Do Citizens of Earth Have the Right to a Radiation-free Environment?

Started by thorfourwinds, April 23, 2012, 11:32:45 PM

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Amaterasu

That's the guy.  He should see what microwaving it looks like.
"If the universe is made of mostly Dark Energy...can We use it to run Our cars?"

"If You want peace, take the profit out of war."

Littleenki

Quote from: Amaterasu on July 11, 2012, 03:57:39 PM
That's the guy.  He should see what microwaving it looks like.

I agree, Amy, and maybe in the interest of Japan's current state of affairs, he could get funding to see what Fukushima's fallout is doing to the people and the water of japan's beautiful islands.

A series of test involving different forms of radiation, and a video to go with it...Ill be e-mailing his foundation today, and suggest that.

Water is the building block of physical life, and when we mess with it, it might be worse than doing GMO and other experiments...bad humans...stop messing with mother nature!:(

Of course, I think of microwave popcorn...I wonder what happens to that GMO corn when it is microwaved?
Oh dear, another food off the list, pretty soon Ill only have my fingernails to eat!;)

Cheers!
Hermetically sealed, for your protection

Amaterasu

[shudder]  Microwave popcorn.  Eek!

Let Me know what Dr. Emoto (like Mr. Roboto...?) has to say.  (Really, it's funny His name has "emote" in it...working with the effects of emotions and all.)
"If the universe is made of mostly Dark Energy...can We use it to run Our cars?"

"If You want peace, take the profit out of war."

deuem

All of this microwaved food is getting me hungry, except for the waved finger nails, I'll skip those.

I wonder if the slides we just saw were from a series of test and could be repeated or a one time deal. And what kind of water to start with? I thought that no two ice crystals were ever the same, like finger prints. The rock and roll water looked pretty relaxed while the Mozart water looked all up tight. With out knowing what really happened, It is hard to tell which one would be better to drink. If that info was in there somewhere and I missed it, please advise me. Chinese think all water should be warm to hot, while I think it should be cold, like nature gives it to us.

Deuem

Amaterasu

I think room temp water is best.  Refrigerated water is not good.  Yes, like nature offers.
"If the universe is made of mostly Dark Energy...can We use it to run Our cars?"

"If You want peace, take the profit out of war."

deuem

Hi, are you sure about that?  Mountain streams, cold water, Melting snow, cold water, well water, cold. Stagnant water, warm.  Most moving water is the best to drink. It is always the best to bottle or drink. Maybe it is just a preference once you have it but I was thinking source material. 90 percent of the water I drink is very hot and mixed with coffee. The rest is as cold as I can get it. I have never even once gotten sick from drinking Ice Cold water. So water and beer, ice cold. Coffee and tea, very hot. Only some wine at room temp.  What do you have against refrigerated water?

Is this a source vs preference question?  Sorry this got a little off topic from the radiation.

Deuem

Amaterasu

Maybe the study I heard of was in error.  But it said that cold water shocks the system and over time is not good...  [shrug]  I will not say I know for sure on this.  Just regurgitating what a study said.  Cool water is ok, but cold water is not good...  [shrug]
"If the universe is made of mostly Dark Energy...can We use it to run Our cars?"

"If You want peace, take the profit out of war."

Mikado

Drinking Ice Cold water, or any drink that is ice cold causes the blood vessels to contract. Secondly, this cold can be transmitted in close proximity to he heart. If you suffer with heart disease, this will cause angina, sometimes bad angina, and should be avoided.

Mikado

Mikado

Quote from: deuem on July 10, 2012, 06:31:50 PM

Where I live most people use 220v. There is no 120v. We have split AC units that suck up energy faster than you can pay the bill. The blower is an inside unit about 6 feet tall and 3 hp. The compressor is outside and about 3ftsq x 2 ft deep. The humidity is the killer, today over 80 percent. If I leave any paper in my printers even for a few minutes they will curl up. It pumps out about 5 gallons in 2 to 3 hours when the humidity is high. Just from my office. Just my office is 30sq meters. Yes you can have a small party here and we have done so many times. WooHoo..

Mikado, I had to go back and check but I think I wrote 7000 watts and not 7000 KW. That should make a big difference. If I wrote KV, I made a mistake. It costs me about 175USD per month to run just the 3hp in my office. We also have other AC units to pay for, so it adds up fast.

I hope I cleared that up. My entire office is 380v 100 amp per ABC. So I can use a lot more than I need if I want to. I think that AC unit is on a 220v 20 amp self circuit, backed up on a 40a line sub panel, backed by 100a main then outside to another 100A panel (the electric company) which is behind 3, 60A fuses (me) which I have never blown in 10 years. I designed the electric boxes and wiring years ago and never once had a problem, everything runs cold while friends of mine have glowing wires. Where I am, in my office, we do all surface mount wiring. In side the plastic snap troughs. So when you leave you can pull the copper and sell it. I rent my office. If I owned it, it would be in the walls like my home.

Deuem

I was thinking 7 KW and reading the 7,000 at the same time. I should have proof read before hitting the post.

