:
GUN
CONTROL
 DISASTERS ENVIRONMENT DISPATCHES

Harvey
Wasserman

Harvey
“Sluggo” Wasserman’s prn.fm podcast is Green Power &
Wellness.  His show, California Solartopia broadcasts at
KFPK-Pacifica 90.7FM Los Angeles. His books include the
forthcoming The Life & Death Spiral of US History.

Read
more by Harvey Wasserman

==================================

* Afgelopen zomer waren er zelfs grote bosbranden in Canada en Siberië……..

VS martelt gevluchte kinderen……

Het
scheiden van kinderen en hun ouders is al een vorm van marteling,
waar opsluiting van die kinderen op volgde, ook al een marteling……. Martelingen die deze kinderen hebben getraumatiseerd en die hen hun leven
lang zal achtervolgen……

Beste
bezoeker dat was het bepaald niet, nee deze kinderen worden zelfs
letterlijk fysiek gemarteld en mishandelt, zo bleek uit aanklachten
tegen een ‘kinderopvangcentrum’ (lees: gevangenis) in Virginia…

Deze
zaken naast andere berichten uit dergelijke gevangenissen die spreken
over het onder dwang innemen van psychofarmaca en zelfs het
injecteren van kinderen met dergelijke stoffen, alles om deze
kinderen rustig te houden……… Ook hier is sprake van ernstige mishandeling ofwel marteling…….

Als je
dacht dat dit het wel was, heb je het helaas mis, immers er zijn
rapporten verschenen over deze ‘jeugddetentiecentra’ waar kinderen seksueel worden misbruikt door de leiding…..

Deze
kinderen hebben niets anders gedaan dan gevlucht (met of zonder
ouders) voor terreur in eigen land, terreur die voor het grootste
deel het gevolg is van ingrijpen door de VS dan wel door VS bedrijven in een één tweetje met corrupte landelijke dan wel lokale overheden, neem bedrijven als plantages voor fruit en mijnen (in Zuid- en Midden-Amerika)………

Trump
zou het scheiden van ouders en kinderen hebben teruggedraaid, echter
twee derde van de kinderen die de VS ‘illegaal’ binnenkomen zijn
alleen en zij zullen het slachtoffer blijven van zaken zoals
hierboven beschreven….. Daarnaast zullen voortaan hele gezinnen gevangen worden gezet, alleen omdat ze veelal door de VS veroorzaakte ellende proberen te ontvluchten……

De VS
het land van de ongekende mogelijkheden…… (voor de welgestelden, misdadige psychopaten, die je in overvloed aantreft in
overheidsfuncties, politiek, financiële maffia en grote bedrijven…..)

Abu
Ghraib for 8th Graders’: Allegations of Children Being Tortured at
Virginia Facility

June
21, 2018 at 4:42 pm

Written by Jake
Johnson

(CD— “Beaten
while handcuffed.”

Locked
up for long periods in solitary confinement.”

Strapped…to
chairs with bags placed over their heads.”

These
are among the many shocking allegations leveled against a Virginia
detention facility by immigrant children as young as 14-years-old,
the 
Associated
Press
 reported on
Thursday, citing the first-hand accounts and sworn statements of
abuse victims detailed in federal court filings.

Whenever
they used to restrain me and put me in the chair, they would handcuff
me,” recounted one Honduran immigrant who was sent to the facility
when he was 15-years-old. “Strapped me down all the way, from your
feet all the way to your chest, you couldn’t really move… They
have total control over you. They also put a bag over your head. It
has little holes; you can see through it. But you feel suffocated
with the bag on.”

A
child-development specialist who worked inside the facility told
the 
AP that
she saw children with broken bones and bruises that they said were
caused by abuse from guards. It is unclear whether any of the
children alleging rampant abuse at the facility were detained as a
result of the Trump administration’s so-called “zero tolerance”
policy.

Responding
to the 
AP‘s
reporting in a tweet on Thursday, Freedom of the Press Foundation
executive director Trevor Timm 
wrote simply,
“This is outright torture.”

Kelly
Weill, a reporter for 
The
Daily Beast
,
described the Virginia facility as “Abu Ghraib for eighth-graders.”

Kelly Weill

@KELLYWEILL

Abu Ghraib for eighth-graders: https://apnews.com/afc80e51b562462c89907b49ae624e79 

According
to the 
AP,
many of the immigrant children detained at the Shenandoah Valley
Juvenile Center—which is located in Staunton, Virginia—were
arrested after federal immigration officials accused them of being
gang members.

But
a top manager at the Shenandoah center said during a recent
congressional hearing that the children did not appear to be gang
members and were suffering from mental health issues resulting from
trauma that happened in their home countries—problems the detention
facility is ill-equipped to treat,” 
AP reported.

The
appalling allegations against the Virginia detention facility come as
President Donald Trump continues to use dehumanizing language to
describe immigrants fleeing violence in their home nations and
conflate undocumented immigrants and those seeking asylum 
with
violent gang members
.

In
a tweet on Tuesday, Trump accused Democrats of wanting undocumented
immigrants to “infest” the U.S.

Chris Hayes

@chrislhayes

I’m still hung up on the sheer vileness of using the verb “infest” to refer to human beings.

It’s not overstating things to say that it springs from the darkest, most evil corners of human history.

It’s the way genocidaires talk about the people they are murdering.

By Jake
Johnson
 / Creative
Commons
 / Common
Dreams
 / Report
a typo

Hier de tekst van het Care2 Team bij een petitie tegen de beslissing van psychopaat Sessions vluchtelingen van (drugs-) bende geweld en huiselijk geweld, waar de regering van hun thuisland niets onderneemt tegen dit geweld of geweld bagatelliseert dan wel zelfs dader is van geweld tegen burgers (zoals bij het landjepik van arme boeren t.b.v. grote buitenlandse, veelal VS bedrijven, waar men niet zelden bloedbaden aanricht onder onwilligen, die NB volkomen in hun recht staan…..)……

It’s
no secret that the Trump administration is staunchly against
immigrants entering the United States without permission, but
Attorney General Jeff Sessions just 
shut
down a way
 for
especially vulnerable people to come to this country legally for
their own protection. 

Thousands,
particularly from Central America, come to the U.S. each year looking
for protection from an abusive spouse or a dangerous gang that’s
issued threats. Though recently the U.S. has granted asylum to many
of these people to guarantee their safety, 
Sessions
has declared that fleeing gang violence or domestic abuse will no
longer qualify people for asylum.

Helaas kunnen wij deze petitie niet tekenen.

Zie ook:

13.000 kinderen van vluchtelingen zitten gevangen in VS ‘detentiekampen’

Immigrants& Muslims Are Trump’s Jews … Until He Comes for theActual Jews (van Harvey Wasserman)

VS sluit zelfs kinderen van 10 jaar op….. Met dat land onderhoudt Nederland hechte banden, een rechteloos land waaraan ‘we’ zelfs mensen uitleveren…..
A Grandmother Seeking Asylum Separated From Disabled Grandson at the Border. It’s Been 10 Months

Met nieuw VS ‘vluchtelingenbeleid’ zullen nog meer kinderen seksueel misbruikt worden…..

Jeff Sessions: ‘asielzoekers zijn alleen welkom in de VS als ze kunnen bewijzen dat ze overleden zijn t.g.v. geweld……….’‘ (en het liefst in poedervorm verkeren….)


Concentratiekampen in VS voor migranten…….


Peuter vluchtelingen moeten eigen zaak bepleiten in VS rechtszalen, de VS: het land van de ‘ongekende mogelijkheden….’


VS wil van 3.000 migrantenkinderen DNA afnemen om zo de ouders op te sporen…..


De VS heeft een lange geschiedenis in het ontvoeren van kinderen uit niet witte families…….


Nikki Haley (VS ambassadeur bij de VN) UNHRC heeft commentaar op een land met een goede mensenrechten reputatie, t.w. Israël…. ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha!

en de volgende artikelen op dan wel via Anti-Media: 

Children Drugged, Given Forced Injections at Texas Detention Facility: Lawsuit

Pentagon Accepts Trump’s Call to House 20,000 Children on US Military Bases

PS: ‘onnodig’ nogmaals op te merken dat het vluchtelingenbeleid van de VS recht tegen het VN Vluchtelingenverdrag ingaat (zoals ook de EU-Turkije-deal daar tegen ingaat….)…..

