Nuclear Power and Progressive-Democrats

Both Republican politicians support, and Progressive-Democrat politicians profess support, for nuclear power as a major source of energy for our economy. Progressive-Democrats, though, seems superficial. Here, for instance is Congressman Frank Pallone (D, NJ):

I’ve been supportive of [nuclear], and we’ve been supportive of it as Democrats mostly on a bipartisan basis, but all that is linked to safety. If anything happens that gives the impression or actually makes it so that people’s lives are at risk, or we have some kind of incident, that’s going to be the end of it. I’ll speak for myself but I won’t be able to support it anymore.

Safety matters in nuclear power, just as it does in handling electricity, natural gas, gasoline—and driving down the street and grilling on the patio. There have been three major incidents involving nuclear power. They were Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, and Fukushima.

The Three Mile Island incident involved a partial meltdown stemming from a stuck valve resulting in loss of coolant to the reactor and operators failing to recognize the fact of the loss of coolant soon enough. Despite those failures, the reactor’s overall design prevented further damage, and radiation release was minimal—generally equivalent to the amount a patient receives during a chest X-ray—and there were no fatalities.

The Chernobyl incident resulted in several immediate casualties and a number of follow-on casualties, and it was the result of serious operator error and poor design. The incident occurred during a test of power-out shutdown procedures that was carried out despite an existing serious power drop during ongoing operations. The design failure was demonstrated by the attempt to shut down the reactor during those conditions resulting in a large power surge that the system could not handle.

The Fukushima incident was driven by a well-offshore earthquake followed by a tsunami, and it had a reactor meltdown, which would seem an especially dangerous and lethal failure. However, the reactor was designed and built to handle all of that but the tsunami, which flooding caused loss of power, leading to the meltdown. By design, the meltdown was contained. Radiation release was extremely limited, and the fatalities ensuing consisted of hospitalized patients and nursing home resident elderly who died while being evacuated due to failures of the evacuation process. No fatalities from the reactor failure occurred.

Nuclear power is safe, when the designs are sound and, especially, when construction and subsequent operation are carried out carefully and in accordance with specifications. When those factors are met, nuclear power compares very favorably with the fatality rates from driving an automobile or truck, from flying commercial, and from riding the train. They compare favorably with the fatality rate inflicted on birds by windmills, and with the loss of habitat from building solar farms.

Pallone surely knows this, which makes his “support” very much a superficial position.

It’s time the naysayers—and not only some Progressive-Democrat pretenders—to get out of the way. Nuclear power is much greener than wind or solar, and it is much steadier and more reliable at generating electricity.

Time to Strike

The Iranian government is threatening US Middle East bases, shipping lanes in the Arabian Gulf, and Israel if the US strikes Iran in support of the Iranian people, who are in the streets first protesting inflation and now openly calling for the downfall of the mullahs’ regime.

Iran will attack American military bases in the Middle East if the US hits first, the country’s parliamentary speaker said Sunday after US officials said the Trump administration was looking at preliminary options for striking Iranian military sites.
Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf [third in power behind Khamenei and Iran’s President] also threatened that Iran would hit Middle Eastern shipping lanes and Israel.

And

Ghalibaf also raised the possibility of a pre-emptive attack, following other senior officials who have mentioned this in recent days.

It’s time for the US to strike in support of the Iranian people. Iran’s ability to strike back was demonstrated during its strikes against Israel and its counters against Israel and the US during the recently concluded 12-day kerfuffle: virtually non-existent, with very few of its missiles getting through defenses, and most of those missing their targets.

My target list would center on Iran’s remaining air defense facilities, missile launch facilities, naval bases and naval ships afloat, then move on to central Basij facilities, and Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps bases. Then the mullahs’ hideaways. They’re last, to give them time to leave the city and the potential for collateral damage, and then to be fixed in place for serious targeting. A couple of days work, maybe longer, depending on the size of the US forces in place and the operational pace they’re put through.

It’s time to be done with the thugs, from the mullahs on down. There will be neither People Power revolution nor any Color Revolution success; those affairs worked, and relatively bloodlessly so, because the governments being tossed had some minimal concern for the lives of their people, or they lacked the overwhelming force available to suppress the protests, or they had places outside their nations to which to flee. The mullahs care only about their own lives and power, the IRGC and the Basij will unhesitatingly provide the necessary force, and the mullahs have no place to which to run or hide.

Without our help, the present struggles in Iran will get very bloody, and the protesting may well end suppressed, if only because so many of the protestors will be killed—in the thousands—by these thugs. That’s already started:

A crackdown on nationwide protests in Iran has killed at least 538 people and even more are feared dead, activists said Sunday….
About 10,600 people have been detained over the two weeks of protests, according to the US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency….