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American Hiroshima A nuclear terrorist attack by Muslim terrorists is extremely unlikely. A real threat is a nuclear accident which history confirms will happen at some point and some place in the world. The American Hiroshima book explains another historically proven real threat, a false flag operation to fool the American people to support war.The below maps are from Scientific American's April 1981 issue showing how a bomb detonated at an American nuclear power plant makes even parts of the east coast uninhabitable.
In the image on the left, the radioactive downwind hazard is shown following an accident in which the core of a one-gigawatt nuclear reactor releases a third of its radioactivity. The disaster from the illustrated accident in the Racine, Wisconsin nuclear power facility. The amount of radiation illustrated is after one week and 100 times the amount released during the Three Mile Island accident. In the image on the right, the radioactive downwind hazard makes a large portion of the United States uninhabitable for decades. The image illustrates a nuclear explosion of a one-megaton bomb at the Racine, Wisconsin nuclear power plant (the American Hiroshima attack is likely to begin with a much smaller nuclear device such as a ten kiloton bomb). The below images shows the radioactivity blasted into the air from a nuclear power plant has a much slower decay rate than that of a nuclear bomb because the two inventories of radioactive nuclei have different proportions of various isotopes (see below for the chart highlighting that the dangers far exceed 25 years).
To read the full article, click here. For specific solutions on how to better protect nuclear facilities, read American Hiroshima and the recommendations by The Committee To Bridge The Gap and The Nuclear Control Institute. Source: Scientific American, April 1981. Fair Use Notice: The use of the above media material is protected by the Fair Use Clause of the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, which allows for the rebroadcast of copyrighted materials for the purposes of commentary, criticism, and education. To return to the American Hiroshima book page, click here.
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