Puerto Rico, na de orkanen Irma en Maria in de steek gelaten door de VS, gaat energievoorziening verduurzamen

Puerto
Rico werd vorig jaar door 2 orkanen getroffen, Irma en Maria, deze hebben het eiland in diepe ellende gestort. Niet alleen gigantische materiële schade,
maar ook zaken als de elektriciteitsvoorziening werden vernield……
De Trump administratie heeft de situatie op Puerto Rico keer op keer
gebagatelliseerd en Trump gaf een hem bevriend bedrijf de opdracht om
de energievoorziening op het eiland weer op gang te brengen, echter
dit bedrijf had daar bij lange na de capaciteit niet voor…..

Er
zijn veel vergelijkingen met Sint Maarten, onderdeel van ‘ons
koninkrijk’, ook daar hield orkaan Irma stevig huis en 90% van de
huizen werd vernield*. Nederland misbruikte de enorme ellende voor de
bewoners om het bestuur van dit eiland te chanteren
(hoofdverantwoordelijke PvdA ploert Plasterk): het democratisch
gekozen bestuur moest opstappen en het kleine eiland met amper
middelen werd verplicht meer te doen aan grensbewaking, dit terwijl er al jaren een
peperdure marine missie gaande is rond de Antillen waar de
Nederlandse marine de VS marine assisteert in de zinloze jacht van de VS op
drugs uit Zuid-Amerika…….

Terug
naar Puerto Rico, waar men nu de blik heeft gevestigd op duurzame
energie, waarbij de firma van Elon Musk, Tesla de eilandbewoners helpt met batterijen
voor de opslag van zonne- en windenergie. Voor korte duur was Puerto Rico zelfs de VS staat, waarbij het grootste gebied werd voorzien van duurzame energie. 

Uiteraard is de Trump
administratie niet blij met het besluit van Puerto Rico om duurzaam
te gaan, immers deze administratie zet in op zoveel mogelijk fossiel
brandstofverbruik……. Toch leuk dat deze administratie dit zelf in de hand heeft gewerkt, al blijft het een godvergeten schandaal dat men deze elandbewoners zo lang heeft laten zitten, zoals het voor ons een schande
is, dat Nederland na 8 maanden eindelijk wat geld heeft overgemaakt voor
de wederopbouw van Sint Maarten, al wordt dit geld dan wel beheert door de neokoloniale
Wereldbank……. (het bestuur moest weg van Plasterk, daar het niet vertrouwd was geld aan dit bestuur over te maken, blijkbaar vertrouwt men nu ook het nieuwe bestuur niet……)

Lees
het volgende artikel van Harvey Wasserman over de gevolgen van 2
vernietigende orkanen op- en de verduurzaming van Puerto Rico:

Puerto
Rico Gets to Solartopia

Puerto
Rico Goes Back Door to Solartopia and the Corporate Media Blacks It
Out

By
Harvey Wasserman, Reader Supported News

Puerto
Rico has made history by becoming — briefly — the largest US
territory or state to be powered almost entirely by renewable energy.

The
corporate media has done all it can to black the story out.

The
rising grassroots movement to totally rebuild Puerto Rico’s
electric supply system with renewable energy and locally owned
micro-grids poses a serious threat to the centralized, fossil-based
corporate elite.

But
two hurricanes and two human-error blackouts have opened the door to
systemic change.

Here’s
how:


Last
September, Hurricane Irma blew through the Caribbean, passing over
enough of Puerto Rico to plunge tens of thousands of people into
darkness. Many of them are still without power.

Then
Hurricane Maria shredded the island’s electric grid and blacked out
its 3.4 million residents virtually in toto.

The
island had two large wind farms, one of which was severely damaged.
The other survived, but had no grid through which to distribute its
electricity.

Some
solar arrays on the island were also severely damaged.

But
at a farm in Barranquitas owned by Hector Santiago, 244 solar panels
kept some 2,500 light bulbs alight to maximize greenhouse plant
growth. Much to the derision of his neighbors, Santiago had invested
some $300,000 in the solar array. Small gas and kerosene-fired
generators kicked back up around the island. But Santiago’s solar
array may well have been its biggest operating power station. 

Over
the following months, the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority (PREPA) tried
to restore its rickety poles and wires, plus its network of obsolete
gas and oil plants … and the ancient coal plant that burns ore from
Colombia.

Along
the way, PREPA’s director was fired, and Governor Ricardo Antonio
“Ricky” Rosselló Nevares has campaigned to privatize the
utility, a move strongly opposed by democracy activists.

On
April 8, as PREPA was bringing the island back up to near-total
power, restoration workers felled a tree onto live transmission
wires, knocking out power to some 850,000 customers.

Ten
days later, PREPA proudly announced that it had restored power to
95.8 percent of the island’s population. Some 62,000 customers were
still in the dark. But PREPA was proud that each the territory’s 78
municipalities had at least some power.

Literally
within hours, Puerto Rico was again plunged into darkness. The same
contractor that on April 8 had dropped a tree into the grid now ran
an excavator that shorted out the entire system. Once again, 

Puerto
Rico was without central-generated electric power.

But
now there was much more solar. In the wake of Irma and Maria,
Solartopian activists have poured thousands of photovoltaic panels
into the island. Strongly advocating that they become the centerpiece
of a rebuilt energy supply system, many collectors now power locally
owned micro-grids.

According
to Elon Musk, Tesla has helped make 662 locations energy
self-sufficient. Key has been San Juan’s Hospital del Nino, which
in just two weeks was made energy self-sufficient with panels and
batteries.

Nearly
all the island’s hospitals were knocked out by Maria. Dialysis
machines, operating rooms, air 

conditioning and other key services
went dead. Many still are.

Ironically,
according to activist Joel Segal, much of the nation’s supply of
pain-killing morphine and Dilaudid also went away, as they are mostly
(for tax purposes) manufactured in Puerto Rico.

While
referring uniformly to this latest centrally-generated fiasco as a
“total” blackout, the corporate media have almost totally ignored
this steady, fast-growing stream of power being generated on Puerto
Rico, virtually all of it solar.


CNN
did cover a local named “Frank,” who after Maria took his home
solar with $7500 in system components. Wired has reported on a
Brooklyn architect, Andrew Marvel (a grand-nephew of the famed
futurist Buckminster Fuller), who plans to use grants of $625,000 for
his 
Resilient
Power Puerto Rico
 to
build 25 small arrays with Tesla battery backups. Another 75 or more
may follow.


During
my 
California
Solartopia
 show
on KPFK-Pacifica in Los Angeles, a listener pledged $20,000 for

neighborhood micro-grid linked with solar panels and batteries.

Rep.
Ted Lieu (D-Calif.) and Rep. Stacey Plackett (D-Virgin Islands) have
asked FEMA to take the island solar. So has San Juan’s progressive
mayor, Carmen Yulin Cruz.

But
it’s all too hot for the corporate media.

In
December PREPA and the New York governor’s office estimated that
$17.6 billion was needed to revamp Puerto Rico’s old grid, funds
that could instead help take the island totally solar.

To
put that in perspective: Governor Andrew Cuomo wants New York
ratepayers to fork over $8 billion to keep four decrepit upstate
reactors on line, despite their owners’ attempts to close them.
Ohio’s 

FirstEnergy just asked Trump to force ratepayers to fork
over $8 billion PER YEAR in “emergency funding” to prop up four
more dying nukes and scores of obsolete coal burners.

Ironically,
the blacked-out story of Puerto Rico having already inadvertently
gone almost entirely solar has opened the brightest window onto a
sustainable future.

A
Solartopian Puerto Rico would enjoy permanent, reliable service, free
of fuel costs and protected from the ravages of the inevitable next
storm while avoiding the emissions that would help cause and
intensify it.

