The Nuclear Omnicide
By Harvey Wasserman
The Three Mile
Island nuclear power generating station shown here in 2011 in Middletown, Pa.,
continues to generate electric power with the Unit 1 reactor. TMI was the scene
of the 1979 meltdown of the Unit 2 reactor, the worst nuclear power plant
disaster in the United States.
AP/Bradley C Bower
AP/Bradley C Bower
In the 35 years since the March 28, 1979, explosion and
meltdown at Three Mile Island, fierce debate has raged over whether humans were
killed there. In 1986 and 2011, Chernobyl and Fukushima joined the argument.
Whenever these disasters happen, there are those who claim that the workers,
residents and military personnel exposed to radiation will be just fine.
Of course we know better. We humans won’t jump into a pot of
boiling water. We’re not happy when members of our species start dying around
us. But frightening new scientific findings have forced us to look at a larger
reality: the bottom-up damage that radioactive fallout may do to the entire
global ecosystem.
When it comes to our broader support systems, the corporate
energy industry counts on us to tolerate the irradiation of our fellow
creatures, those on whom we depend, and for us to sleep through the point of no
return.
Case in point is a new Smithsonian report on Chernobyl, one
of the most terrifying documents of the atomic age.
Written by Rachel Nuwer, “Forests Around Chernobyl Aren’t
Decaying Properly” cites recent field studies in which the normal cycle of dead
vegetation rotting into the soil has been disrupted by the exploded reactor’s
radioactive fallout. “Decomposers—organisms such as microbes, fungi and some
types of insects that drive the process of decay—have also suffered from the
contamination,” Nuwer writes. “These creatures are responsible for an essential
component of any ecosystem: recycling organic matter back into the soil.”
Put simply: The microorganisms that form the active core of
our ecological bio-cycle have apparently been zapped, leaving tree trunks,
leaves, ferns and other vegetation to sit eerily on the ground whole,
essentially in a mummified state.
Reports also indicate a significant shrinkage of the brains
of birds in the region and negative impacts on the insect and wildlife
populations.
Similar findings surrounded the accident at Three Mile
Island. Within a year, a three-reporter team from the Baltimore News-American
cataloged massive radiation impacts on both wild and farm animals in the area.
The reporters and the Pennsylvania Department of Health confirmed widespread
damage to birds, bees and large kept animals such as horses, whose reproductive
rate collapsed in the year after the accident.
Other reports also documented deformed vegetation and
domestic animals being born with major mutations, including a dog born with no
eyes and cats with no sense of balance.
To this day, Three Mile Island’s owners claim no humans were
killed by radiation there, an assertion hotly disputed by local downwinders.
Indeed, Dr. Alice Stewart established in 1956 that a single
X-ray to a pregnant woman doubles the chance that her offspring will get
leukemia. During the accident at Three Mile Island, the owners crowed that the
meltdown’s radiation was equivalent “only” to a single X-ray administered to
all area residents.
Meanwhile, if the airborne fallout from Three Mile Island
and Chernobyl could do that kind of damage to both infants and the nonhuman
population on land, how is Fukushima’s continuous gusher of radioactive water
affecting the life support systems of our oceans?
In fact, samplings of 15 tuna caught off the coast of
California indicate all were contaminated with fallout from Fukushima.
Instant as always, the industry deems such levels harmless.
The obligatory comparisons to living in Denver, flying cross country and eating
bananas automatically follow.
But what’s that radiation doing to the tuna themselves? And
to the krill, the phytoplankton, the algae, amoeba and all the other
microorganisms on which the ocean ecology depends?
Cesium and its Fukushima siblings are already measurable in
Alaska and northwestern Canada. They’ll hit California this summer. The
corporate media will mock those parents who are certain to show up at the
beaches with radiation detectors. Concerns about the effect on children will be
jovially dismissed. The doses will be deemed, as always, “too small to have any
impact on humans.”
But reports of a “dead zone” thousands of miles into the
Pacific do persist, along with disappearances of salmon, sardines, anchovies
and other ocean fauna.
Of course, atomic reactors are not the only source of
radioactive fallout. Atmospheric bomb testing from 1945 to 1963 raised
background radiation levels throughout the ecosphere. Those isotopes are still
with us.
Burning coal spews still more radiation into our air, along
with mercury and other lethal pollutants. Fracking for gas draws toxins up from
the earth’s crust.
Industry apologists say reactors can moderate the climate
chaos caused by burning those fossil fuels. But fighting global weirding with
atomic power is like trying to cure a fever with a lethal dose of X-ray.
On a warmed, poisoned planet, the synergistic impact of each
new radioactive hit is multiplied. All doses are overdoses.
In 1982, Adm. Hyman Rickover, founder of the nuclear navy,
put it this way:
Until about two
billion years ago, it was impossible to have any life on earth; that is, there
was so much radiation on earth you couldn’t have any life—fish or anything.
Gradually, about
two billion years ago, the amount of radiation on this planet ... reduced and
made it possible for some form of life to begin, and it started in the seas.
...
Now, when we are
back to using nuclear power, we are creating something which nature tried to
destroy to make life possible. ...
But every time you
produce radiation, you produce something that has life, in some cases for
billions of years, and I think there the human race is going to wreck itself,
and it’s far more important that we get control of this horrible force and try
to eliminate it.
We know from Dr. Alice Stewart the dangers of even a single
X-ray to a pregnant human. And from Dr. John Gofman, former chief medical
officer of the Atomic Energy Commission, that nuclear power is an instrument of
“premeditated mass murder.”
At Three Mile Island, the mutated vegetation, animal and
human infant deaths still remain a part of the immutable record.
Chernobyl still lacks a permanent sarcophagus, leaving the
surrounding area vulnerable to continued radiation leakage. Fukushima daily
dumps more than 300 tons of radioactive water into the Pacific. The stacks and
spigots are still gushing at more than 400 reactors across the globe. The next
disaster is already in progress.
The good news is that the same green energy technologies
that can bury nuclear power can take the fossil burners down with them. They
create jobs, profits, ecological harmony and peace. They’re on a steep
trajectory toward epic success.
As the reactor industry’s lethal isotopes gut our
ecosystems, from bottom to top, our tolerance for these “safe doses” falls to
zero. We may not fall over dead from them immediately, but the larger
biospheric clock is ticking. We need to act.
Harvey Wasserman edits Nukefree.org and wrote “Solartopia!
Our Green-Powered Earth.”
truthdig.com
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