Helen Caldicott on the dangers of uranium exportation and the contradictions of the 1968 Non-Proliferation Treaty:

Article IV of the 1968 Non-Proliferation Treaty states that all countries have the inalienable right to obtain technology to generate nuclear power and electricity, even as Article VI specifies that nuclear armed nations will disarm as soon as possible. Clearly these two articles contradict each other. Only two elements, uranium and plutonium, can provide the fissionable fuel for nuclear weapons.

It logically follows that any country with a uranium enrichment facility for nuclear power generation allowed under Article IV can also produce weapons-grade uranium, while any country with a 1000-megawatt nuclear power plant can manufacture up to 250 kilograms of plutonium each year — theoretically enough to produce 50 bombs.

Because the radioactive life of plutonium is more than 250,000 years and the life of uranium is measured in billions of years, any country powered by nuclear electricity will have the capability to manufacture nuclear weapons over aeons of time.

It is unfathomable that intelligent leaders and the scientists who are employed by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which simultaneously actively promotes nuclear power while policing and preventing the attainment of nuclear weapons, do not understand the outstanding fallacies and contradictions inherent in the treaty. The IAEA admits that it is understaffed, underfunded and its inspection of reactors leaves much to be desired.

H/t to Lynette Dumble for bringing this to my attention.

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Jul 202009
 

The FPN Blog is back up and running after a glorious week off at the beach.  Every evening on this little sojourn, a bit before sunset, I would go down to the water’s edge and stand with my  feet rooted in the sand, and simply be in still connection with the sun, water, air and land that surrounded me.  But after awhile, I realized that to actually keep my feet rooted and connected involved something of a constant re-balancing as the sand shifted beneath my toes as the the tide came in and then went back out again.

At The Edge

At The Water's Edge

And that I think is a good description of what is necessary in the work that needs to be done.  I have been blogging/writing with few breaks since 2001.  I am tired, disheartened and burnt out.  I look around me and realize that a tremendous amount of our time is spent on insane things.

Watching Rep. Sessions tell Judge Sotomayor that  they were going to do that ‘crack cocaine thing’, Patriarchal wingnuts threatening to vote against health insurance legislation if it allows abortion, car dealers that give away AK-47′s with the purchase of a new car.  The lady I spoke with at the company that insures my son’s cell phone after it was stolen who told me that we couldn’t go outside the ‘matrix’ in obtaining a replacement.  No wonder we are burnt out.

As I walked the shore, I learned that the local sea lion population is under stress and no one knows exactly why.  How could we know why  when our energies go to staying within the matrix and not getting shot by some idiot who just got a brand new AK-47.  It is all connected.  But more importantly, we are all connected.  And even when the sand rather literally shifts beneath us, we are connected to the universe and we need to keep re-balancing and re-connecting.  Our lives depend on it.

Yoni Tidepool

Yoni Tidepool

In addition to taking a break, I have also been working on some website upgrades.  Most aren’t visible but will hopefully lead to a lot less spam-related crashes. I am still mucking around trying to understand some of the new administrative features (as you can see despite all the proper code to center the pictures, they aren’t centered…), so bear with me if glitches occur.  I have added some more blog links and did a bit of streamlining and removing of outdated material.  If you see any problems, do please let me know.

Also, we have a  brand new Facebook page, the old one is significantly messed up and will be removed as soon as the new one is repopulated, so if you want to follow FPN on Facebook, click here.

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Blog Break

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Jul 052009
 

During the next few weeks, I’ll be blogging intermittently if at all due to some much needed down time and other projects that need attention.

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A new U.S. offensive in Afghanistan is underway. Despite the promises below, please keep in your heart the innocent people who will, without doubt, be victimized by this latest military action.

The operation was aimed at putting pressure on insurgents “and to show our commitment to the Afghan people that when we come in we are going to stay long enough to set up their own institutions,” Captain (Bill) Pelletier said.

He said the US military was prepared for casualties, but stressed that “it is absolutely essential that no civilians be harmed”.

“We do not want people of Helmand province to see us as an enemy, we want to protect them from the enemy,” he said.

Addressing Marine commanders days before the assault, Dutch Major-General Mart de Kruif compared it to the D-Day invasion that changed the course of World War Two.

“We have people out there who do not realise that progress is about to come to them,” he said.

Perhaps history makes that a little difficult.

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Talk about ironic observances, the annual Fourth of July fireworks at our local park has been canceled due to budget woes.  No doubt the neighborhood dogs will be appreciative of the peace and quiet, but since learning this news, I have been trying to figure out a substitute tribute that would be equally fitting.

With knee-jerk flag-waving and latter day tea parties of the faux patriotism genre obviously to be avoided at all costs, it occurs to me that the way a real patriot would celebrate is to secede.  That’s right, get up and walk away and start a new country because this one is showing definite signs of being about as life-like as a used cherry bomb.

After all, only in America:

Are you likely to be denied urgent health care for lack of seven dollars.

A major tobacco company helps to write tobacco regulatory legislation.

The winner of the Presidential election is the one who gets the most money from the defense industry even when the majority of his supporters want to get out of the unpopular wars of the last eight years.

The people who make laws regulating corporations take money from those same corporations?

Illegal detention is a happening event despite campaign promises and a whole lot of laws to the contrary?

The President thumbs his nose at the LGQBT community numerous times, with the vague mention of addressing their concerns later, especially the baffling back-peddling on Don’t Ask Don’t Tell and DOMA?

Bailed out banks raise salaries to get around bonus caps and have the chutzpah to raise interest rates despite promises not to.

We listen to climate change skeptics that are funded by oil companies and continue to insist (and here), against all evidence (and here) that there are such  things as clean, safe and affordable coal and nuclear. energy.
The government not only blames the wrong people for what happened on Sept. 11, 2001, but actively works to cover up the real culpability.  As Mark Karlin, editor and publisher of Buzzflash accurately points out,

It was always one of the great betrayals of the American public, dead Iraqi civilians, and our killed and wounded service men and women that the Bush Administration — and particularly Cheney — used anti-terrorism as a guise to secure control over oil fields.

Clearly, not only absolving, but actually legally covering up for Saudi financing of terrorism is a deal with the devil: You keep sending us the oil and you can do whatever you want to keep your regime in power, even if it’s paying off the terrorists who committed 9/11.

Where a pop-singer is memorialized in butter at the Iowa State Fair and the story appears not in The Onion but in America’s newspaper.  (With the bizarre emphasis we place  on the Iowa caucuses during presidential elections, this litmus test of values should not be taken lightly.)

Yes dear citizens, these are the remains of our country.  It has gotten to the point where it feels like we’re living in a surrealistic sequel to Orwell’s 1984. And there are many more signs of imminent failure, but the above should suffice to make the point, if not keep you up at 3 a.m. Not a scenario that leads one to want to celebrate. America, love it or leave it. Or time to say enough is enough and fight like hell and take our country back with real substantive change.

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