reason why the antiwar movement did not catch on in US

zidane1strife said:
What are a few decades? That's gonna pass by in no time...

Alright then. You and I just have different notions of "soon". I don't dispute that fusion will happen eventually, the question is, when?
 
RussSchultz said:
If the reaction takes more energy to sustain itself than it creates, you cannot make it viable by simply making it bigger! (This is the same reason 90% of the .com's failed--you can't make your losses up in volume)

Theoretically, ITER should solve that problem. Theoretically:

ITER will provide 500 megawatts of fusion power for 500 seconds or longer during each individual fusion experiment. ITER will demonstrate essential fusion energy technologies in a system that integrates physics and technology and will test key elements required to use fusion as a practical energy source. ITER will be the first fusion device to produce a burning plasma and to operate at a high power level for such long duration experiments. The fusion power produced in the ITER plasma will be 10 times greater than the external power added to the plasma.

http://www.energy.gov/HQPress/releases03/janpr/pr03026.htm
 
RussSchultz said:
Call me a pax americana lover/warmonger, but the world has remained silent for way too long and allowed Rwanda, Iraq, Zimbabwe, etc continue for way too long. I blame the US for this also.

I'm not suggesting conquering the world, but I do think the US should stand up and fill its moral shoes. The whole world should. We should cast off ties with dictators like the Saudi's, the Kuwaiti's, etc. and deal only with democratic/representative countries. We should make our displeasure known to all despotic regimes, through no uncertain terms: No economic or military aid given to any of those governments of countries like Saudi Arabia or Egypt. (direct humanitarian aid not withstanding). And yes, in extreme cases, use our military might to enact a change.

Or, you could sit pretty in your (generally) lily white ivory towers and let those darkies suffer, since you'd prefer not to dirty your hands.

Wake up. The US doesn't give a damn about Rwanda, Zimbabww, Congo, Uganda or anything else. The major reason to oppose this war is the rampant hypocrisy of the United States. Is it oil, is it racism, who knows? But the bottomline is we'd never waste the effort intervening in an African country, meanwhile we wasted no time in going into the Balkans and Iraq. Liberating people, my ass... :rolleyes:

Sxotty said:
And the reason the US doesn't do it is b/c it will be expensive, piss people off, and we don't have enough help, and to many hindering like france. If Iraq actually goes well, then I think we will see more dictators lose contorl even if the US does not intervene b/c their people will realize the lies they are hearing

The reason the US doesn't really do it, is because the US doesn't really care.

By the way, the only reason the anti-war movement didn't catch on, and the ONLY reason we went to war at all is because of 9/11. Which we now all know was planned by Saddam. Hmmm...Not sure what Osama's role was anymore... Oh, I know, maybe he doesn't exist since we couldn't catch him.

There are enough logical holes to drive the titanic through, but that's ok, mindlessly listen to your government and the genius who is our un-elected president.

By the way, if all we find is 1-2 WMD war heads, that's not significant enough to count for anything, and will be pretty hillarious.
 
Nagorak said:
Wake up. The US doesn't give a damn about Rwanda, Zimbabww, Congo, Uganda or anything else. The major reason to oppose this war is the rampant hypocrisy of the United States.

Hypocrisy is rampant among human beings.

By the way, if all we find is 1-2 WMD war heads, that's not significant enough to count for anything, and will be pretty hillarious.

Backpeddaling, see above.
 
DemoCoder said:
Yeah, but what's better -- releasing nothing into the atmosphere, and depositing a few thousand tons of spent materials into 0.1% of the earth's surface, or emitting 22 billion tonnes of CO2 into the atmosphere, and distributing low-intensity *radioactive* dust all over the earth's surface.

Sure, nuclear power plants produce more concentrated waste, but the radioactive waste from coal ash, while less dangerous per mass, is emitted and spread all over the place in much higher volumes.

I would argue that the denser the power source, and denser the waste, the better for the environment. Of course, concentraing waste leads to security problems because it becomes easier for people to move incredibly dangerous things around (who can turn radioative ash in the air into a concentrated terrorist weapon?) But security is a different concern thna environmentally optimal.

What if you could have a completely clean environment almost, but you had to turn 0.01% of the earth's surface into an uninhabitable hellhole by concentrating all your bad stuff in one place.


Is it really clear that laying down immense solar production facilities around the world to handle the future energy needs of a planet of 6 billion people living a western lifestyle will not negatively impact the planet?


As far as solar, it doesn't hurt to try, does it? Not to mention you're forgetting wind, geothermal and hydro power. Also, I don't remember a solar panel ever melting down and killing everyone nearby. Nuclear meltdowns are at least as big of a problem. Sure, maybe it's not likely, but when it happens (and it will, no matter how many safe guards you put up), it's always going to be a major disaster. Maybe it would work if all the nuclear plants were down in Antarctica or on the moon, but that's not too likely is it?

By the way, the toxic waste is a much bigger problem than you make it out to be. Yeah, it might seem like a good idea to put it in all one place but 1) no one wants it in their backyard. 2) transporting it there is hazardous and what happens when (not if) a major spill occurs. 3) the half life of radioactive waste is ridiculously long, and the idea that it won't eventually get loose is absurd. 4) If you think about the cost of maintaining a toxic waste dump for the next few eons, it no longer seems very cost effective, does it?