But
a Solartopian Puerto Rico would threaten the Trumpian corporatists
who want to “restore” the island’s central, fossil-fired,
utterly corrupted grid, which is sure to go down in the next
global-warmed hurricane. Or by the next felled tree and errant
excavator.

Puerto
Rico’s Solartopian moments are big news. So are the solar panels
and micro-grids that could help the island survive the next
hurricanes (season starts June 1) and corporate wrecking crews.

Let’s
keep those panels coming!


To
learn more contact me at 
solartopia.org.

Hear this
at prn.fm with
Joel Segal & David Braun:
 
http://prn.fm/solartopia-green-power-wellness-hour-04-19-18/

===============================

* Zie o.a.: ‘Sint Maarten bukt nog steeds onder de gevolgen van orkaan Irma, pas na bijna 8 maanden maakt Nederland wat geld over……..‘ Voor meer berichten over het schandalige gedrag van Nederland i.z. Sint Maarten, klik op het label met die naam, of op ‘orkaan Irma’, direct onder dit bericht.

Zie ook: 

Puerto Rico (‘VS’) wordt nog steeds slecht of niet geholpen voor gevolgen orkaan Maria >> Trump: ‘eiland krijgt teveel hulp’‘ (zie ook de links in dat bericht)


Trump: VS heeft een geweldige prestatie geleverd met de hulp aan Puerto Rico na orkaan Maria………. ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha!

6.000 doden i.p.v. 60 op Puerto Rico na Orkaan Maria, zo gaat de VS met haar burgers om………

Puerto Rico het Sint Maarten van de VS: dodental orkaan Maria bijgesteld naar 2.975 en bijna een jaar later zit een groot deel van het eiland zonder stroom

Trumps grote held: Andrew Jackson, een genocidale voorstander van slavernij………

Afgelopen zaterdag ontving ik een artikel van Harvey Wasserman. Hierin vertelt hij over het beest Trump en zijn uitlating dat zijn held, Andrew ‘Andy’ Jackson, de burgeroorlog in de VS had kunnen voorkomen…… ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha!

Jackson was een genocidale voorstander van slavernij, dezelfde slavernij die ten grondslag lag aan die burgeroorlog……… Jackson was democraat en onder zijn presidentschap is een enorm aantal oorspronkelijke bewoners van de VS vermoord, de zogenaamde indianen…….

Eerst als militair en later als president, heeft deze schoft een fikse steen bijgedragen aan de vreselijke en enorme genocide die de leiders van het gestolen land hebben uitgevoerd op de oorspronkelijke bewoners van dat ‘land’. Het gestolen ‘land’ dat wordt aangeduid als de Verenigde Staten van Amerika………

Het gaat hier overigens over een genocide, die een enorm aantal slachtoffers meer heeft gemaakt, dan de genocide van Hitler en zijn psychopathisch tuig op de joden………

Het maakt alweer het e.e.a. duidelijk over Trumps zieke geest….

Hier het artikel van Harvey Wasserman:

How
Trump’s Genocidal Hero Andrew Jackson Might Have “Avoided the
Civil War”

A portrait of former president Andrew Jackson hangs on the wall behind President Donald Trump, accompanied by Vice President Mike Pence, in the Oval Office at the White House in late March. (photo: Andrew Harnik/AP)

A
portrait of former president Andrew Jackson hangs on the wall behind
President Donald Trump, accompanied by Vice President Mike Pence, in
the Oval Office at the White House in late March. (photo: Andrew
Harnik/AP)

By
Harvey Wasserman, Reader Supported News

05
May 17


onald
Trump’s latest insane excursion into US history has been to claim
that his great hero, Andrew Jackson, might have prevented the Civil
War.

Given
his racist, genocidal nature, our seventh president could only have
done that by giving up slavery in the South, spreading it into the
North or giving the Southwest back to Mexico.

Jackson,
of course, would never have given up slavery, which was the cause of
the war and the core of his fortune.

As
a young man, like a cowboy driving cattle, Jackson personally drove
slaves to market. He eventually owned more than a hundred of them,
and defended America’s “peculiar institution” at every
opportunity.

In
addition to their authoritarian temperaments, Jackson and Trump share
“accomplishments” such as trashing the Constitution, personally
profiting from the presidency, and inciting imperial conquest.
Jackson did stand for the Union against South Carolina’s threatened
secession, but that was about tariffs, not slavery.

Trump
rightly says Jackson was “tough.” In 1806, in one of his fourteen
duels, Jackson took a bullet an inch from his heart. He then killed
his opponent in a manner considered most unchivalrous, and became a
social outcast for many years. The bullet stayed in his chest until
his own death four decades later.

Jackson
was also a pioneer homophobe. As Sen. James Buchanan of Pennsylvania
openly lived with his likely lover, Sen. Rufus King of South
Carolina, Jackson loudly referred to him as “Aunt Nancy.” (After
King died, Buchanan became our only “bachelor president.”)

But
mainstream historians have made a hero of “Old Hickory.” Born to
dirt poor Irish immigrants who died early, Jackson’s hardscrabble
upbringing was the opposite of Trump’s.

Trump
inherited millions from his father, who was a Klan (Kukluksklan, of KKK, AP) sympathizer (or
member), a landlord so cruel that the legendary leftie folksinger
Woody Guthrie wrote a song denouncing him.

Andrew
Jackson pre-dated the Klan, but would’ve killed for an estate like
the one Trump inherited. And he did.

As
an orphan, Jackson began his military career at age 13. Rising
through the ranks as an Indian killer, he conquered the Chickasaw by
recruiting their ancient rivals, the Cherokee. Jackson then turned on
the Cherokee as if they had been the enemy. His racism was open,
lethal, and proud.

With
Trump-style “Common Man” rhetoric, Jackson promised to destroy
the National Bank. He then made insider deals with the smaller banks
that replaced it, enriching his backers and himself. These and other
scams helped buy him his 1000-acre slave plantation in Tennessee.

When
he conquered native land for the US, Jackson and his cronies somehow
wound up with the best parcels. His 1830 Indian Removal Act ordered
all eastern tribes to move west of the Mississippi.

The
Appalachian Cherokee had an advanced tribal government, an elected
leader (John Ross), a capitol, a written constitution, and much more.
Most lived in private homes and ran successful farms. Some (like
Ross) owned plantations and slaves. There were seven Cherokee lumber
mills.

The
Cherokee petitioned for statehood. Supreme Court Chief Justice John
Marshall ruled that the Constitution allowed no new state to be
created from existing ones (Abraham Lincoln dodged that technicality
in 1863 to form West Virginia).

But
Marshall also ruled that the Cherokee had sovereignty (a clause later
used to site casinos) and a Constitutional right to stay on their
ancestral lands.

Jackson
replied, Trump-style, that he would ignore the Court. Under Jackson’s
successor, Martin Van Buren, federal troops forced some 14,000
Cherokee out of their homes at gunpoint. Through the summer of 1838
they were held in a concentration camp. Then, along the infamous
“Trail of Tears,” they were marched hundreds of miles to
Oklahoma. About 3,000 died along the way.

Jackson
promised the Cherokee and other tribes the right to live in that
Oklahoma territory “as long as the grass grows and the rivers
flow.” Fifty years later their “excess land” was given to white
“Sooners” who raced in on horseback and covered wagons to claim
homesteads.

As
for the Civil War, its root cause was conflict over Mexican land.
Mexico abolished slavery in its 1821 revolution against Spain. But
American settlers (many from Tennessee) re-established it in 1836,
when (after the Alamo) they made Texas an independent republic.

Jackson
died in 1845. The next year his protégé, James K. Polk, provoked a
war and took from Mexico what became New Mexico, Arizona, California,
Colorado, Nevada and more. US troops marched all the way into Mexico
City, where young soldiers like Robert E. Lee and Ulysses S. Grant
fought side-by-side. Americans like Abraham Lincoln and Henry Thoreau
denounced the conquest as a “poison pill.”

The
Civil War broke out when slave owners demanded the right to spread
slavery into the West. California’s 1850 statehood gave free states
a majority in Congress. War erupted in Kansas, where John Brown and
other abolitionists battled slave owners for control.

