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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (681144)10/26/2012 1:23:34 AM
From: TopCat  Respond to of 1573689
 
"It's an engineering problem...."

Chris doesn't understand that.



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (681144)10/26/2012 1:24:58 AM
From: d[-_-]b  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1573689
 
There are places to store that stuff. It's an engineering problem
Yucca Mountain is the place - but Obama cut the funding for that as well.



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (681144)10/26/2012 3:56:45 AM
From: Joe NYC1 Recommendation  Respond to of 1573689
 
There are places to store that stuff.
It may not even need to be a place to store the stuff. "Spent" fuel rods have only a small amount portion that is really spent. Large percentage of potential energy is still there. Which is why it probably does not make sense to send it to Yucca Mountain.

This nuclear "waste" is not really waste, but a treasure. It can be re-processed, removing portions that are trully spent. This spent portion has much shorter half life, and becomes harmless in decades to a century (not 100s of thousands of years). The rest (majority) of the spent fuel rods can be combined with fresh fuel and used again in nuclear power plants.



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (681144)10/26/2012 12:28:46 PM
From: bentway  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1573689
 
"Same with safety at a nuclear power plant."

No, it's not really the same, Ten. Any engineered project, whether a bridge or a microprocessor, has a design life always less than 500 years. Nuclear waste will be deadly for hundreds of thousands of years. Modern HUMANS haven't been around for hundreds of thousands of years. No civilization has survived for anywhere near that long.

Although nuclear needs to be part of the mix, because of the waste, it should be as small a part as we can make it.



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (681144)10/26/2012 12:33:41 PM
From: bentway  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1573689
 
Todd Akin was arrested multiple times for physically blocking women’s access to abortion clinics

thinkprogress.org
Undiscovered until now because at that time he used his actual first name, William, not Todd.



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (681144)10/26/2012 12:50:19 PM
From: bentway1 Recommendation  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 1573689
 
God Distances Self From Christian Right
October 24, 2012 | ISSUE 48•43 | More News



THE HEAVENS—Responding to inflammatory remarks made by Republican Senate candidate Richard Mourdock during a debate Tuesday night, Our Lord God the Almighty Father sought today to distance Himself from both Mourdock and the entire right-wing fundamentalist Christian movement, sources confirmed.

“I want to make one thing absolutely clear: Mr. Mourdock’s comments from last night in no way reflect my position on this or any other issue,” said the Divine Creator, speaking at a press conference this afternoon to address Mourdock’s remarks that rape-induced pregnancies were God’s intent. “And furthermore, I would like to take this opportunity to say definitively that I, God, do not officially sanction or condone the words or actions of anyone involved in the fanatical, conservative Christian faction that Mr. Mourdock represents.”

“Many people hear my name in connection with the Christian Right and start to assume we are aligned in some capacity, and I’m here to say, for the record, that we are not,” God continued. “So let me just be clear: I don’t want women to get raped—not ever. I don’t think their resulting pregnancies are my divine will. And if a woman is raped, then she has the right to get an abortion, period. I do not agree with Mourdock. I do not agree with the Christian Right. End of story.”

Calling Mourdock’s comments “the last straw,” the Lord Our Maker explained that while in the past there have been a few areas where He and the religious Right have been in agreement, more often than not, in recent years, He and Christian conservatives have grown “actually quite far apart” on a wide range of issues.

News in Brief

'Mother Mary Was Essentially Raped,' Mourdock Says While Digging Self Into Deeper Hole
God then went on to cite several incidents—ranging from the Westboro Baptist Church’s “God Hates Fags” campaign to Missouri Senate candidate Todd Akin’s remark this year that victims of “legitimate rape” rarely get pregnant—as examples of what He described as “an unmistakable and disturbing trend toward intolerance that I do not support.”

“What these people are saying betrays a worldview that is, frankly, completely different from my own, and it embarrases me to even hear my name mentioned alongside theirs,” God told reporters, emphatically. “For example, I’m not into capital punishment at all, or really killing in general, so I’m not sure where that whole talking point came from. On the same token, I don’t like guns very much, and I certainly wouldn’t say that everyone has a right to own guns—that’s absurd. Unlike Mr. Mourdock and many Christian Republicans, I agree with the overwhelming majority of climate scientists that global warming poses a major threat to the planet and must be addressed. I also believe stem cell research is very useful, and I think that if you’re gay, that’s fine by me.”

“Even on some economic issues we don’t quite see eye-to-eye,” continued the Eternal One, a self-described Keynesian who said He has “serious doubts” about the merits of trickle-down economics. “And, you know, a lot of this stuff is in the Ten Commandments, too, so I’m already on record as being not in agreement with a good majority of the Christian Right’s views. In fact, in the future, if people could just refrain from grouping us together in any way, I think that would be ideal.”

“That includes members of the Christian Right themselves—if they could stop talking about me entirely, that would be preferable,” God added. “In the end, probably best if we just completely went our separate ways here.”

At press time, God’s son, Jesus Christ, offered a countering view and confirmed He strongly believes pregnancies resulting from rape are, in fact, God’s gift.



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (681144)10/26/2012 1:58:12 PM
From: bentway  Respond to of 1573689
 
‘Cloud Atlas’ filmmakers under fire for putting actors in ‘yellowface’ makeup

By The Guardian
rawstory.com
Friday, October 26, 2012 10:43 EDT

Topics: Cloud Atlas ? Jim Broadbent

By Xan Brooks, The Guardian

Adaptation of David Mitchell book reflects film industry’s racial pecking order, says Asian-American action group

Cloud Atlas, Warner Bros’ $100m adaptation of the novel by David Mitchell has been criticised by Asian-Americans after casting white western actors in “yellowface” makeup. Directed by Tom Twyker and Lana and Andy Wachowski, the film stars Tom Hanks, Halle Berry and Jim Broadbent in a narrative that hops between countries and across the centuries.

“It’s an artistically ambitious approach to film-making,” said Guy Aoki, founding president of the Media Action Network for Asian–Americans (Manaa). “Unfortunately it reflects the same old racial pecking order that the entertainment industry has been practising for years.”

Aoki was particularly concerned by a segment set in a futuristic South Korea, in which the actors Jim Sturgess, James D’Arcy and Hugo Weaving are made up to play Asian characters. “Every major male character in the Korean story is played by non-Asian actors in really bad yellowface makeup,” he said. “The Asian-Americans at the [preview] screening burst out laughing because [Weaving] looked terrible – like a Vulcan on Star Trek.”

The Manaa went on to contrast the Korean segment with sequence in the South Pacific, starring the Afro-British actor David Gyasi as a Maori slave. “You have to ask: would the directors have used blackface on a white actor to play Gyasi’s role?” Aoki said. “I don’t think so: that would have outraged African-Americans. But badly done yellowface is still OK.”

Asianweek.com reports that the Manaa has previously led protests against alleged racial stereotypes in the Sean Connery thriller Rising Sun. They also criticised comedian Sarah Silverman after using the term “chinks” on an episode of Late Night With Conan O’Brien.

Released today in the US, Cloud Atlas is an extravagant fantasy epic that finds space for cannibals, parasitic brain worms and an artichoke that shoots laser beams. The American critic Roger Ebert has hailed it as “one of the most ambitious films ever made”, although others are less convinced. Reviewing the film at last month’s Toronto film festival, the Guardian’s Henry Barnes described it as “a roaming behemoth of a movie” that “carries all the hallmarks of a giant folly”.