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REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
ObamaCare mandate ruled unconstitutional
Tuesday, August 16, 2011 7:45 AM
M52NICKERSON
DALEK!
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite:"Subsidies" which are subject to "involuntary termination," such as COBRA ("The COBRA premium reduction under ARRA is not available for individuals who experience involuntary terminations after May 31, 2010." http://www.dol.gov/ebsa/cobra.html)] Yes, any subsidy can be stopped at any time. As can any regulation, or mandate. Since the COBRA subsidies are not the ones in the new health care law what is you point? Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite:and Which they just ****ed. "Major sources of new revenue include a much-broadened Medicare tax on incomes over $200,000 and $250,000, for individual and joint filers respectively, an annual fee on insurance providers, and a 40% tax on "Cadillac" insurance policies. There are also taxes on pharmaceuticals, high-cost diagnostic equipment, and a federal sales tax on indoor tanning services. Offsets are from intended cost savings such as improved fairness in the Medicare Advantage program relative to traditional Medicare." - wikipedia Really? How is that rutting it? Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite:I asked how they were similar. I don't see much similar? Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite:If you want to win the argument badly enough to call into question your own credibility, who am I to stop you. For the record, what I said was "Lawyers trump regulations every time, and the companies will have to be caught out on not making good on the 80% to actual claims." They have to apply 80% of the money they take in to addressing claims. Sound familiar? But if that don't work for you... "Insurers will be required to spend 85% of large-group and 80% of small-group and individual plan premiums (with certain adjustments) on healthcare or to improve healthcare quality, or return the difference to the customer as a rebate." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patient_Protection_and_Affordable_Care_Act It's one of the few things I like about this bill. I miss understood you because paying 80% of claims is different then spending 80% of premiums. Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite:And it'll stop because they passed a LAW! What's the stem word for "Lawyer?" They're going to be laughing at us all the way to the bank. By that argument all laws and regulations are worthless. See throwing lawyers at it only works for so long. At some point it gets to court, or is settled. Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite:That's really just what they report for the federal research grants. All these guys are doing is they take an existing drug, switch out maybe an oxide group with a sulfide group, mix up a vat (or toss the gene into some bacteria), do some in house testing with volunteers while they make up stuff in fluffy research papers that make the new drug sound like a cure for cancer, then submit it to the FDA for even more soft testing. After that, they release it. If it kills a bunch of people, then they recall it. Wash, rinse, repeat. You think that really costs a million bucks? Really, do you have any citation for that, at all? It is not a easy as you think to change chemical groups and still maintain the effectiveness of a drug. Plus they are comming out with new drugs. I do not fear God, I fear the ignorance of man.
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite:and Which they just ****ed. "Major sources of new revenue include a much-broadened Medicare tax on incomes over $200,000 and $250,000, for individual and joint filers respectively, an annual fee on insurance providers, and a 40% tax on "Cadillac" insurance policies. There are also taxes on pharmaceuticals, high-cost diagnostic equipment, and a federal sales tax on indoor tanning services. Offsets are from intended cost savings such as improved fairness in the Medicare Advantage program relative to traditional Medicare." - wikipedia
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite:I asked how they were similar.
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite:If you want to win the argument badly enough to call into question your own credibility, who am I to stop you. For the record, what I said was "Lawyers trump regulations every time, and the companies will have to be caught out on not making good on the 80% to actual claims." They have to apply 80% of the money they take in to addressing claims. Sound familiar? But if that don't work for you... "Insurers will be required to spend 85% of large-group and 80% of small-group and individual plan premiums (with certain adjustments) on healthcare or to improve healthcare quality, or return the difference to the customer as a rebate." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patient_Protection_and_Affordable_Care_Act It's one of the few things I like about this bill.
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite:And it'll stop because they passed a LAW! What's the stem word for "Lawyer?" They're going to be laughing at us all the way to the bank.
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite:That's really just what they report for the federal research grants. All these guys are doing is they take an existing drug, switch out maybe an oxide group with a sulfide group, mix up a vat (or toss the gene into some bacteria), do some in house testing with volunteers while they make up stuff in fluffy research papers that make the new drug sound like a cure for cancer, then submit it to the FDA for even more soft testing. After that, they release it. If it kills a bunch of people, then they recall it. Wash, rinse, repeat. You think that really costs a million bucks?