Mikado

Littleenki

Quote from: Amaterasu on July 11, 2012, 05:31:00 PM
[shudder]  Microwave popcorn.  Eek!

Let Me know what Dr. Emoto (like Mr. Roboto...?) has to say.  (Really, it's funny His name has "emote" in it...working with the effects of emotions and all.)
I e-mailed his group, with te idea, Amy, we'll see what happens.
I just dont want to be accused of "Emote control" ;)

And that popcorn? GMO corn layered with chemicals, and popped in a microwave field?

Mmmm sounds good, how did Orville sell this stuff on us? :o

Le
Hermetically sealed, for your protection

Mikado

The same way cigarettes were sold and advertised by Doctors.

Littleenki

We used to be able to buy water radiators...for BETTER health! WTF???
Heres a PS article that describes how it was in fashion to drink irradiated water back in the early 1900's. We have come a long way, havent we...now just a hundred more years until everything is irradiated and the world will be a great place to live...NOT!
A quote from the article:

QuoteYou might go so far as to say that Radon Water was a rip-off, which is exactly the pitch the Radium Ore Revigator company used to sell its "better," "more scientific" product: a watercooler lined with a serious amount of carnotite, an ore of uranium and radium that undergoes radioactive decay, yielding radon gas. Storing any water in this cooler overnight would give you fresh, potent, invigorating radon water to drink by morning. Unfortunately for those who used them, Revigators actually worked. (Today, of course, we run as fast as we can from radon; ridding basements of it is a big business.)

Many of the radioactive products marketed at the time, such as uranium blankets, contained radioactive materials, but at such low levels that they probably did little harm to consumers. But over time, companies started producing ever more powerful devices, most of them based on radium, the element with the strongest marketing appeal. The supremely scary Radiendocrinator was a 2-inch by 3-inch case that contained paper infused with 250 microcuries of radium, enough to illuminate a fluorescent screen placed near it. It was meant to be placed over—the very thought makes me shudder—the endocrine glands.

http://www.popsci.com/scitech/article/2004-08/healthy-glow-drink-radiation

Well, if that aint crazy, this is even more....Undark the glowing fad..

QuoteUS Radium employed hundreds of women at their factory in Orange, New Jersey, including Grace Fryer. Few companies at that time were willing to employ women, and the pay was much higher than most alternatives, so the company had little trouble finding employees to occupy the rows and rows of desks. They were required to paint delicate lines with fine-tipped brushes, applying the Undark to the tiny numbers and indicator hands of wristwatches. After a few strokes a brush tended to lose its shape, so the women's managers encouraged them to use their lips and tongues to keep the tips of the camel hair brushes sharp and clean. The glowing paint was completely flavorless, and the supervisors assured them that rosy cheeks would be the only physical side effect to swallowing the radium-laced pigment. Cause for concern was further reduced by the fact that radium was being marketed as a medical elixir for treating all manner of ailments.

The owners and scientists at US Radium, familiar with the real hazards of radioactivity, naturally took extensive precautions to protect themselves. They knew that Undark's key ingredient was approximately one million times more active than uranium, so company chemists often used lead screens, masks, and tongs when working with the paint. US Radium had even distributed literature to the medical community describing the "injurious effects" of radium. But inside the factory, where nearly every surface sparkled with radioluminescence, these dangers were unknown. For a lark, some of the women even painted their fingernails and teeth with radium paint on occasion, to surprise their boyfriends when the lights went out.

http://www.damninteresting.com/undark-and-the-radium-girls/

Wow, so I guess eating that GMO microcorn will be news in about 50 years, and we will say the same things then about it that we are saying about this madness!

Cheers(I think?)
Hermetically sealed, for your protection

Mikado

Radium was put on wristwatch arms and numbers to be able to see in the dark.

Mikado

sky otter

 ;D

the microwave water thing vs tap water reminds me of a study done long ago about white bread
my dad who has been gone since'85 just luved quoting it everytime we had bread..lol

the study was done on white sliced bread
rats fed the bread died from starvation
while
rats who ate cardboard were just fine

i never could verify that study but  we had lots of fun arguing about what was in cardboard

::)

deuem

Quote from: Mikado on July 12, 2012, 02:14:07 PM
I was thinking 7 KW and reading the 7,000 at the same time. I should have proof read before hitting the post.

Mikado

No problem, Just please allow me one get out of Jail card when I type a mistake. I did think that is what happened. Wow, 7000kw, I would be frozen to death.

To all;
Back on the radiation of water. On the examples I have seen here so far. Does anyone know if the same results can be done over and over. If I remembered right when I was in school I was told or lied to that every ice crystal is different. Who has a microscope and a microwave?  This should be an easy test and it runs in line with the thread. 

Also, don't we have a new member here from Japan.  Maybe he can get some samples done there. I forgot his name but he said he was an English teacher there. If he can do salt and fresh that would be interesting to see. Frozen or liquid....

Deuem,  hum, P&J on cardboard with a sprikle of nuked finger nails, maybe?