~LiL*PrInCeZ~ thumbnail
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Posted: 19 years ago
#1

we have been hearing a lot abt Iran in the news lately

soo...do you think iran has the rights 2 make nuclear weapons or not

and PLEASE keep all political debates to a POLITICAL level and lets not involve RELIGION into it

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CuteFairy91 thumbnail
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Posted: 19 years ago
#2
I am confused. I dont watch da newz... 😆 😆
Mashal thumbnail
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Posted: 19 years ago
#3
off course if ameriaca can make nuclear weapons then y not iran can make nuclear weapons
Mauritian thumbnail
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Posted: 19 years ago
#4

right to make nuclear weapons you said?? it has same rights as every other country i suppose 😆

but then it says it is not making nuclear weapons!!!

it is purifying uranium to be able to produce energy. and there is the question... does it need alternate sources of energy?? .....especially one which is so diificult to maintain... when it is sitting on so much oil??

so it is about the weapons, i suppose. and for me the equation is simple. weapons are for killing... it is the masses who who take the brunt, while leaders try to equate their powers to those of their neighbours... where will the race end?? anyway, noone has had the gut to use one of those thingies yet. why make them if you won't use them?? or will they??

the question is about getting the priorities right. all that money should be for the common man... now that is the challenge😕

MNMS thumbnail
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Posted: 19 years ago
#5
All the veto power holders have the right to make nuclear weapons no matter how much destruction that can cause and how damageable that is to the envoironment and to human life... And if a country makes that power due to their hardwork.. it is restricted!! Double standards!! Why not the IAEA warns America, Britain, France and other countries on the same basis... why only Iran is being targeted... America claimed b4 Iraq war that they have the so-called "Weapons of mass destruction"... Did they found anything there??? NO... Why Colin Paul resigned?? Now wht they are doing to iraq?? 😡
Edited by MNMS - 19 years ago
SuperDuper01 thumbnail
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Posted: 19 years ago
#6
I totally agree with MNMS................America dont want any other country to become as powerful as they r.................

Thats the main point ---I guess
Edited by Sania_Hitler - 19 years ago
fatmah5000 thumbnail
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Posted: 19 years ago
#7
yes...as the country,which is independent,it has the right to make nuclear power...
MonicA#1Actress thumbnail
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Posted: 19 years ago
#8

I say DON'T MAKE WEAPONS, ESPECIALLY NUCLEAR WEAPONS!!

Nuclear weapons are so dangerous. Just ask Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Ever heard of Chernobyl incident. All happened because of a nuclear power plant. Even today, kids from that city and many miles around the plant are born with serious defects and usually never live normal lives. Read about The Chernobykl kids project :

https://www.chernobyl-international.org/facts.html

See how terribly sick these kids are. Shame on people who want to make nuclear weapon now.

NUCLEAR IS BAD FOR YOU!

Forget all this fighting and hug the oppostion side and give them a flower. Yes, that's right, suck it up and shake hands.

Don't ruin the lives of millions of innocent people and give them the terrible fate the kids of CHERNOBYL sufferes, and are still suffereing.

Here are links to the Chernobyl site. Read and explore the whole site, and then tell me do we need Nuclear power?

https://www.chernobyl-international.org/mission.html

https://www.chernobyl-international.org/news.html

https://www.chernobyl-international.org/images.html

MonicA#1Actress thumbnail
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Posted: 19 years ago
#9
Note: The information on this page is excerpted from United Nations page "Chernobyl Info". Chernobyl.info was developed by the United Nations and the Swiss Agency for International Development to serve as an unbiased and reliable international communication platform regarding the long term consequences of the Chernobyl disaster. The UN website contains the original sources for all facts cited. The debate continues about the extent to which radiation affects human health. The November 2005 Report of the Secretary General of the United Nations urged the international assistance community to focus on projects that address poverty, lack of economic opportunity, inadequate health care, and environmental degradation in Chernobyl regions. Chernobyl Children's Project International fully supports this holistic approach to alleviating suffering in the region.

Chernobyl: The Facts

Chernobyl: What the Experts are Saying



In the early morning hours of 26 April 1986, a testing error caused an explosion at the Chernobyl nuclear power station in northern Ukraine. During a radioactive fire that burned for 10 days, 190 tons of toxic materials were expelled into the atmosphere. The wind blew 70% of the radioactive material into the neighboring country of Belarus.

Almost 20 years later, the people of Belarus continue to suffer medically, economically, environmentally and socially from the effects of the disaster. These are the facts:


The Accident
* The Chernobyl power plant is located on the border area between Ukraine and Belarus.

* The explosion of the reactor at Chernobyl released 100 times more radiation than the atom bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. (1)

* At the time of the accident, about 7 million people lived in contaminated territories, including 3 million children.

* About 5.5 million people - including more than a million children - continue to live in contaminated zones. (2)


Radiation and Health
A common misconception is that only about 31 people died as a result of the Chernobyl disaster. In order to understand the full extent of the health impact of the Chernobyl disaster, we have to understand two types of exposure to radiation.

1) Acute Exposure is a high dose of radiation over a short period of time. Approximately 134 power station workers were exposed to extremely high doses of radiation directly after the accident. About 31 of these people died within 3 months. Another 25,000 "liquidators" - the soldiers and firefighters who were involved in clean up operations - have died since the disaster of diseases such as lung cancer, leukemia, and cardiovascular disease.

2) Long Term Exposure refers to various lower doses of radiation that result in tumors, genetic mutations, and damage to the immune system. In the case of Chernobyl, millions of people will continue to be exposed to such doses of radiation for decades to come.