Tuesday, August 16, 2011 7:46 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: Quote: If you coverage is not paying for anything why to you maintain it? Because he'd be fined up to 2,000 yearly in taxes when the ACA act takes effect, for as long as he doesn't have insurance? Not even getting into the fact that his security team probably qualifies as a small business, meaning he has to provide insurance policies.
Quote: If you coverage is not paying for anything why to you maintain it?
Tuesday, August 16, 2011 8:02 AM
BYTEMITE
Quote:Really? How is that rutting it?
Quote:I don't see much similar?
Quote:By that argument all laws and regulations are worthless.
Quote:Really, do you have any citation for that, at all? It is not a easy as you think to change chemical groups and still maintain the effectiveness of a drug. Plus they are comming out with new drugs.
Tuesday, August 16, 2011 8:55 AM
FREMDFIRMA
Tuesday, August 16, 2011 9:38 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: There aren't subsidies in the health care law. Projections were made that plans would be affordable with EXISTING premium subsidies. Oh look, COBRA just ended.
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite:
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: We have a winner. It's alarming to think of a world without the Clean Water Act or the Clean Air Act, and I'm not even sure it's a world I want to live in, I admit it. But if you can't see that lawyers and lobbyists have their way with every piece of regulation and every loophole and that government and industry is in cahoots, I don't know what to tell you. Our socio-economic system is pretty strongly stacked against the average citizen, and stacked for anyone who has money. And so long as that flaw exists, corporations can and will abuse their consumers and make off like bandits all the while. Our socio-economic system DOES make laws and regulations worthless.
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: It's possible that DT might be able to address this with some eloquence, and not have it take up thirty pages of diagrams. But as for the "difficulty" of changing out the chemical groups, it's pretty basic chemistry. And for "maintaining the effectiveness," it's guesswork. That's the reality of the science. They don't know what the effectiveness is UNTIL they test it, and I have some serious questions about the scientific rigor of a lot of their tests.
Tuesday, August 16, 2011 10:24 AM
Quote:If you really believe that why have this debate?
Quote:How about you enlightin me!
Quote:Not as basic as you think, nor as much guesswork. You may have some serious questions, but right now you have little to back up your claims.
Tuesday, August 16, 2011 10:44 AM
Tuesday, August 16, 2011 11:14 AM
Quote:Originally posted by BYTEMITE: The first one is a basic assessment of savings with the ACA act, not a subsidy. The second is an calculator for existing subsidies. This doesn't prove your point. Tax incentives, also not a subsidy. They're tax incentives.
Quote:Originally posted by BYTEMITE: Because you don't? *boggle* What kind of counter-point was that?
Quote:Originally posted by BYTEMITE: How about no, and if you really want to know why I think the way I do, you just reread what I've already said, because it's been pretty comprehensive.
Quote:Originally posted by BYTEMITE: Fine. But at some point you can't just keep asking "cites please." At some point you have to respect a fellow debater enough to just carry on the debate. Otherwise we're just going to get mired in widely known and accepted minutia. "Practically speaking, it involves chemical aspects of identification, and then systematic, thorough synthetic alteration of new chemical entities to make them suitable for therapeutic use." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medicinal_chemistry Synthetic alteration. You catch that? Then hit to lead methodology, where you test the chemicals, and drop the ones that don't have any effects you want. Then after the process chemistry, the clinical trials. It's damn easy. I've made chemicals using bacteria and altered genes before myself. Takes maybe 30 minutes to splice the gene sequences, then mix them with the bacteria. After that, you have about a day then you go back and look at which bacteria colonies picked up the gene sequence you want. And for the stuff you can't use bacteria, it's simple chemistry, like I said. Don't tell me what I think, or don't think, or that something "isn't as easy as what I think." It's a good way to get my gander up.
Tuesday, August 16, 2011 11:30 AM
Quote:You even said yourself that you would not live without a few of those laws and regulations. They must be doing something.
Quote:If you are talking about how both insurance and sub-prime morgages rely on people not being able to afford payments I pointed out how that was flawed.
