Post from March, 2011

Nukes Have Needs. Big Ones.

Sunday, 20. March 2011 9:04

How absurd is it to boil water for electricity using something that, in the event of a natural disaster, needs all of the attention, back-up power, and water? Picture the earthquake that finally really hits California. People are homeless, hurt, without power, water, or food. Relief efforts and recovery will begin, as they do. But Diablo Canyon’s two reactors are also damaged, because it was built by the usual idiots on a heap of fault lines. All attention shifts from we the people, to the bigger badder needs of the unmanageable thing.

The world’s eye will be fixed on a firetruck gunning seawater through the air, all fingers crossed the pool ain’t cracked. How preposterous is this. There IS no tool for the job. It’s not like a fire that’s out when it’s out. Those old buggers have to stay cool for a decade before they dry store. 24/7 pumping of water for 365 unbroken days a year for 10 years. And dry storage is obviously no picnic either, and it’s no picnic FOREVER.

So California shakes and Diablo’s two reactors suddenly have the biggest needs in the room. Instead of us rallying out to clear rubble, get water, find food, we’ll be sittin’ like pigeons. Told to stay inside, we’ll huddle impossibly in our powerless homes, while suicide workers run around with extension cords and diesel and duct tape, and world leaders mumble on. We huddle instead of getting to the work we know, the work of surviving. Nukes just mean we handed over that treasure, our inborn capacity to survive. How do you rebuild when you can’t go outside? How do you start rounding up fresh water or forage for your kids, when everything’s untouchable, radioactive, pissed on by nuke execs you’ll never meet? &^%.

35 years of activists are still right: nukes are too big, too dumb, too doomed. Because Japan chose to use immortal toxins to boil water, its otherwise local disaster sweeps everyone who shares atmosphere, food chains, and oceans. With plutonium in the mix, fools upon fools, Japan’s otherwise natural disaster of 2011 is everyone’s disaster of 2012, 2018, radiating forward year after year through time and generations.

The two official lines that really burn are the one about how discussing nuclear policy in a time of tragedy is inappropriate, and the other one about “lessons learned,” like the nuclear industry is REALLY going to study this playbook and get it right next time. That is crap with a half life of a bazillion. There is no getting it right. There’s just shutting it down for good.

It is decades-past time to flip the switch to OFF at the nuclear reactors at Diablo Canyon and San Onofre. California has just these 4 reactors to close. It’s a less daunting goal than that of Japan, or France, or even our own East Coast, and it starts with PG&E, which is such familiar territory.

Meanwhile, here’s a good source: linked below (IEEE)

Category:Transition | Comment (0) | Author: Megan

Low Level Radiation: Linear or Algorithmic? Ask a Bird

Saturday, 19. March 2011 16:54

Category:Transition | Comment (0) | Author: Megan

Nukes Need Their Own Planet

Saturday, 19. March 2011 16:49

This planet is clearly not LARGE enough to handle nuclear power. If you’re still wanting nukes, you’re going to have to colonize some corner of distant space to do it, because we are clearly FULL UP here. Take every reactor and spent fuel pool and waste stash with you, please. We have been found, in every decade, to be too little for their 24/7 x Forever care.

This is good coverage: http://spectrum.ieee.org/static/japans-earthquake-and-nuclear-emergency

Category:Transition | Comment (0) | Author: Megan

This Sunday 12 Noon, Across from the Bovine in Point Reyes: Join Mainstreet Moms to Stand & Sing with Lansing, with Madison (rain or shine)

Thursday, 10. March 2011 11:20

If you can’t fly, drive or somehow project yourself through time/space to Lansing, Michigan, or Madison, Wisconsin right this damn minute, then take a stand with us across from the Bovine in Point Reyes Sunday at noon. We’ll take big photos and send support and strength to the people there next week. Forward this email to friends in other towns to stand with Lansing, because it’s really so past time. This uprising is now or never, Wisconsin folks are into their 4th cold week, and California is still dozing. We will have signs, or make your own. Bring an umbrella. We love the old labor song Solidarity Forever, and will bring handouts, but if you have another great labor song, bring copies to share. (Solidarity lyrics here, tune below.) No grating, lugubrious chants will be heard, no fear.

Category:Transition | Comment (0) | Author: Megan

Cooked up Crisis, Corporate Coup: Michael Moore on Amy Goodman Today

Thursday, 10. March 2011 11:11

What if your board of supervisors were dissolved, your town council dissolved, all current contracts with local business and labor nullified, and an outside corporate “emergency manager” put in place to run everything? Welcome to Michigan! Stand with Michigan, California, or your house is next:

Category:Transition | Comment (0) | Author: Megan

Cooked Up Crises, Corporate Coups Part II: Lansing. Watch this, I promise you.

Thursday, 10. March 2011 10:55

Category:Transition | Comment (0) | Author: Megan

Lansing Holy Crap, Madison GO

Thursday, 10. March 2011 10:23

My jaw can’t drop any further, which must mean it’s time to close it and GO. The last 24 hours ripped the last scraps of facade over what’s happening in 16 states under corporate-hired governors, and corporate-hired legislatures. It was never the pensions, it was never the budgets.

Multinationals know what it’s like to operate in countries that don’t have labor and environmental laws, haven’t the collective strength of unions, and have no local sovereignty to constrain corporate extraction activities. America is being stripped down to match, most spectacularly in Madison and now Lansing. If we all don’t figure out a way to stand in solidarity with our sisters and our brothers in that cold, and on those floors, and in those streets, we are losers in Loserville.

Category:Transition | Comment (0) | Author: Megan

This Sunday: Rally & Sing with the Mainstreet Moms for Wisconsin, Noon Point Reyes

Tuesday, 8. March 2011 7:05

Category:Transition | Comment (0) | Author: Megan