The
only way Jackson’s “art of the deal” might have avoided the
Civil War was by persuading northerners to embrace slavery, or
southerners to give it up. But both regions were committed to
expansion, and neither wanted the other’s economic system. When
Lincoln said the nation could not exist “half slave and half free,”
he was tragically correct.

Of
course, war might have been avoided if Jackson’s progeny had given
that land back to Mexico, or restored the Carolinas to the Cherokee,
or persuaded the southerners that slavery was never going to work in
the West anyway. Cotton does not grow in Kansas or the Southwest, and
slavery made no economic sense in the desert, corn or wheat fields.

Without
the Jacksonian conquest of Mexico, the “immigrants” Trump now
attacks would merely be living on their own land. The wall Trump
wants to build tracks a border that did not exist before Polk overran
what was once both our southern and our western neighbor.

Sorting
through his often insane pronouncements about US history, Trump has
seemed surprised to discover that Abraham Lincoln was actually his
fellow Republican, while Jackson was a Democrat. Each was the first
president from his respective party. Both were “men of the people.”
But their views on slavery were, literally, at war with each other.

Trump
might also note that when he retired from the presidency in 1837,
Jackson found a trusted relative had squandered his wealth. Much of
what he’d gouged out of slaughtering Indians and whipping slaves
was gone.

Since
Trump has joined Jackson in using the presidency to enrich himself,
he might want to oversee his sons more carefully.

He
might also try doing a better job with the economy. As Trump’s hero
left office in 1837, his immediate “legacy” featured a major
stock market panic followed by four years of depression.

No
doubt the Great Historian would loudly blame that on the Democrats …
until he realized his hero actually was one.


Harvey
Wasserman’s
 History
of the US is at www.solartopia.org,
along with Solartopia! Our Green-Powered Earth.

==================================

Klik voor meer berichten n.a.v. het bovenstaande, op één van de labels, die u hieronder terug kan vinden, dit geldt niet voor de labels: John Brown, Chickasaw, A. Jackson en Lincoln.

Kerncentrales geliefd bij grote bedrijven: Wasserman met een extra pleidooi voor echt groene energieopwekking

Het lijkt erop dat we in Nederland niet bang hoeven te zijn, dat er nog nieuwe kerncentrales gebouwd zullen worden, hoewel zaken drastisch kunnen veranderen als de lijpe angst- en haatprofeet Wilders een absolute meerderheid haalt bij de verkiezingen op 15 maart a.s., maar dat is zeer onwaarschijnlijk.

Daarnaast moeten we de ijskoude, inhumane neoliberalen van de VVD niet vergeten, mochten die niet zo goed goed boeren op 15 maart a.s., is het niet onwaarschijnlijk, dat men toch met de PVV in zee zal gaan, een coalitie die het CDA zeker interessant zal vinden. Hoe men ook van de ‘VVD en CDA toren blaast’ over het niet willen samenwerken met de PVV, de kans dat dit toch zal gebeuren bij voornoemde situatie, is alles behalve ondenkbaar……. Zoals u wellicht weet: ook CDA en VVD hebben weinig of geen bezwaar tegen kernenergie……..*

Afgelopen zaterdag ontving ik van Harvey Wasserman het onderstaande artikel over kernenergie en waarom grote bedrijven, zeker in de VS deze vorm van energieopwekking verder willen uitbouwen, ook al zijn er grote problemen met de kerncentrales in de VS**, die men verzwijgt voor de pers. De reguliere pers in de VS is alles behalve anti-kernenergie en men legt zich daar, o.a. wat betreft problemen met kernenergie, met alle liefde zelfcensuur op………

Aan bod komt in het artikel o.a. de strijd tussen Edison en Tesla, met feiten waar je haar stijl van op gaat staan!! Ook beschrijft Wasserman ten overvloede nog eens, dat er ook voor kernenergieopwekking alsnog een hele berg CO2 de lucht ingaat……… In de staat Nevada wil de overheid huiseigenaren die zonnepanelen op het dak hebben, extra belasten op de energierekening, aldus Wasserman.

Genoeg gezegd lees en oordeel zelf:

Why
Corporations Love Nukes: King CONG v. Solartopia

As
you ride the Amtrak along the Pacific coast between Los Angeles and
San Diego, you pass the San Onofre nuclear power plant, home to three
mammoth atomic reactors shut by citizen activism. 

Framed
by gorgeous sandy beaches and some of the best surf in California,
the dead nukes stand in silent tribute to the popular demand for
renewable energy. They attest to one of history’s most powerful and
persistent nonviolent movements. 

But
250 miles up the coast, two reactors still operate at Diablo Canyon,
surrounded by a dozen earthquake faults. They’re 
less
than
 seventy
miles from the San Andreas, about half the distance of Fukushima from
the quake line that destroyed it. Should any quakes strike while
Diablo operates, the reactors could be reduced to rubble and the
radioactive fallout would pour into Los Angeles.

Some
10,000 
arrests of
citizens engaged in civil disobedience have put the Diablo reactors
at ground zero in the worldwide No Nukes campaign. But the epic
battle goes far beyond atomic power. It is a monumental showdown over
who will own our global energy supply, and how this will impact the
future of our planet.  

On
one side is King CONG (Coal, Oil, Nukes, and Gas), the corporate
megalith that’s unbalancing our weather and dominating our
governments in the name of centralized, for-profit control of our
economic future. On the other is a nonviolent grassroots campaign
determined to reshape our power supply to operate in harmony with
nature, to serve the communities and individuals who consume and
increasingly produce that energy, and to build the foundation of a
sustainable eco-democracy.

The
modern war over America’s energy began in the 1880s, when Thomas
Edison and Nikola Tesla 
clashed over
the nature of America’s new electric utility business. It is now
entering a definitive final phase as fossil fuels and nuclear power
sink into an epic abyss, while green power launches into a
revolutionary, apparently unstoppable, takeoff.  

In
many ways, the two realities were separated at birth.  

Edison
pioneered the idea of a 
central
grid
,
fed by large corporate-owned power generators. 
Backed by
the banker J. Pierpont Morgan, Edison pioneered the electric light
bulb and envisioned a money-making grid in which wires would carry
centrally generated electricity to homes, offices, and factories. He
started with a coal-burning generator at Morgan’s Fifth Avenue
mansion, which in 1882 became the world’s first home with electric
lights.

Morgan’s
father was unimpressed. And his wife wanted that filthy generator off
the property. So Edison and Morgan began stringing wires around New
York City, initially fed by a single power station. The city was soon
criss-crossed with wires strung by competing companies.

But
the direct current produced by Edison’s generator couldn’t travel
very far. So he offered his Serbian assistant, Nikola Tesla, a
$50,000 bonus to solve the problem.

Tesla
did the job with alternating current, which 
Edison claimed
was dangerous and impractical. He reneged on Tesla’s bonus, and the
two became lifelong rivals.

To
demonstrate alternating current’s dangers, Edison launched the “
War
of the Currents
,”
using it to kill large animals (including an elephant). He also
staged a gruesome human execution with the electric chair he secretly
financed.

Edison’s
prime vision was of corporate-owned central power stations feeding a
for-profit grid run for the benefit of capitalists like Morgan. 

Tesla
became a 
millionaire working
with industrialist George Westinghouse, who used alternating current
to establish the first big generating station at Niagara Falls. But
Morgan bullied him out of the business. A visionary rather than a
capitalist, Tesla surrendered his royalties to help Westinghouse,
then spent the rest of his haunted, complex 
careerpioneering
various inventions meant to produce endless quantities of electricity
and distribute it free and without wires. 

Meanwhile,
the investor-owned utilities bearing Edison’s name and Morgan’s
money built the new grid on the back of big coal-burners that poured
huge profits into their coffers and lethal pollutants into the air
and water.