Quote:"Drug companies are like other companies in that they manufacture products that must be sold for a profit in order for the company to survive and grow. They are different from some companies because the drug business is very risky. For instance, only one out of every ten thousand discovered compounds actually becomes an approved drug for sale. Much expense is incurred in the early phases of development of compounds that will not become approved drugs.[4] In addition, it takes about 7 to 10 years and only 3 out of every 20 approved drugs bring in sufficient revenue to cover their developmental costs, and only 1 out of every 3 approved drugs generates enough money to cover the development costs of previous failures. This means that for a drug company to survive, it needs to discover a blockbuster (billion-dollar drug) every few years.[4]"
Tuesday, August 16, 2011 2:23 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: Correction: I think they're good ideas, but as implemented, they're very flawed. Just because we have a Clean Water and Clean Air Act in no way actually means the public is kept safe from dangerous and toxic amounts of pollution. If we were to reconstruct the system from the ground up, with different implementation, there are some ideas that I would keep.
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite:By ignoring my point. You committed what's called a red herring fallacy.
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite:So it's shoot and miss, like I said. I still hold that if it's really costing them this much, they're not doing it right. And I'll also admit these are smart people, so there's got to be a reason they're not doing this right.
Tuesday, August 16, 2011 3:28 PM
Quote: You do realize that no system will guarantee people are kept safe right? Those acts have helped.
Quote:You can see that just by the fact that we don't have flammable river anymore.
Quote:I asked what the similarities were, you said I should be able to find them. I still don't see them.
Quote:Or they are doing it right and you are wrong. That is what all the facts indicate.
Tuesday, August 16, 2011 4:08 PM
Quote: Instead of having no upper limit on contamination, now we have clean-up levels that will still get people sick if exposed to those concentrations. I'm sorry, we can do a lot better than a system that's currently controlled by the industries that are polluting.
Quote:Originally posted by BYTEMITE:No, we just have flammable groundwater and roads because of loophole additions pushed by business.
Quote:Originally posted by BYTEMITE:I said the similarities were that they both assume that some people will be too poor to pay for a certain service, but the banks/insurance industry pays for those services anyway. Normally that's not a bad thing, except, it creates an unstable business model, which results in collapse if it's undermined by too few people paying enough back into the business. This is why I think, as I said, that the insurance industries pushed for everyone being forced to buy a plan, both because debts of the poor are still worth something, and also to bring in people buying the higher end insurance packages. But I think the effort is going to fail, and they've only undermined themselves further, by taking on more policy holders. If it were the case that this would allow people to rip off the insurance companies, I might be more optimistic, but I don't think it is, I think it's corporate greed that will lead down the same route as the big banking firms. What's more, because everyone is forced to buy in, I think it's going to hit everyone when it happens. You responded with "but the sub-prime mortgages bundled the bad loans to make their profit," which was missing the point of why I made that comparison. Red herring.
Quote:Originally posted by BYTEMITE:That they could do it cheaper, and they're not exaggerating costs for research grants? What facts have you presented to prove me wrong there? I was right about the HOW of how they create chemicals, maybe I know a little something about the industry.
Tuesday, August 16, 2011 4:20 PM
Tuesday, August 16, 2011 4:39 PM
Quote:How about because getting down to the minimum detection level for all water is unrealistic.
Quote:If we get any deeper I may need my tinfoil hat.
Quote:Studies are underway and the more evidence that is gathered that Fracking is causing Methane contamination in ground water the better new regulations can be.
Quote:No it was not a Red Herring
Tuesday, August 16, 2011 5:10 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: That, sir, is another red herring. The toxicology of the compounds has NOTHING to do with the minimum lab detection levels. And if you know enough to throw around words like the minimum lab detection levels, then you damn well know it, too. The EPA is very political, and the administration of it on the top level is NOT run by scientists. So yes, quite often, the amount of contamination established as a Federal Standard is influenced by industry. If you believe they are safe, explain to me why the MCLs often come under review. If they were already at the given safe levels, then they wouldn't change them or adjust them, wouldn't they?
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite:Conspiracy Theorist? Proudly. What you fail to understand is that some of them turn out to be real.
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite:It's only methane contamination, and not at all the fracking fluids that are used, and not at all deliberate.
