Fuck HBO

>people were beginning to finally stop screeching "muh Chernobyl!" every time nuclear power is discussed
>HBOniggers had to go and resurrect it as a talking point for at least another decade

great

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Other urls found in this thread:

pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/es3051197
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_Stevens
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unethical_human_experimentation_in_the_United_States#Human_radiation_experiments
rt.com/news/460958-chernobyl-hbo-racial-diversity-actors/
twitter.com/SFWRedditVideos

HBO hasn't been worth it since the 1980s.

Nuclear power isn’t used to generate power in most cases. It’s a power sink to take excess electricity from the grid, and also it is used to transmute elements.

The Sopranos and Curb Your Enthusiasm isnt worth it? Fuck off

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Big oil and wind, solar, etc have a pretty penny for those who scaremonger

For me it's the Phillips disaster of 1989

t. Amerimutt education

>Lets produce nuclear waste that needs to be store for generations to come just so we can have some quick cheap energy for ourselves.

Nuclear energy is boomer-tier energy.

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Joos are scared people will switch to 4th gen. nuclear and tell them and towelheads to fuck off

This is why no one takes pol serious anymore. you screech about everything that doesn't kill the environment or people. use a brain cell once in awhile and stop being contrarian for the sake of it

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>"muh Chernobyl!" every time nuclear power is discussed

It clearly showed the issue wasn't nuclear power but the combined forces of central planning, incompetence and nepotism.

Notice the target audience wasn't Americans but Europeans? We didn't get to watch it until much later. They're trying to grow anti-nuclear sentiment against Poland for going nuclear and France for wanting to stay nuclear.

>he payed to watch shows you could get for free

OZ my nigga

Comrade you're delusional GO TO INFIRMARY

The honest truth is most people, including you, don't deserve electricity. By switching to wind and solar and making electricity too expensive for commoners we'll be able to finally control information.

Before Chernobyl I thought the place IRL is a wasteland but after I researched a bit I found out radiation is pretty harmless. I didn't even know the plant stayed operational after the accident.

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pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/es3051197
>Because nuclear power is an abundant, low-carbon source of base-load power, it could make a large contribution to mitigation of global climate change and air pollution. Using historical production data, we calculate that global nuclear power has prevented an average of 1.84 million air pollution-related deaths and 64 gigatonnes of CO2-equivalent (GtCO2-eq) greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions that would have resulted from fossil fuel burning. On the basis of global projection data that take into account the effects of the Fukushima accident, we find that nuclear power could additionally prevent an average of 420000–7.04 million deaths and 80–240 GtCO2-eq emissions due to fossil fuels by midcentury, depending on which fuel it replaces. By contrast, we assess that large-scale expansion of unconstrained natural gas use would not mitigate the climate problem and would cause far more deaths than expansion of nuclear power.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_Stevens
>Albert Stevens (1887–1966), also known as patient CAL-1, was a victim of a human radiation experiment, and survived the highest known accumulated radiation dose in any human.[1] On May 14, 1945, he was injected with 131 kBq (3.55 µCi) of plutonium without his knowledge or informed consent

>Plutonium remained present in his body for the remainder of his life, the amount decaying slowly through radioactive decay and biological elimination. Stevens died of heart disease some 20 years later, having accumulated an effective radiation dose of 64 Sv (6400 rem) over that period, i.e. an average of 3 Sv per year or 350 μSv/h. The current annual permitted dose for a radiation worker in the United States is 0.05 Sv (or 5 rem), i.e. an average of 5.7 μSv/h.

>radiation is pretty harmless

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Sopranos, the wire, curbs, deadwood, band of brothers, oz

I can't think of another network putting out anything worth watching since 2000

>On May 14, 1945, he was injected with 131 kBq (3.55 µCi) of plutonium without his knowledge or informed consent
the beacon of degeneracy as is

You are like a little babby.
FUCK ALL JEW ENTERTAINMENT!

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>It clearly showed the issue wasn't nuclear power
As if that's what people will take from it

>On May 14, 1945, he was injected with 131 kBq (3.55 µCi) of plutonium without his knowledge or informed consent

Stay classy Russia

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It is.

>It clearly showed the issue wasn't nuclear power but the combined forces of central pooing, incompetence and nepotism.

I knew it!