The unstable radioactive elements iodine-131, caesium-137, strontium-90 and plutonium-239 do their damage when they are spread via inhaled dust particles, deposited in the earth by rainfall, or enter the food chain through plants and animals. When the human body is exposed to these elements, free radicals impair cellular function and may damage DNA. The cells of the embryo, lymphatic system, thyroid, bone marrow, intestines, breast and eggs are very vulnerable to the effects of radiation. Almost 20 years after the disaster, the results of long term exposure to radiation are becoming apparent. Experts also recognize that poverty and poor diet are contributing factors to the health problems in many Chernobyl affected regions.


Health Impact: What We Know So Far
Only with the passage of time, and additional research, will we understand the full extent of the impact of the Chernobyl disaster on the health of those in the affected regions. Experts disagree on how many of the following problems are specifically caused by radiation, and also recognize that poverty, poor diet, lifestyles, and even fear of radiation, are contributing factors to the health problems seen in Chernobyl affected regions. Programs designed to help Chernobyl affected populationsmedically need to focus on all potential causes of poor health.

* Thyroid Cancer: Thyroid cancer in children has increased dramatically since the disaster, particularly in the Gomel region of Belarus. The World Health Organization predicts that, in this region alone, 50,000 children will develop the disease during their lifetime. Throughout Belarus, the incidence of this rare disease in 1990 was already 30 times higher than in the years before the accident. (3)

* Leukemia: In the Gomel region of Belarus, incidence of leukemia has already increased 50% in children and adults. (4)

* Other Diseases in Children: In addition to thyroid cancer and leukemia, UNICEF reports that between 1990 and 1994, nervous system disorders increased by 43%; cardiovascular diseases by 43%; bone and muscle disorders by 62%; and diabetes by 28%. UNICEF cautioned that it is difficult to prove whether these increases were caused by radiation or another unknown factor.

* Other Cancers: Swiss Medical Weekly recently published findings showing a 40% increase in all kinds of cancers in Belarus between 1990 and 2000. (5) Tumor specialists fear that a variety of new cancers will only emerge 20-30 years after the disaster. (6) Cases of breast cancer doubled between 1988 and 1999. (7)

* Birth Defects: Maternal exposure to radiation can cause severe organ and brain damage in an unborn child. Five years after the disaster, the Ukrainian Ministry of Health reported three times the normal rate of deformities and developmental abnormalities in newborn children, as well as an increased number of miscarriages, premature births, and stillbirths. (4)

* Genetic Mutations: Hereditary defects in Belarusian newborns increased in the years after the disaster. (8) Scientists have observed that congenital and hereditary defects have passed on to the next generation, as young people exposed to radiation grow up and have their own children. (9)

* Cardiac Abnormalities: Heart disease in Belarus has quadrupled since the accident, caused by the accumulation of radioactive caesium in the cardiac muscle. (10) Doctors report a high incidence of multiple defects of the heart - a condition coined "Chernobyl Heart."


Environment and Food
Large families in rural areas - people who farm and collect their food - continue to receive large doses of radiation from the food supply. Tragically, these people will need to change their traditional ways forever in order to preserve their own health. (11)

* Soil: Twenty-one percent of prime Belarusian farmland remains dangerously contaminated from the decaying components of plutonium. (11)

* Groundwater: Radiation concentrated in sediments at the bottoms of lakes and ponds - the population continues to contaminate itself by fishing there. The average concentration of radionuclides in the groundwater has risen 10- to 100-fold. (11)

* Air: Although the air outside the Exclusion Zone is generally safe, plowing, summer forest fires, and wind erosion continue to put the air at risk. (12)

* Food: The food and water supply is continuously contaminated by rainfall and by the movement of radioactive dust. Mushrooms - a national disk of Belarus - are severely contaminated in half the country but still collected and eaten. Livestock such as cattle and goats accumulate radioactivity in their meat and milk.


Economic Impact
* Belarus was once a thriving agricultural community, as part of the "breadbasket" of the former Soviet Union.

* The economic damages to Belarus after the accident over 30 years (1986 - 2015) will be $235 billion, or over 32 annual national budgets. (11)

* The Belarusian economy has suffered loss of agricultural land, mineral resources, and production.


Social Impact
* Loss of a Culture: After the Chernobyl accident, almost 400,000 were forced to leave their homes for their own safety - homes and villages that had been part of their families for generations. Over 2,000 towns and villages were bulldozed to the ground, and hundreds more stand eerily silent.

* Fear and Uncertainty: Many Belarusian live in fear, uncertain about the extent to which their health and that of their children is at risk and not knowing where to turn for information. This natural fear is exacerbated by the fact that the extent of the accident was not openly disclosed for many years. "Radiophobia" makes it hard for many in the community to move on with their lives and help themselves.


The Crumbling Sarcophagus
* 97% of the radioactive materials from the Chernobyl plant remains inside a hastily constructed, crumbling sarcophagus. The sarcophagus was meant to be an interim measure, designed with a maximum lifetime of 20-30 years.

* According to a 2003 report by the Russian Atomic Energy Minister, Alexander Rumyantsev, "the concrete shell surrounding the Chernobyl nuclear reactor is in real danger of collapsing at any time."

* A new shelter, a 1.3 million euro project scheduled to be completed in 2009, is hoped to safely contain Chernobyl for 100 years.

Here is the link:

https://www.chernobyl-international.org/facts.html

X-rebel thumbnail
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Posted: 19 years ago
#10
Iran has every right to make nuclear weapons, as all other countries have it, especially USA has it.

And even if Iran doesnt have them, America will attack them for some other reason, as it did with Iraq.

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