In
the 1930s, Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal established the federally
owned Tennessee Valley Authority and Bonneville Power Project. The
New Deal also strung wires to thousands of American farms through
the 
Rural
Electrification Administration
.
Hundreds of rural electrical cooperatives sprang up throughout the
land. As nonprofits with community roots and ownership, the co-ops
have generally 
provided far
better and more responsive service than the for-profit investor-owned
utilities. 

But
it was another federal agency—the 
Atomic
Energy Commission
—that
drove the utility industry to the crisis point we know today. Coming
out of World War II, the commission’s mandate was to maintain our
nascent nuclear weapons capability. After the bombings of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki, it shifted focus, prodded by Manhattan Project
scientists who hoped the “Peaceful Atom” might redeem their guilt
for inventing the devices that killed so many.

When
AEC chairman Lewis Strauss 
promised atomic
electricity “too cheap to meter,” he heralded a massive
government commitment involving billions in invested capital and
thousands of jobs. Then, in 1952, President Harry Truman commissioned
panel on
America’s energy future headed by CBS Chairman William Paley. The
c
ommission
report
embraced
atomic power, but bore the seeds of a worldview in which renewable
energy would ultimately dominate. Paley 
predicted the
United States would have thirteen million solar-heated homes by 1975.

Of
course, this did not happen. Instead, the nuclear power industry grew
helter-skelter without rational planning. Reactor designs were not
standardized. Each new plant became an engineering adventure, as
capability soared from roughly 100 megawatts at Shippingport in 1957
to well over 1,000 in the 1970s. By then, the industry was showing
signs of decline. No new plant 
commissioned
since 1974
 has
been completed.

But
with this dangerous and dirty power have come Earth-friendly
alternatives, ignited in part by the grassroots movements of the
1960s. E.F. Schumacher’s 
Small
Is Beautiful
became
the bible of a back-to-the-land movement that took a new generation
of veteran activists into the countryside. 

Dozens
of nonviolent confrontations erupted, with thousands of arrests. In
June 1978, nine months before the partial meltdown at 
Three
Mile Island
,
the grassroots Clamshell Alliance 
drew 20,000
participants to a rally at New Hampshire’s Seabrook site. And Amory
Lovins’s pathbreaking article, “
Energy
Strategy:
 The Road
Not Taken
,” posited
a whole new energy future, grounded in photovoltaic and wind
technologies, along with breakthroughs in conservation and
efficiency, and a paradigm of decentralized, community-owned power. 

As
rising concerns about global warming forced a hard look at fossil
fuels, the fading nuclear power industry suddenly had a new selling
point. Climate expert 
James
Hansen
,
former Environmental Protection Agency chief 
Christine
Todd Whitman
,
and 
Whole
Earth Catalog
 founder Stewart
Brand
 began
advocating atomic energy as an answer to CO2 emissions. The corporate
media began breathlessly reporting a “nuclear renaissance”
allegedly led by hordes of environmentalists.

But
the launch of Peaceful Atom 2.0 has fallen flat.

As
I recently detailed in an 
online
article
 for The
Progressive
,
atomic energy adds to rather than reduces global warming. All
reactors emit Carbon-14. The fuel they burn demands substantial CO2
emissions in the 
mining,
milling, and enrichment processes
.
Nuclear engineer Arnie Gundersen has 
compiled a
wide range of studies concluding new reactor construction would
significantly worsen the climate crisis.

Moreover,
attempts to recycle spent reactor fuel or weapons material have
failed, as have attempts to establish a workable nuclear-waste
management protocol. For decades, reactor proponents have argued that
the barriers to radioactive waste storage are political rather than
technical. But after six decades, no country has unveiled a proven
long-term storage strategy for high-level waste.  

For
all the millions spent on it, the nuclear renaissance has 
failed to
yield a single new reactor order. New projects in France, Finland,
South Carolina, and Georgia are 
costingbillions
extra, with opening dates years behind schedule. Five projects pushed
by the Washington Public Power System 
caused the
biggest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history. No major long-standing
green groups have joined the tiny crew of self-proclaimed “pro-nuke
environmentalists.” Wall Street is 
backing
away

Even
the split atom’s most ardent advocates are hard-pressed to argue
any new reactors will be built in the United States, or more than a
scattered few anywhere else but China, where the debate still rages
and the outcome is uncertain.

Today
there are about 100 U.S. reactors 
still
licensed
 to
operate, and about 450 worldwide. About a dozen U.S. plants have 
shut
down
 in
the last several years. A half dozen more are 
poised to
shut for financial reasons. The plummeting price of fracked gas and
renewable energy has driven them to the brink. As Gundersen notes,
operating and maintenance costs have soared as efficiency and
performance have declined. An aging, depleted skilled labor force
will make continued operations dicey at best.

And
nuclear plants have short lifespans for safe operation.

When
the reactor ruptured on March 11, 2011, spewing radioactivity around
the northern hemisphere, Fukushima Daiichi had been operating only
one month past its fortieth birthday,” Gundersen says.

But
the nuclear power industry is not giving up. It wants some $100
billion in state-based 
bailouts.
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo recently 
pushed through
a $7.6 billion handout to sustain four decrepit upstate reactors. A
similar bailout was 
approved in
Ohio. Where once it demanded deregulation and a competitive market,
the nuclear industry now wants re-regulation and guaranteed profits
no matter how badly it performs.

The
grassroots pushback has been fierce. Proposed bailouts have
been 
defeated in
Illinois and are under attack in New York and Ohio. A
groundbreaking 
agreement involving
green and union groups has set deadlines for shutting the Diablo
reactors, with local activists demanding a quicker timetable.
Increasingly worried about meltdowns and explosions, grassroots
campaigns to close old reactors are ramping up throughout the United
States and Europe. Citizen action in Japan has prevented the
reopening of nearly all nuclear plants since Fukushima.

Envisioning
the “nuclear interruption” behind us, visionaries like Lovins see
a decentralized 
“Solartopian”
system
 with
supply owned and operated at the grassroots.

The
primary battleground is now Germany, with the
world’s 
fourth-largest economy.
Many years ago, the powerful green movement 
won a
commitment to shut the country’s fossil/nuclear generators and
convert entirely to renewables. But the center-right regime of Angela
Merkel was dragging its feet.

In
early 2011, the greens called for a nationwide demonstration to
demand the 
Energiewende,
the total conversion to decentralized green power. But before the
rally took place, the four reactors at Fukushima blew up. Facing a
massive political upheaval, and apparently personally shaken,
Chancellor Merkel (a trained quantum chemist) declared her commitment
to go green. Eight of Germany’s nineteen reactors were soon shut,
with plans to close the rest by 2022.

 That
Europe’s biggest economy was now on a soft path originally mapped
out by the counterculture prompted a 
hard
response
 of
well-financed corporate resistance. “You can build a wind farm in
three to four years,” 
groused Henrich
Quick of 50 Hertz, a German transmission grid operator.

Getting
permission for an overhead line takes ten years.”

Indeed,
the transition is succeeding faster and more profitably than its
staunchest supporters imagined. Wind and solar have blasted ahead.
Green energy prices have dropped and Germans are enthusiastically
lining up to put power plants on their rooftops. Sales of solar
panels have skyrocketed, with an ever-growing percentage of supply
coming from stand-alone buildings and community projects. The grid
has been flooded with cheap, green juice, crowding out the existing
nukes and fossil burners, cutting the legs out from under the old
system.  

In
many ways it’s the investor-owner utilities’ worst nightmare,
dating all the way back to the 1880s, when Edison fought Tesla. Back
then, the industry-funded Edison Electric Institute warned that
“distributed generation” could spell doom for the grid-based
industry. That 
industry-feared
deluge
 of
cheap, locally owned power is now at hand.  


In
the United States, state legislatures dominated by the fossil
fuel-invested billionaire Koch brothers have been slashing away at
energy efficiency and conservation programs. Ohio, Arizona, and other
states that had enacted progressive green-based transitions are
now 
shredding them.
In Florida, a 
statewide
referendum
 pretending
to support solar power was in fact designed to kill it.  

In
Nevada, homeowners who put solar panels on their rooftops are under
attack. The state’s monopoly utility, with support from the
governor and legislature, is 
seeking to
make homeowners who put solar panels on their rooftops pay more than
others for their electricity. 