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite:Let me put it this way. I said that the similarity between subprime mortgages and insurance is that the expectation is that policy holders can not normally afford the service. If people could always afford a house, would they get sub prime mortgages? If people could always afford a medical procedure, would they get insurance? If not, then what I said was a correct statement. Anything else is changing the subject. Therefore, Red herring.
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite:The last section of your post and the tinfoil comment is you starting to become BEYOND uncivil. So, respond if you like, but I'm done talking to you.
Tuesday, August 16, 2011 6:55 PM
1KIKI
Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.
Tuesday, August 16, 2011 11:48 PM
DREAMTROVE
Wednesday, August 17, 2011 12:54 AM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: The thing about opinions is if someone wants it, they'll solicit it, they don't want it hurled at them gratis.
Wednesday, August 17, 2011 2:24 AM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: Nick, Lots of people on the board know folks from regulatory agencies, some may actually be them. I could forward you to some, but I dom't know you from Adam. That's part of the problem here. You're new, and should probably stop an listen for a while. I don't want to butt in, because I really want no part of this, I'm just saying this because you're new here, so I'm trying to be nice. The way your presentation comes across is like a college student, lecturing everyone on what's "right" that is a secret stash that only you are privy to. If the people you a talking to happen to be in the industry you're talking about, why would they want to hear this? The thing about opinions is if someone wants it, they'll solicit it, they don't want it hurled at them gratis. But it's going to take a little while before anyone knows who you are. For example, I was never in the military. If I have a military question, I ask ome of the military experts here on the board. Often which one will depend on the type of question, sometimes I might post it to the whole board, but what I'm really looking for is "hey, military guys, collectively, give me your opinion on this." If I were to get a response from some kid with less combat experience than myself ranting as if they were an authority because they read a book on it, or a wikipedia entry, telling me why everyone else was wrong, chances are I would not read a second post from that person. So, specifically? You're arguing with someone in industry right now. If you want I can bring in someone from the EPA, but why would I waste his time? It would just annoy him. If you're really curious as tk the level of infiltration by industry? Yes, sure, everyone at the EPA is from the industries that are being regulated, specifically the energy industry. That doesn't invalidate their opinions, in part because it means their opinions are very informed, but it also does not make them objective. They trust the words of industry heads more than those of environmentalists. Not because they're all paid to (though some are) but because they know and respect those people's opinions and they think of environmentalists as tinfoil hats. So, I'm not jumping in to this argument, I have no interest in it. You don't come across as a moron, but I still don't know you from Adam. If you want people to listen to what you have to say, you have to listen to what they have to say, this is my one off post on this, and I'll leave you with some simple thoughts: Those who talk much, say little. Questions are more imporant than answers. The voice of authority sounds like ignorance. It asks no questions, spouting only answers. Of as a Chinese librarian put it thousands of years ago: A wise man is like a valley: all the water flows to the valley, so the valley is rich with it. An idiot is like a mountain: all flows from him; he hears nothing, and thus does not learn.
Wednesday, August 17, 2011 11:43 AM
Wednesday, August 17, 2011 3:25 PM
Wednesday, August 17, 2011 7:35 PM
RIONAEIRE
Beir bua agus beannacht
Thursday, August 18, 2011 3:14 PM
Quote:Originally posted by m52nickerson: I inspect and regulate potable water systems. Everything to from small systems serving small businesses or churches, to large regional water systems. By systems I mean water plants and distributions systems and the administration that over sees them.
Thursday, August 18, 2011 3:27 PM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: Which agency? We might have a lot to talk about.
Friday, August 19, 2011 6:06 AM
Friday, August 19, 2011 7:03 AM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: I don't know if anyone has plans to export fracking waste to florida, i doubt it, but rptesting of private wells is a major issue here in Ny. The major issue is CFC contamination, which I suspect is intentional. My uncle works for the EPA. He used to work for the oil industry. He says he recognizes all of his new co-workers because they used to be his old co-workers. That's what a ship is, you know - it's not just a keel and a hull and a deck and sails, that's what a ship needs.
Friday, August 19, 2011 7:58 AM
Friday, August 19, 2011 8:09 AM
Friday, August 19, 2011 8:15 AM
Friday, August 19, 2011 3:15 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: They're not necessarily bad, but sometimes they might overlook potential dangers simply because their personal history has caused them to relax their judgement and alertness. They've sometimes been lulled into a false sense of security.
