Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Back to the nineteenth century




As most people know nothing about nuclear power, so do not know whether or not we are facing the end of this energy source.

I understand that after the disaster in Japan, maybe the risk does not outweigh the obvious benefits it brings. But I know that we are not aware of it.

So far, the paralysis of the central Fukushima temporarily left in the dark of the country, with the subsequent collapse of transport and supplies.

Can you imagine the widespread blackout nuclear energy worldwide, as some politicians seem to be asking? In the absence of other alternatives, now that would be a real economic crisis, with a reversal of decades reached in the collective welfare of humanity.

So it is understood that the emerging countries that barely begin to leave an endemic underdevelopment, such as China and India, and to a lesser extent, Brazil, South Africa and others, are most reluctant to question this kind of energy.

Of course, if in the end we have no other, we must adapt to the grim economic scenario reflux until now no environmentalist or anti-nuclear group has dared to explain.

Yes there is, for now, beneficiaries of such a catastrophe as oil producers Gaddafi, even dancing on the corpses of their enemies recently massacred, and the glitzy Persian Gulf satrapies.

Of course, the subjects of these regimes, anchored for centuries in an ominous Middle Ages would not notice any difference in your personal situation under the tyrannies that are already suffering.

No comments:

Post a Comment