But
it may be too little, too late. In its agreement with the state,
unions, and environmental groups, Pacific Gas and Electric
has 
admitted that
renewables could, in fact, produce all the power now coming from the
two decaying Diablo nukes. The Sacramento Municipal Utility
District 
shut down
its one reactor in 1989 and is now flourishing with a wave of
renewables.  

The
revolution has spread to the transportation sector, where electric
cars are now plugging into outlets powered by solar panels on homes,
offices, commercial buildings, and factories. Like nuclear power, the
gas-driven automobile may be on its way to extinction.  

Nationwide,
more than 200,000 Americans now 
work in
the solar industry, including 
more
than 75,000
 in
California alone. By contrast, only about 100,000 people 
work in
the U.S. nuclear industry. Some 88,000 Americans now 
work in
the wind industry, compared to about 
83,000 in
coal mines, with that number also dropping steadily.

Once
the shining hope of the corporate power industry, atomic energy’s
demise represents more than just the failure of a technology. It’s
the prime indicator of an epic shift away from  corporate
control of a grid-based energy supply, toward a green power web owned
and operated by the public.

As
homeowners, building managers, factories, and communities develop an
ever-firmer grip on a grassroots homegrown power supply, the arc of
our 128-year energy war leans toward Solartopia. 

Harvey
Wasserman’s 
Solartopia!
Our Green-Powered Eart
h
is at 
solartopia.org.
His Green Power & Wellness Show is at 
prn.fm.
He edits 
nukefree.org.


http://www.progressive.org/news/2016/12/189107/king-cong-vs-solartopia     King CONG vs. Solartopia by Harvey Wasserman

==========

*  Vergeet niet, dat voorafgaand aan de ramp in Fukushima, PvdA volksverlakker Samsom zijn bezwaar tegen kernenergie bijstelde in geen bezwaar………

** Zoals zo ongeveer alle bestaande kerncentrales kampen met fikse problemen, die zoveel mogelijk uit de pers worden gehouden. In Nederland kan het nog gekker: de centrale in Borssele heeft eenzelfde reactorvat als de centrales in het Belgische Tihange en Doel, waar men haarscheurtjes heeft ontdekt in het reactorvat, toch weigert men een grondig onderzoek te doen naar haarscheurtjes in het reactorvat van de centrale in Borssele……..

Zie ook:

Radioactieve deeltjes van Fukushima ramp gevonden in de Beringstraat

Samsom (PvdA), de nieuwe ‘Eco Warrior’ laat van zich horen…. OEI!!!

Californië, een apocalyps van vuur, plus een boodschap voor dwaze nucleaire energie lobbyisten’‘ 

Radioactieve wijn door kernramp Fukushima

Hans Spekman (PvdA) vindt uitdelen van jodiumpillen aan ‘omwonenden’ van wrakke kerncentrales onzin…..

Stientje van Veldhoven (D66 staatssecretaris) ‘plotsklaps’ slap op kernenergie, waar de Belgische kerncentrales in Doel en Tihange levensgevaarlijk zijn……

Jodiumtabletten voor omwonenden kerncentrales………. ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha!

Eigenaar Fukushima wil 777.000 ton radioactief afval in oceaan dumpen…..!!!

Bam gaat meebouwen aan nieuwe Britse kerncentrale……….

Hinkley Point C: EU keurt 21 miljard overheidssubsidie goed voor bouw kerncentrale……….

Melchior: na Fukushima lachte Frankrijk de Duitsers uit, daar men ‘gratis’ kernenergie afzwoer……..

Australische ‘wetenschappers’ verklaren Fukushima tot een incident……..

Turkenburg stelt dat een ‘meltdown’ van de kerncentrales in Borssele en België onmogelijk is…….. AUW!!!

Turkenburg: “de ramp in Fukushima is aan menselijk falen te danken..” ha! ha! ha! ha! Ja, zoals de kerncentrales ook door mensen worden gebouwd!!

Ramp Fukushima door menselijk falen

Klik voor meer berichten n.a.v. het bovenstaande, op één van de labels, die u onder dit bericht terug kan vinden, dit geldt niet voor de labels: Diablo Canyon, Edison,  San Andreasbreuk, Tesla.

Tsjernobyl 24 april 1986 en de bagatellisering van gevaren kernenergie

Het is vandaag 30 jaar geleden, dat de kernramp in Tsjernobyl zich voltrok. In aanloop van de 30 jarige herdenking deze ramp, liet een aantal kernenergie deskundigen van zich horen de laatste tijd. Opvallend commentaar: een ramp als die in Tsjernobyl is niet mogelijk met de centrales in Nederland en België…….

Na de kernramp van 2011 in Fukushima, was dit geluid verdwenen, tot die ramp haalden de voorstanders van kernenergie deze dooddoener ‘te onpas en te onpas’ van stal. Maar helaas: de kernreactoren van Fukushima waren ‘moderne en betrouwbare’ reactoren, gebouwd naar VS ontwerp >> weg dooddoener!

Het is nu meer dan 4 jaar, na de ramp in Fukushima en blijkbaar vindt de kernenergie maffia het tijd, weer te pleiten voor kernenergie. Zoals gezegd de oude dooddoener wordt weer van stal gehaald, alsof de ramp in Fukushima niet plaatsvond…….

Intussen stroomt er per dag 300 ton aan radioactief water uit het Fukushima complex zo de oceaan in, dat is 300.000 liter!!! De pers en milieugroepen zijn niet welkom in het rampgebied rond Fukushima, m.a.w. alles wat daar passeert is verborgen voor het publiek en de wereld moet een regering geloven, die als alle voorgaande Japanse regeringen zoveel mogelijk de gevaren van kernenergie bagatelliseert…… Oh nee, ik vergis me, de vorige regering sloot alle kerncentrales na de ramp in Fukushima, dat heeft de huidige regering teruggedraaid……..

Een paar weken geleden liepen twee Japanse kerncentrales groot gevaar, door een zware aardbeving in het gebied, waar deze centrales stonden……… Lullig genoeg was de aandacht in de Nederlandse media voor dat feit uiterst belabberd…..

Na het zoveelste stilleggen van een Belgische reactor in Doel, of Tihange, berichtte Deutsche Wirtschafts Nachrichten gisteren dat computers van de Duitse kerncentrale van Gundremmingen besmet waren met een computervirus…….. Niet door kwaadwillende buitenstaanders, maar gewoon via een ‘bevriende stick……’

Hier een artikel dat Harvey Wasserman publiceerde op de webpagina van Eco Watch, over 30 jaar Tsjernobyl:

30
Ways Chernobyl and Dying Nuke Industry Threaten Our Survival

Harvey
Wasserman
 | April
25, 2016 1:33 pm 

April
26 marks the 30th anniversary of the catastrophic explosion at
the 
Chernobylnuclear
power plant.

It
comes as Germany, which is phasing out all its reactors, has asked
Belgium to shut two of its nukes because of the threat of terrorism.

It
also comes as advancing efficiencies and plunging prices
in 
renewable
energy
 remind
us that nukes stand in the way of solving our 
climate
crisis
.

Greenpeace action at the Bohunice nuclear power plant in Czechoslovakia, near the Austrian border. Activists erected 5,000 wooden crosses on April 25, 1991 to commemorate the fifth anniversary of the Chernobyl disaster, and appealed to the Czech government to close the outdated Soviet-built plant. Photo credit: © Greenpeace / Veronika Leitinger

Greenpeace
action at the Bohunice nuclear power plant in Czechoslovakia, near
the Austrian border. Activists erected 5,000 wooden crosses on April
25, 1991 to commemorate the fifth anniversary of the Chernobyl
disaster, and appealed to the Czech government to close the outdated
Soviet-built plant. Photo credit: © Greenpeace / Veronika Leitinger

And
it makes us remember the second and third biggest lies told us
by the atomic power industry: that no commercial nuke could explode,
and that no one would be harmed by reactor fallout.