Friday, August 19, 2011 3:49 PM
Friday, August 19, 2011 3:56 PM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: This industry is getting huge investment from water monopolists like BP capital, Bechtel and Halliburton, and the chemicals, 60,000 gallons of haloalkane mix per frack, is absurdly high. Every square mile is hit by twice as many top level toxicity WMDs as Saddam's entire arsenal was supposed to possess.
Friday, August 19, 2011 11:08 PM
Quote:I have not seen, nor can I find any tests that have confirmed contamination from any of the fracking chemicals. That does not mean I think it is a good idea.
Quote:Right now the issue seems to be gas contamination. Wells have come up with dissolved methane.
Quote:If those companies are trying to contaminate water supplies purposely they need to understand that contamination will spread, so the ground water they have rights to can very well become contaminated. They should also know that the organic chemicals can be removed with GAC filters or Pack Tower Aeration systems.
Quote:I think the exemptions for Fracking that protects it from the EPA needs to go.
Quote:Then the EPA can do its job.
Saturday, August 20, 2011 5:17 PM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: Nevermind the budget. Focus on this one. Yes, the methane is what sets the water on fire, and it can be hazardous, but it's actually the lower hazaard here. My mom has a list of accident stories, but the real danger isn't the accidents, it's the normal frack. A well can be fracked up to 18 times. Each frack contains about 2% mix of chemicals, largely haloalkane nerve gas. That which goes down under pressure forces the rock up for a moment, and then the rock falls, settles, and pushes the water and chemicals back up. The result is called flowback water, and represents 1/2-2/3 of that which went down. The flowback "water" is really 20,000 ppm mix of nerve agents (sl,e of which have been reported deadly at concentrations as low as 0.001 ppm,) which havs already killed people I know and are currently killing my sister. Once these flow back, they have to go somewhere. Here are the options being used:
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove:1) storage. Places accept the flowback to store in 8,000 gallon tanks. Sometimes they accept a quarter of a million gallons per tank. How does this work? A number of ways: put a vaporizer on the top of the tank, or just a put a pipe to drain out the bottom. How can tney do this? Halliburton loophole. Yes, this is now legal.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove:2) recycling. The fracking fluid is taken to a "recycling" facility at the edge lf a bldy lf water, and poured into a swimming pool. The goal appears to be to recover a small percentage of chemicals for re-use, while pouring the rest kn the river.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove:3) water treatment. This is when the haloalkane mix is diluted 10:1 and then poured back into the water supply. This means now it is 2,000 ppm, but it makes no difference as the end result is that so much of this stuff is being produced the final contamination is dependent only on the amount of haloalkanes and other toxins and not the concentration, which in the entire water table will ultimately be several ppm. My sister appears to have been hit by vapor from wqter contaminated at about one part per million. Abiut one milliliter lf contaminant appears to be enough to have a majority chance of killing you.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove:4) brine. This is when they take potent nerve agents mixed with other toxins, diesel and gas heavy water and call it "salt" and pour it on the roads. The industry is producing this stuff in large enough quantity that it doesn't matter *where* it enters the ecosystem, it will contaminate the entire state.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove:Which is the problem with industry folk. Stories have been circulating "the water was already contaminated" and "people could always set their water on fire" etc. They can make whatever case they want to, and because they speak the sasme language, other industry people will buy it.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove:Nothing is going to alter the fact that the industry is synthesizing more than a million times more chemical weapons than have ever been synthesized before, then releasing those agents into the environment, and not taking them back. You can't create a billion gallons of tetrachloroethylene, and then truck it out into the countryside, and come back without it, and say "oh, it's perfectly safe, it's in storage." Taking aside for the moment thst there are no billion gallon storage facilities for the stuff, there's just no excuse for making the stuff in the first place.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove:If the industry is allowed to do the total number of fracks they have planned for the US, that will mean one trillion gallons of haloalkanes. To truly grasp the danger level, the plan calls for one million drilling pads, eqch with several wells, and each pad covering on square mile of drilling and occupying six acres. Each pad, individually, with no accidents, represents a higher cancer risk than the Fukushima meltdown.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove:Of course they understand this. They intend to sell us back our water like they are doing in Texas. What ultimately happened in Bolivia was a communist revolution, or national socialist, technically, but the morales govt. Is more closely allied to china than to germany.