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>reading comprehension level - 56%

>Curb Your Enthusiasm isnt worth it?
If I wanted to see a bunch ofkikes kvetching and ad-libing I'd turn on CNN.

lol no, that was us
>The mastermind behind this human experiment with plutonium was Dr. Joseph Gilbert Hamilton, a Manhattan Project doctor in charge of the human experiments in California.[6] Hamilton had been experimenting on people (including himself) since the 1930s at Berkeley.

>Although Stevens was the person who received the highest dose of radiation during the plutonium experiments, he was neither the first nor the last subject to be studied. Eighteen people aged 4 to 69 were injected with plutonium. Subjects who were chosen for the experiment had been diagnosed with a terminal disease. They lived from 6 days up to 44 years past the time of their injection.[2] Eight of the 18 died within 2 years of the injection.[2] All died from their preexisting terminal illness, or cardiac illnesses. None died from the plutonium itself.

>Stevens was a house painter, originally from Ohio, who had settled in California in the 1920s with his wife. He had checked into the University of California Hospital in San Francisco with a gastric ulcer that was misdiagnosed as terminal cancer. According to Earl Miller, acting chief of radiology at the time, he was chosen for this study because "he was doomed" to die

Many comical things have been done:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unethical_human_experimentation_in_the_United_States#Human_radiation_experiments
>The experiments included a wide array of studies, involving things like feeding radioactive food to mentally disabled children or conscientious objectors, inserting radium rods into the noses of schoolchildren, deliberately releasing radioactive chemicals over U.S. and Canadian cities, measuring the health effects of radioactive fallout from nuclear bomb tests, injecting pregnant women and babies with radioactive chemicals, and irradiating the testicles of prison inmates, amongst other things.

Forget that, post more funny cats

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Wow, I see how it is
no reply?

i'm currently watching it, so far so good, i really like the accuracy.

K I N O
I
N
O

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Just meme that it's anticomminst because they are secretly nazis. Maybe antifa will burn their studio

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Meh, I still like the historical series. Generation Kill is still the best miniseries.

Coal power gives off more radiation than nuclear.

To be fair, it's a pretty good dramatic series and (in a rare occurrence) is a Hollywood series that shows how blatantly and utterly fucked up socialism is.
>dat supervisor sending men to their death one after the other to pump water into a reactor that no longer exists because 'muh superior soviet reactor cannot explode!'
>dat speech where the old party member talks about how the 'hysterics' of eyewitnesses don't matter as much as the expert opinion of The State
>dat technician being forced into the reactor room at gunpoint to prove how 'safe' it is
>dat KGB comin to swoop you up if you question the official narrative

Nuclear is fucking retarded when we could use MSR's and thorium fluoride reactors.

rt.com/news/460958-chernobyl-hbo-racial-diversity-actors/

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>To be fair, it's a pretty good dramatic series

Because you've low standards, it's low brow slapstick coldwar memes one after another.

>Nuclear is fucking retarded when we could use MSR's and thorium fluoride reactors.

Still nuclear.

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Did you just take a photo at a redshifted lcd?

tbqh I was more afraid of Chernobyl because of STALKER
The show actually made me appreciate the engineering that goes into nuclear reactors much more. I'm more convinced of nuclear power now than before.

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It's not radioactive you foreign faggot.

If you open the link you won't have to ask stupid questions

No wonder the Italians don't like you people

Just put a white guy to lead Wakanda in next Black Panther, I wonder what these people say about communicating those emotions then.

based, im happy we're taking canada with us

>>The experiments included a wide array of studies, involving things like feeding radioactive food to mentally disabled children or conscientious objectors, inserting radium rods into the noses of schoolchildren, deliberately releasing radioactive chemicals over U.S. and Canadian cities, measuring the health effects of radioactive fallout from nuclear bomb tests, injecting pregnant women and babies with radioactive chemicals, and irradiating the testicles of prison inmates, amongst other things.

Based.

all garbage, read a book.

Chernobyl was a piece of shit by 1950's standards. It's a testament to the safety of nuclear power that it took as long as it did to melt down.

You can even go and visit Chernobyl if you want to. Costs around 100 euro for a full day. Pic related: it's a crazy Spanish guy who thought it would be a good idea to climb a 30 year old rope in Pripyat. Rope held out though.

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The place is mostly just smashed to bits by looters/vandals. You do get to go really close to reactor 4, which is nice.

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>muh fukoroshima

The Fukushima Disaster.

Death toll: 0

Nuclear power was dead in the water anyway.
The pile of regulations laid on new constructions is so onerous it's impossible to turn a profit.
Fortunately, solar panels have become so cheap along with batteries that the 100% renewable future is starting to become realistic.

this