Prior
to the 1986 disaster at Chernobyl, there was at least one minor
explosion (on March 28, 1979) at 
Three
Mile Island
 (TMI)
in Pennsylvania. Thankfully, TMI Unit 2’s containment dome was
uniquely solid. The site is in the flight path of the Harrisburg
airport. Citizen activists had demanded Unit 2’s containment be
able to withstand a jet crash. So they forced construction upgrades
that may have saved millions of lives when the reactor was stretched
to its limits.

TMI’s
owners long denied there was a melt-down at all. But robot cameras
later showed otherwise. The industry still denies anyone was harmed
by TMI’s fallout. But the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture
and the Baltimore News-American 
reported that
downwind farm and wild animals died in horrifying droves. Parallel
reports by researcher Tim Mousseau are now coming from areas downwind
from Chernobyl.

Village
Voice reporter Anna Mayo (recently deceased and greatly missed),
photographer Bob Del Tredici and filmmaker Robbie Leppzer all
documented TMI’s immense human toll. In 1980, I 
interviewed dozens
of local downwinders enduring radiation-related illnesses including
cancer, emphysema, heart disease, stroke, sterility, birth defects
and Down’s Syndrome.

Recent
studies by nuclear engineer 
Arnie
Gundersen
 indicate
TMI2’s containment may have cracked, releasing far more radiation
than generally suspected. Even now, nobody knows exactly how much did
escape, what it consisted of, where it went or who was impacted.
TMI’s owners have quietly paid at least 
$15
million in damages to downwinder families
,
including at least some payments for Down’s Syndrome.

By
1979 new reactor orders had already stopped due to the industry’s
horrific inefficiencies, bad economics and lack of answers for
decommissioning and radioactive waste storage. The industry’s
biggest lie—that atomic power would be “too cheap to meter”—was
already obvious.

But
when Chernobyl blew up 30 years ago, it exposed lies number
2 and number 3: that a commercial reactor could not explode and
that the industry’s radiation would kill no one.

Here’s
a short list of 30 ways these two tragic flaws are killing us all.
They are discussed with experts Joe Mangano and Dr. Janette Sherman
on my 
recent
Solartopia show
.

1. According
to studies by three top European scientists
,
first published in 2009, more than 
985,000
people have died
 from
Chernobyl’s fallout.

2. Impactful
radioactive contamination is still in evidence in soil
throughout
Ukraine, Belarus and as far away as Scotland.

3. By
some estimates, children born throughout regions downwind of
Chernobyl
 have suffered
radiation-related diseases
 at
rates affecting up to 80 percent of those born in critical areas.

4. Reindeer,
sheep and other animals
 across
northern Europe are still too heavily contaminated to be safely
consumed.

5. Radioactive
fallout
 from
Chernobyl
 hit
northern California within 10 days of the explosion,
followed by a 60 percent drop in bird births recorded at the Pt.
Reyes sanctuary north of San Francisco.

6. Epidemiological
studies by Mangano, Sherman and others show that 
nearby
infant death rates
 rise
when commercial reactors open, and drop when they shut.

7. Epidemiological
studies show
 direct
links between reactor operations and cancer rates downwind, including
a 70 percent excess of thyroid cancer in the four counties
surrounding New York’s 
Indian
Point
 reactors
as opposed to the nation as a whole.

8. When
Chernobyl blew up
,
industry apologists emphasized that such a disaster at a Soviet
reactor had nothing to do with American nukes. But on March 11, 2011,
four General Electric reactors exploded at Fukushima (three melted,
and their cores have yet to be found).

9. The
explosions at Fukushima
 by
estimates of at least one Japanese scientist have spewed at least 
30
times as much Cesium 137
 as
was released by the atomic bombs at 
Hiroshima
and Nagasaki
.

10. The Fukushima disaster
still dumps
 at
least 300 tons of radioactive water into the Pacific Ocean every day.

11. Thousands
of tons of contaminated water
 are
being held in flimsy storage tanks at Fukushima, at least some of
which are likely to give way; serious leaks of radioactive water are
also on-going at Indian Point, Florida’s Turkey Point, numerous
other commercial reactor sites and at the Hanford (Washington)
military reservation.

12. The
Japanese government and Fukushima’s owner
 (Tepco)
are hinting strongly they would like to dump still more thousands of
tons of radioactive water directly into the Pacific.

13. At
least 7,000 clean-up workers
 are still
being exposed
 to
radiation at Fukushima every day.

14. It
remains unclear exactly where the cores from Units 1, 2  and 3
might be
,
what can be done to contain them and exactly what kinds of long-term
dangers they pose.

15. Thyroid
abnormalities among children
 in
the Fukushima area are
far
beyond normal
.

 

Thyroid in Children Increases 30-Fold in , New Study Says

16. Physicians for Social Responsibility predicts at least 68,000 downwinders will die from Fukushima’s fallout. Dr. Chris Busby estimatesadditional cancers alone at more than 400,000. Arnie Gundersen estimates the ultimate toll on par with Chernobyl, of up to 1,000,000.

17. Radioactive
hot spots clearly linked to Fukushima
 are
being found throughout Japan, some as far away as Tokyo.

18. Japanese
activists have kept all but three of Japan’s 54 reactors shut
 since
Fukushima, but the pro-nuke Abe regime wants to stage some 2020
Olympic events near the stricken reactor site.

19. Some
11,000 highly radioactive fuel rods are still strewn around the
Fukushima site
 with
no prospects for safe long-term storage.  Nowhere on earth has
safe long-term storage of atomic wastes been proven.

20. Though
the explosions at Fukushima have been linked to the tsunami
 that
wiped out back-up generations, primary damage (especially at Unit 1)
was caused by an earthquake whose epicenter was 120 kilometers
distant, far further than many fault-lines near scores of other
reactors around the world.

21. Two
U.S. reactor sites
 (Perry
in Ohio and North Anna in Virginia) have already suffered significant
damage from earthquakes.

22. Among
many others, reactors at Diablo Canyon, California and Indian Point,
New York
,
are very near major fault lines, with the potential death tolls in
downwind Los Angeles and New York City stretching into the millions.

23. Dr.
Michael Peck, resident Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC)
safety inspector at California’s Diablo Canyon has warned
that
the two huge reactors there cannot withstand a likely earthquake
delivered by any of the dozen seismic faultiness surround the site.
Peck filed his report within the NRC but it was made public a year
later by Friends of the Earth and other community groups. The NRC has
dismissed Peck’s warnings and he has been moved to the Commission’s
Chattanooga office.

24. As
terrorists slaughtered innocent civilians in Brussels, the New York
Times reported
 that
Belgian
 authorities
evacuated two reactors
which
they felt were vulnerable to attack. As mentioned above, Germany
has now asked Belgium to shut these nukes down.

25. A
wide range of reports dating back at least to the 1970s have
confirmed
 that
throughout the entire global nuclear industry, commercial reactors
simply 
cannot
be guaranteed
 to
be safe from a concerted terrorist attack, making them all what Karl
Grossman has called “pre-deployed weapons of mass destruction.”

26. The
technological basis for the 99 U.S. reactors now operating dates
far back
 in
the previous century, as the average age of an operating U.S. nuke
American reactor is now roughly 35 years old, with Davis-Besse (near
Toledo, Ohio) distinguished primarily by four major cuts into its
containment dome, and a shield building that is literally crumbling.

27. Since
Fukushima on March 11, 2011
 significant
safety advances advocated by the staff of the NRC and others have not
been installed at U.S. nukes despite widespread warning of defects.

28. Seven
top NRC engineers took the 
rare
and daring step
 of
filing a public 2.206 petition warning that 98 of 99 current US
reactors have serious basic flaws in the electrical sector of their
emergency core cooling systems, which are designed to protect the
public from a major catastrophe.

EcoWatch ‎@EcoWatch

7 Top  Experts Break Ranks to Warn of Critical Danger at Aging  Plants http://ecowatch.com/2016/03/09/nrc-experts-warn-dangers-nuclear/ @riverkeeper

29. Former
NRC expert 
David
Lochbaum
,
now with the Union of Concerned Scientists, has warned
 that
the inspectors’ findings on the faulty cooling system wiring are
quite serious, and could have been solved easily and cheaply several
years ago, when they were first discovered.