Sunday, August 21, 2011 12:25 AM
Monday, August 22, 2011 7:58 PM
Wednesday, August 24, 2011 3:32 AM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: Some of this is good criticism and deserves serious debate, and we should wait until ByteMite is back from vacation to have it, as she is the most knowledgeable, and should be included. Just a couple of thoughts for now: 1) The volatiles, it's my understanding, will cycle back into the water supply. 2) The water you use also cycles back.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: 3) Far lower levels have been demonstrated to permanently contaminate the water supply of Vietnam. 4) Looking at the contamination in Vietnam, we see that contamination gets trapped cycling through particular river valleys.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: 5) It would be easy to reserve a few pure water systems to control and sell. 6) Difficult, not impossible. When I've done the math before it seems to me that the amount of planned fracking is thousands to million of times higher than that necessary to irreversibly contaminate the groundwater.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: 7) My figures like "some of these agents are toxic at 0.001 ppm" come from industry people who are constantly giving lectures, but checking online I see no reason to doubt them. I'm sure there's some stuff in there on that level. Diluted Mixes range from 0.5% to 2% chemical soup and the lists contain high levels of volatile haloalkanes like TCE, DCM, etc.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: 8) 1 ml means 1 ml, as the neurotoxicity is cumulative. Given the amount of water that passes through a human's system, this amount can accumulate pretty quickly even at 1ppm. Remember, it's not just the water we drink, we also breath it.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: My sister has been given six months to live after contamination following a spill near her workplace after a truck containing fracking fluid tipped over. Doctors say that the cause is a contamination of cumulative exposure to potent volatile CFCs which may have entered the ventilation system of the building. The mix contains high levels of tetrachloroethylene and other chlorinated hydrocarbons readily absorbed into the human body mutating her DNA. The estimate was at least 100 million contamination events within her brain caused the extremely aggressive tumor growths which affect her, and both of her coworkers in the building, one of whom was the one whose brain leaked out his nose, which I posted earlier. The third had her spine extrude out the back of her skull, which has now been replaced with cowhide. I'm told that this is the result of a few ppm contamination. This is pretty serious.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: The compounds can easily get trapped in the ecosystem and cycle through forever, which is what is happening in Vietnam. It's not a one time deal. You add volatile CFCs to your ecosystem, they don't evaporate and then float into space punching a hole in the ozone layer on the way out, they tend to precipitate back down into the ecosystem, and cycle through as water does.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: The total mass of the US groundwater system is 33 trillion gallons. That's not infinity. That's a finite number. If you take 1 trillion gallons of chemical nerve agent and add it to the water, that would be 3 percent of the water supply. Sure, some of it will cycle through, and over the course of the next million years that number will be reduced, but not substantially during our lifetimes.
Wednesday, August 24, 2011 6:52 AM
Wednesday, August 24, 2011 7:13 AM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: Nick, DNA damage is cumulative. Something might be safe for 8 hours but deadly after 8 months of constant exposure.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove:
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: Overall, I see no reason to defer to your analysis. If contamination in Vietnam is natural and not from agent orange, then why, last year, did the UN launch a clean-up effort to combat the left over agent orange? http://mg.co.za/article/2010-06-28-un-announces-agent-orange-cleanup-for-vietnam] Yes there is clean up for some places. I was talking about the major water contaminates found. Not the only ones, nor is it the whole country. Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: Things don't evaporate into oblivion, that's why we have problems like acid rain. What goes up is pretty likely to come down again. Your right they don't evaporate into oblivion, but they do change. You will find that chemicals will breakdown in air and water over time. Ethylene dibromide, which usetio be used in leaded gasoline, has a halflife of 40 minutes in air. It is much longer in waterm but it will still break down. http://www.epa.gov/ttnatw01/hlthef/ethyl-di.html Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: Chemistry is a pretty straightforward science. No one needs to rely on the word of govt. regulators to determine what effect chemicals will have in the environment or in the body. In fact, no one trusts govt. regulators, since they are little more than industry spokemen. So it should be no problem for people to test and show proof of contamination. I do not fear God, I fear the ignorance of man.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: Things don't evaporate into oblivion, that's why we have problems like acid rain. What goes up is pretty likely to come down again.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: Chemistry is a pretty straightforward science. No one needs to rely on the word of govt. regulators to determine what effect chemicals will have in the environment or in the body. In fact, no one trusts govt. regulators, since they are little more than industry spokemen.
