Agema's first forray into this discussion was in direct response to this article, Ewok.
He ain't you. Further, he never responded to my critique of his critique (other than the one asking if this was a personal thing (I'm still not convinced it isn't); among the critiques of his critiques that I
didn't list is that I found his counter-argument fairly unconvincing). Further further, you've never made a direct response to the article. And I don't think you made one when I responded to the article you posted, which this post you quoted linked to.
Lot of not responding, here. Frankly, I don't really care for Eacaraxe's back of the napkin calculations, my forays into data science have shown to me that such things very, very, very rarely make an argument that stands up to an actual scientific investigation. It's also created two pages of what I consider the worst sins of this forum: bickering inanely over side points as if it means anything for a crazy amount of time, with neither side willing to give an inch.
But the overall point, that we have the designs for safe nuclear reactors, and how to reduce the waste from them to a very small amount, and how we have the procedures and material developed to safely dispose of them? All that? Not really been acknowledged by the "other side", here, just some guff about "now, nobody's
actually said anything anti-nuclear here" (baloney) and "well, we can just use renewables instead and that has 0 radioactive waste" and like, okay, yes, so does brushing my teeth, it doesn't address whether we have a more advanced technological understanding for a feasible large-scale energy shift between nuclear and renewables (given the current state of designs for both, I gotta hand it to nuclear), and it doesn't address whether there is an "unfair" public perception of nuclear in comparison to modern nuclear designs (after this thread, I'm again gonna hand it in favor of nuclear, i.e. yes there is an unfair perception).
You, and here I do mean the personal you, Specter, can keep up a fear of bureaucracy as an excuse to not get invested into public projects. "What if the government ruins this like it ruins everything and
kaboom?!" I think it's been shown in this thread that 3 Mile Island was not any Chernobyl. It also has led to a lot of safety regulation. And if we don't elect a man who wants to actively keep dismantling the EPA and diverting DoE money to oil and gas, we'll actually be able to keep up on those in any new construction. Bad bureaucracies do not make good bureaucracies nonexistent - many of the greatest leaders of history were such because of their ability to build an effective administration and have it run without their micromanaging every decision for their kingdom/nation. Further, our current nuclear energy infrastructure is woefully out of date, either new modern ones need to be built to replace them, or alternatives will. If that doesn't happen,
that's the real risk of kaboom. And when we're talking about a long term replacement, that we need to
start implementing now cuz any implementation will take years, what's more ready in terms of design for the project, nuclear or renewables? I honestly don't have all the faith in renewables. They
help, but they're very much a
developing technology still. It would have been wonderful if they'd been better funded and tested by now, but they haven't, and it's time to drop the big investments. In my book, nuclear at its current state of technology is the better investment against the hypothetical development of renewables, at this time.
You know, I was curious how this thread got offtrack to a discussion of the feasibility of nuclear power, and on looking back, turns out it was you trying to use a 3rd world not even functional government to say that 1st world developed nations couldn't handle nuclear. Ah well.