30. The
corrupt regulatory culture of the NRC is now in the process of
re-licensing every American reactor
,
with projected lifetimes stretching to 60 years, two decades beyond
original design capacity, guaranteeing that America’s 99 remaining
reactors will continue to dangerously decay, putting us all in harm’s
way. All the relicensing has proceeded without a requirement that the
industry get private insurance, which is still unavailable after more
than a half-century of operations.

There
is much much more. The on-going radiation releases from these jalopy
reactors impact our health and undermine our eco-systems every
day, threatening our future on this planet, and standing in the
way of the Solartopian Revolution in renewables and efficiency that
must ultimately save our planet from ecological and economic
ruin.

Harvey
Wasserman’s Organic Spiral of U.S. History will be published soon
on 
www.solartopia.org. He
edits 
www.nukefree.org and
wrote Solartopia! Our Green-Powered Earth.

Mijn excuus voor de belabberde weergave. 

Klik voor meer berichten n.a.v. het voorgaande, op één van de labels, die u onder dit bericht terug kan vinden.

Kerncentrales De Krim doelwit Oekraïense terroristen…..

Gisteren schreef ik een artikel over de selectieve belangstelling voor gebeurtenissen door o.a. de reguliere media, dit i.v.m. de westerse aandacht voor de neergeschoten Russische straaljager*. Later op de dag, kwam ik een artikel van Harvey Wasserman op EcoWatch tegen, waarin hij het totaal negeren door de westerse media, van het opblazen van hoogspanningsmasten in De Krim hekelde. Volgens Wasserman waren dit hoogspanningsmasten, die stroom afvoeren uit twee kerncentrales en bestond het reële gevaar, voor kernsmelting, dan wel een explosie van de kern als in de kerncentrales van Fukushima……… Voorts wijst Wasserman er nog eens op, hoe gevaarlijk en kwetsbaar kerncentrales eigenlijk zijn, ook door terroristische aanslagen…….

Volgens de autoriteiten in De Krim en Rusland, is deze terroristische daad alleen toe te schrijven aan het fascistische bewind in Oekraïne, de door neonazi’s gecontroleerde regering van de corrupte grofgraaier Porosjenko, ik ‘vrees’ dat ze daar het gelijk aan hun kant hebben………

Porosjenko, de enorme misdadiger en marionet van de VS, die z’n ‘eigen’ burgers massaal vermoord, mag godbetert ons land bezoeken….. Nederland dat zich afficheert als land van internationaal strafrecht…… De neonazi junta, die Porosjenko leidt, maakte gisteren op de beschuldigingen van voornoemde autoriteiten bekend, dat het geen gas meer zal afnemen van Rusland en dat het luchtruim van Oekraïne gesloten zal worden voor Russische vliegtuigen. Wat betreft dat gas: Oekraïne heeft een enorme schuld opgebouwd met het niet betalen voor de leveringen van dit Russische gas, vorig jaar was die schuld nog 14 miljard euro, reken maar, dat dit bedrag intussen een stuk hoger is………

Hier het artikel:

Nuclear
Reactors Make ISIS an Apocalyptic Threat

Harvey
Wasserman
 | November
25, 2015 10:22 am | 
Comments

As
you read this, a terror attack has put atomic reactors in Ukraine at
the brink of another Chernobyl-scale apocalypse.

Transmission
lines have been blown up. Power to at least two major nuclear power
stations has been 
“dangerously”
cut
.
Without emergency backup, those nukes could lose coolant to their
radioactive cores and spent fuel pools. They could then melt or
explode, as at 
Fukushima.

Yet
amidst endless “all-fear-all-the-time” reporting on ISIS, the
corporate media has remained shockingly silent on this potential
catastrophe.

Ukraine's Rivne Nuclear Power Plant in the country's northwest. Photo credit: Wikimedia commonsUkraine’s
Rivne Nuclear Power Plant in the country’s northwest. Photo credit:
Wikimedia commons

Nor
has it faced the most critical step needed to protect our planet
in a time of terror: shutting all atomic reactors.

The
world’s 430-plus licensed commercial 
nuclear
plants
 give
terrorists like ISIS the power at any time to inflict a radioactive
Apocalypse that could kill millions, destroy huge parts of the Earth
and devastate the global economy.

Fallout
from Chernobyl’s 1986 disaster has killed more than a
million people.

Cancer
rates among children
 and
others near Fukushima are soaring.

Americans
downwind from Three Mile Island 
died
in droves
.

Major
scientific studies in Germany and elsewhere 
link soaring
cancer and other human death rates to nearby reactor emissions even
without an accident.

The
1966 melt-down at Fermi I, near Detroit, cost at least $100 million.
Three Mile Island’s 1979 melt-down converted a $900 million asset
into a $2 billion liability. Chernobyl has cost Ukraine, Belarus and
the former Soviet Union at least $500 billion. Fukushima wiped out a
$60 billion asset and may cost Japan trillions, permanently crippling
its economy.

All
imposing inestimable damage to the global ecology. The radioactive
carbon and raw heat reactors emit unbalance our weather, irradiate
the oceans, create waste that cannot be managed.

The
ability of ISIS and other terrorists to cause more such catastrophes
is unquestioned and escalating.

Despite ISIS’s
bloody warning in Paris
,
all commercial reactors are still at risk.

They
are crumbling on their own. The shield building at Ohio’s
Davis-Besse is 
literally
disintegrating
.

Diablo
Canyon is surrounded by a dozen 
California
fault lines
.

Fort
Calhoun in Nebraska has been 
flooded.

Earthquakes
have 
damaged Ohio’s
Perry and North Anna, in Virginia.

And
official reports on the 9/11 attacks on New York’s World Trade
Center confirm that Al Quaeda also c
onsidered
targeting atomic reactors
.

Had
they hit Indian Point, 45 miles north of the twin towers, millions of
Americans would now be dead. Trillions in property damage would have
decimated the nation’s economy. Billions of acres would be
contaminated, along with countless lakes, rivers and much of the
Atlantic Ocean.

The
screaming heads at CNN, Fox et. al. say this kind of Apocalyptic
event is exactly what ISIS seeks. But they avoid the
obvious connection to the world’s increasingly fragile
reactors.

In
Ukraine, Deputy Director Yuri Katchich of the Ukrenergo power
company 
said the
“emergency unloading” at the South Ukrainian and Zaporozhskaya
nuclear sites forced by terror attacks on far-away power
lines is “very dangerous.” We can only imagine the damage
direct attacks on the reactors themselves might have done.

The
2011 earthquake and tsunami took out back-up generators at 
Fukushima,
followed by three melt-downs and four explosions.

Tsunami-like
flooding caused by busted dams upriver from at least three dozen U.S.
reactors could replicate much of what happened at Fukushima.

There
are 58 reactors in France, 99 in the U.S. If ISIS is as reckless and
relentless as it seems, the safety of none of them can be guaranteed.

So
as our governments, politicians and media scream for security, we
must free ourselves from the nuclear curse.

We
must also remember that ISIS grew out of an U.S. invasion of Iraq
based largely on our corporate addiction to fossil fuels.

The
obvious answer to this global nightmare is to speed the transition to
a
renewable energy world.

No
terror group can ever cause an apocalypse by blowing up a solar
panel.

Harvey
Wasserman
 wrote
SOLARTOPIA! OUR GREEN-POWERED EARTH. His AMERICA AT THE BRINK OF
REBIRTH: THE ORGANIC SPIRAL OF U.S. HISTORY will be published next
year.

* Zie: ‘Het Syrische leger haalt een straaljager van de VS uit de lucht………

Voor meer berichten over/met De Krim, Oekraïne, Porosjenko, VS buitenlands beleid (de VS heeft de opstand en staatsgreep in Oekraïne gefinancierd en geregisseerd…), terreur, kerncentrale, kernenergie, Fukushima, Tsjernobyl, ISIS (= IS), Irak en/of illegale oorlog, klik op het desbetreffende label, onder dit bericht.