Wednesday, August 24, 2011 9:36 AM
Wednesday, August 24, 2011 11:25 AM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: It's problematic to prove that a contaminant like TCE is directly derived from fracking, and not another cause, which is one of the blocks the industry has at the moment which they're jumping on. My point is this: What does it matter if it's from fracking or not? What we have here is a potent neurotoxic heavy chlorination of DNA coming from haloalkane contaminants in the groundwater which is now proving to cause terminal brain cancer at an alarming rate. None of this is in doubt. So what if we cannot prove that it's from fracking? The industry is admitting to wanting to continue use knowing that billions of gallons will end up the ground water. Why should we allow something we know to be incredibly deadly to increase in contamination by radical orders of magnitude because some corporation says it will add to their profit model or lower their cost, regardless of whether or not they have any other agenda?
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: My take is, fuck them. The industry argument is like saying "Oh, you can't prove that radiation hiroshima deaths in the 21st century are coming from undetonated U235 from the 1945 bombing, they might well be coming from the Japanese nuclear power industry, therefore, it makes no difference if we go and drop several more nukes on Japan!" It's an idiotic position. The industry admits to using the contaminant, the contaminant is proven to cause cancer, even at relatively trace levels, it doesn't matter whether it's their TCE or someone else's that caused my sister's cancer, there's ample reason here to stop them from pumping massive amounts of TCE into our water system.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: As for the gas yields, there is little question here. Even the industry only claims 12.5 bbl/acre, which is less than the base 17 bbl for corn ethanol, and far less than current yields on other biofuels. They just dodge this one by talking in terms of TCF and mi², figures which any idiot can convert. Critics such as the Sierra Club have posted independent measured yields for fracking as substantially lower than industry claims, falling from 2 bbl/acre to much lower, like 0.14. Also, the second year yield fall of rates are showing up at 30-60%, 90% on some wells, far higher than industry predictions, which were more like 5%. These have radical implications for the long term yield rates. This is why it's so essential to have people investigating yield rates, which is the only thing I've seen yet that you applauded, so I don't see why you're arguing with it now, except that you seem to argue with everything posted. I tire of this, really I do.
Wednesday, August 24, 2011 11:55 AM
Wednesday, August 24, 2011 3:56 PM
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Wednesday, August 24, 2011 5:09 PM
Thursday, August 25, 2011 8:42 AM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: You make a good point that my arguments need to be sound and credible.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: I'm surprised you haven't run into DNA substitution reactions. These are up their as the second major form of carcinogenesis now after microbial agents such as virus HPV-16.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: Light weight high volatilization compounds like haloalkanes are of personal interest to me because they easily cross the blood brain barrier to institute primary brain cancers like GBM, which is what we're seeing a very high instance of here right now, way over the norm.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: ETA: As for the snark, you also might watch to hold the superior tone. I tend to know what I'm talking about, even if I veer off into rampant speculation, I'm not starting from a position of ignorance. But it doesn't matter who the audience is, anyone might react negatively to someone who comes in as a self appointed authority.
Thursday, August 25, 2011 10:07 AM
Thursday, August 25, 2011 10:30 AM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove:As to haloalkenes, yes, technically, haloalkane is a more generic, but TCE is an alkene, sure. I suspect that it destabilized into DCM which I think is the more potent mutagen, but I would intentionally go near any of the stuff. If you look around you, you find that it's all over the place: Household cleansers, industrial solvents, even air-conditioners. I'd much rather jump in the pool than breathe that stuff in. An air conditioner holds a fair amount of fluid which leaks over time, just figure where it goes. We've become a very self-destructive society, and we need to remove as many of these high risk contaminants as possible. I have intentionally removed myself very far from them, but now they are coming to me.
Thursday, August 25, 2011 12:39 PM
Thursday, August 25, 2011 12:52 PM
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