Hi Marshall,
Thanks for your comments.
Paula
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Marshall Dudley" <mdud...@king-cart.com>
To: <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Sent: Monday, November 05, 2007 10:45 AM
Subject: Re: CS>Nuclear Waste Task Force - Maps Links - Sierra Club


> Paula Perry wrote:
> > Hi Deb.
> > I looked at that . They say "rad experiments"  I believe that a rad is
> > a unit of measurement for radiation. That must mean that they are
> > experimenting with radiation. Unfortunately, I ask myself. How could
> > they experiment without subject matter?
> They can't.
> > If I am stupid I am sure someone will correct me. Radiation is what
> > they call "nuclear medicine?"
> Nuclear medicine uses radiation, but is NOT radiation.  Light and X-rays
> are also radiation.  Nuclear medicine uses what is termed ionizing
> radiation, which includes X-Rays, alpha, and gamma rays. I don't think
> they use beta rays.
> > It produces waste.
> Not necessarily. Unless you are referring to the waste caused by energy
> production.  Like the carbon dioxide waste produced by coal powered
> plants. Even that does not exist if produced by hydroelectric power.
> > At Ft. Belvoir they state "human radiation experiments". However, I
> > wonder how you could experiment without radiation without humans.
> Yes, that would require both radiation and humans. It is very ambiguous,
> it could be using something like cesium, or something like a laser or
> X-ray.  Or it could be exposing humans to the radiation of outer space.
> Insufficient information.
> > When I was a baby I had three radiation treatments for an enlarged
> > thymus. That is how I learned what a rad was, when the hospital was
> > ordered to report it to me. It led to Thyroid problems and the removal
> > of most of it.
> Yes it is. The rad is a unit of energy absorbed from ionizing radiation,
> equal to 100 ergs per gram or 0.01 joules per kilogram of irradiated
> material.
> > Paula
> >
> >
> >
> >     ----- Original Message -----
> >     *From:* Deborah Gerard <mailto:devorah...@yahoo.com>
> >     *To:* silver-list@eskimo.com <mailto:silver-list@eskimo.com>
> >     *Sent:* Friday, November 02, 2007 12:44 PM
> >     *Subject:* Re: CS>Nuclear Waste Task Force - Maps Links - Sierra
Club
> >
> >     *Wonder why so many VA Hospitals are listed?....deb*
> >
> >     */Paula Perry <p...@zoomnet.net <mailto:p...@zoomnet.net>>/* wrote:
> >
> >         You can go to this page. Click the link titled "Deadly Nuclear
> >         Radiation Hazards" to pull up a map of the US. If you click on
> >         any area of the map it will take you to a page that will list
> >         all the nuclear activity for the area.
> >
> >         There is a book, Fighting Radiation & Chemical Pollutants with
> >         foods, herbs, & vitamins, by Steven R. Schechter, N.D.
> >         Highly recommend the book. It has a map in it that got me
> >         interested.
> >         Paula
> >
> >          http://www.sierraclub.org/nuclearwaste/maps.asp
> >
> >
> >     __________________________________________________
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>
>
>
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