But that's typical western thinking, just put the problem off till tomorrow. That's why the US government is a few trillion dollars in debt. Everyone is concerned about the threat Saddam could have presented in the long term. Maybe a more realistic concern is the threat this sort of thinking is going to present in the long term. It doesn't matter if you're an individual, a corporation or a company: you can't keep going deeper into debt indefinitely. Unfortuantely the morons in congress just gung-ho to either spend the money or give outrageous tax counts-- neither of which are at all acceptable when we're already so far in debt.

Anyway, unless the western world wakes up and seriously adjusts its life style, the whole world is going to be trashed anyway. I'm afraid to think of how it will be if all the third world countries adopt the same attitude. Right now, gas guzzling cars are at least as big a problem (if not more) than power plants. In terms of pollution, power plants are actually a lot cleaner than cars, because the plants have been forced to install very effective scrubbers and such that just don't exist on the exhaust pipe of a car. Actually, make that an SUV, the type of vehicle we all know is best for hauling groceries around town. :rolleyes: And while power plants have gotten cleaners in recent years, the average fuel economy of the US has dropped since the late 80s, so things on that front are just getting worse.
 
Crusher said:
There's a small nuclear reactor about 8 blocks from where I live in the Mechanical Engineering building on campus. I don't think I've spent one second of my life worrying about whether or not it would explode, and it's being operated by 20 year old college students.

Do you worry about getting in a car accident on the way to work?

Does that mean it won't happen?
 
Deflection said:
By the way, if all we find is 1-2 WMD war heads, that's not significant enough to count for anything, and will be pretty hillarious.

Backpeddaling, see above.

You can make ricin in your house, and you can probably learn exactly how by searching the internet. Finding ricin doesn't count as having WMD.

Finding a handful of warheads does not count as a threat. The WMD threat from Iraq was nonexistant.

In fact the whole idea is pretty ridiculous, because any dictator that uses WMD on the US would just get nuked into oblivion. Contrary to popular belief, dictators are not suicidal: they like being in power.

The only people who would use chemical weapons are terrorists, and then it's a moot point because they already can just make ricin themselves. The thing about terrorism is it requires only a few people to pull off. You can't stop terrorists by attacking countries, you can't fight a "war on terrorism". Law enforcement can deter it somewhat, which is how most terrorist plots are foiled. But, the truth is, the US is no safer today than it was 5-10 years ago.

Funny how we didn't start a war on terrorism after white boy Timothy McVeigh blew up the Oklahoma city building. Based on the past few years, maybe we should be equally concerned about white militia groups as middle eastern terrorists?
 
I disagree with just about everything you say.

Nagorak said:
By the way, if all we find is 1-2 WMD war heads, that's not significant enough to count for anything, and will be pretty hillarious.

On the contrary. Finding one single <strong>nuclear warhead</strong> in Iraq would be complete justification for the war, as would finding any weapons-grade nuclear material in enough volume to create an actual weapon, be it a dirty-bomb or an actual warhead.

Nagorak said:
In fact the whole idea is pretty ridiculous, because any dictator that uses WMD on the US would just get nuked into oblivion.

That's a Cold-war era assumption that may be less valid now. During the Cold War, our massive nuclear arsenal served two purposes. Deterrent through the MAD policy, and providing us with the only possible way to neutralize the Soviets' nuclear arsenal. Small chance of that, if the Soviets could launch before our missiles hit their targeted silos, but when the alternative is the complete obliteration of your civilization, you play every odd.

However, any dictator that nukes America will not have the ability to destroy the country like the USSR could have, for the foreseeable future at least. America's convential forces are more than capable of disarming him of his wmd capability. Knowing that, I think a rational American leadership would consider a conventional response, and if they deemed it possible to effectively neutralize the threat conventially, they would actually choose that method to spare the civilian populace. A more measured response to such an attack is not out of the realm of possibility.

Nagorak said:
Contrary to popular belief, dictators are not suicidal: they like being in power.

Saddam could have stayed in power if he had simply completely co-operated with the weapons inspectors. And don't say that he did and the US lied about it. Even Hans Blix admits to a pattern of evasion. Here's a good brief on just what Saddam may have been evading:

http://www.thebulletin.org/issues/1998/mj98/mj98albright.html

From The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists said:
In 1998, many believe that Iraq’s nuclear program has been dismantled and most if not all of the materials and equipment that were used in that program have been found and destroyed. But in a seven-year-plus effort, U.N. inspectors from the U.N. Special Commission (UNSCOM) and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Action Team have had to work through so many layers of deception, and have received so many different “full, final, and complete declarationsâ€￾ from the Iraqis, that they have no doubt Iraq is still hiding important information. Inspectors believe they may never know the full story.

And theirs is not idle curiosity. The stakes are high. Inspectors believe that Iraq could reconstitute its nuclear weapons program quickly, once sanctions are lifted.

Nagorak said:
The thing about terrorism is it requires only a few people to pull off. You can't stop terrorists by attacking countries,

No, attacking Afghanistan had no effect on Al Quaeda. Your attitude seems to be that you can't stop terrorism, at all, ever. But it's that very attitude, and the accompanying decision to accept terrorist blackmail instead of fighting back, that allows terrorists to win.
 
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