- MSNBC apparently had a picture of the Ft. Calhoun nuclear
plant taken today AFTER the 'water dam' - barely visible surrounding the
reactor and main control buildings in this photo taken on June 24 - burst.
But that page is now 'page not found'.
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- I'll guess that when the aqua dam burst, the control
room was flooded. They are saying "no problem, there is no danger"-
but, of course, there IS a problem.
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- The REASON there is a problem and why they aren't telling
the truth is because, while Fukishima is equivalent to about twenty Chernobyls,
Ft. Calhoun is equivalent to about twenty Fukushimas.
- Not because it has a lot of reactors - or even a very
big one. But because it is holding an immense amount of nuclear fuel in
its cooling pool.
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- This isn't some elevated bathtub like the cooling pools
at Fukushima. Oh, no. This cooling pool is forty feet UNDER GROUND AND
forty feet ABOVE GROUND. It's EIGHTY FEET DEEP IN TOTAL. If they can't
cool it, the corn belt is in trouble.
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- I'm guessing that it's the big rectangular building behind-left
(actually touching) the round nuclear reactor containment building.
- Why do I think that? Because it has no windows or ventilation
and it's about the only building on-site large enough to hold the amount
of spent nuclear fuel it has to hold - and, by the way, it was filled up
to capacity in 2006 - which is why they had to start storing the excess
spent fuel rods in those concrete dry casks outside of the pool. But I
could be wrong. If I am, please send me a diagram - not an opiniongram.
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- The dry casks are visible near the top of the picture.
They are grey concrete blocks set together on the large, grey square area.
- The casks have white doors facing a little to the left
in the photo. The NRC says there is 'no problem' should the casks become
partially submerged by Missouri flood waters.
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- The back-up generators are probably flooded as well.
They were ALSO what the rubber dam was in place to protect. Even if they
aren't, there is water in the electrical system. That's what the yellow
cards from the NRC were about last year - and those cards were never signed
off as safe. There are at least six and probably dozens of NRC and government
people there 'closely monitoring' the plant. All they can do is watch.
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- The 'emergency' plans were only thought up when the water
started rising and were only implemented beginning on June 6. Before then,
the plant owners were still pissing back and forth with the NRC that a
flood that bad couldn't happen. And the brilliant rubber condom around
the plant didn't just burst by itself. The dumbasses were piddling around
and managed to pop it themselves!
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- So, when they tell me there is no danger at all, I know
otherwise because the rubber dam was the last resort...and that ANY water
higher than that is too much - and the water was clearly VERY high up
on it when it burst.
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- I'm thinking that if I call another disaster, and it
happens, it will start getting dicey in about sixty-four hours. From now.
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