Geiger Counter Readings in Seattle, WA on January 19, 2012

Latitude 47.704656 Longitude -122.318745

Geiger Counter Readings in Seattle, WA on January 19, 2012

Ambient office = .064 microsieverts per hour

Ambient outside = .084 microsieverts per hour

Soil exposed to rain = .100 microsieverts per hour

Romaine lettuce from grocery store  = .104 microsieverts per hour

Tap water = .112 microsieverts per hour

Filtered water = .089 microsieverts per hour

Geiger Counter Readings in Seattle, WA on January 17, 2012

Latitude 47.704656 Longitude -122.318745

Geiger Counter Readings in Seattle, WA on January 17, 2012

Ambient office = .121 microsieverts per hour

Ambient outside = .079 microsieverts per hour

Soil exposed to rain = .070 microsieverts per hour

Red leaf lettuce from grocery store  = .096 microsieverts per hour

Tap water = .083 microsieverts per hour

Filtered water = .066 microsieverts per hour

Geiger Counter Readings in Seattle, WA on January 16, 2012

Latitude 47.704656 Longitude -122.318745

Geiger Counter Readings in Seattle, WA on January 16, 2012

Ambient office = .087 microsieverts per hour

Ambient outside = .071 microsieverts per hour

Soil exposed to rain = .079 microsieverts per hour

Leeks from grocery store  = .080 microsieverts per hour

Tap water = .134 microsieverts per hour

Filtered water = .121 microsieverts per hour

Nuclear Debate 4 - Nuclear Weapons

             It may seem obvious why the vast majority of the people on Earth are opposed to nuclear weapons. They are insanely powerful and destructive. They could vaporize big cities in a blinding flash of light and heat. That being said, there are other reasons that nuclear weapons are being opposed.

           From a strictly military point of view, the strategic ballistic missiles and huge bombs may be useful for deterrence but they lack the discrimination of a good tactical weapon. Powerful explosives are an important part of any military arsenal but in a sense, nuclear bombs are too powerful. There have been attempts to make smaller nuclear weapons such as mortar shells that could be used on a battle field or against specific military targets but there are still problems with their manufacture, deployment and use which make them less attractive. And there is the problem of the bright red line of non-nuclear war versus nuclear war. If one party starts lobbing tactical nuclear weapons around, the other party will be motivated to consider the use of strategic megaton warheads in response.

            Usually the intent of warfare is to defeat an enemy by destroying their military capacity. Wiping out civilians has been a secondary and somewhat frowned upon goal. There have been famous instances where a conquering army has completely destroyed their opponents’ cities and, in the instance of Rome and Carthage, rendered their land uninhabitable for generations. These are the exceptions rather than the rule. Generally, the conquerors have wanted to exploit the citizenry and physical resources of their defeated enemies. There have been efforts to create a ‘neutron’ bomb which would wipe out people but leave buildings intact but that still leaves an empty city with no workers. Strategic nuclear weapons are just too destructive.

          Nuclear blasts throw huge amounts of dust and debris into the atmosphere including radioactive particles. This material, called fallout, falls back to the ground over time. The area surrounding the destruction caused by the explosion itself can be rendered uninhabitable by fallout. Depending on the size of the blast and the location, fallout can be caught up in high air currents such as the jet stream and carried for thousands of miles, even circling the planet. So, regardless of where an explosion occurs, entire hemispheres of the Earth can be threatened by the fallout. If either India or Pakistan attacked the other, the prevailing winds would carry fallout back to the land of the attacker. If a nuclear exchange of one hundred big warheads took place, enough dust and smoke would be injected into the atmosphere to cut sunlight down to the point where agriculture would be threatened. This is called a nuclear winter and millions if not billions would starve.

          There has been much work on treaties to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons beyond the few countries who possess them. However, the fact that a country without nuclear weapons feels threatened by a country with nuclear weapons is a very strong motivation to acquire them. The world has been lucky so far that some insane leader of a country with nuclear weapons has not attacked an enemy but it could happen. There are politically unstable countries that possess nuclear weapons, such as Pakistan, that could disintegrate into chaos leaving the world wonder who is going to wind up with the nukes. If a non-state player such as a terrorist group got their hands on a nuclear bomb, they could take out a big city. These are just some of the political problems of nuclear weapons.

          In the end, nuclear weapons are a very bad idea for a number of reasons, military, political, climatic, environmental and health.  The whole world would suffer in a nuclear war broke out anywhere. For all these and more reasons, nuclear weapons should be eliminated as soon and as completely as possible.

Peace symbol made by combining the semaphore flag positions for ‘n’ and ‘d’, standing for nuclear disarmament:

The Debt Limit Explained

CGPGrey aptly tackles the American debt limit in this little edu-tainment video. It is really not as confusing as you might have thought or assumed.

That's Not Where The Fuel Goes

I know that Russia is a different place, and having never been there I might be judging too harshly, but as far as I know, there is no car on the international market that accepts gas through its windshield. If you know otherwise, please inform me in the comments below.

GoPro Films Dog POV As He Fetches From A Pool

It is kind of hard not to love the idea of a dog's perspective on things. David Alpert strapped a GoPro camera to his white lab, grabbed the tennis balls and had a field day. 

"Indy 4" Gets An Honest Trailer, Finally

It has been five years, yet it is still not soon enough for the Screen Junkies lads to lambast "Indiana Jones & The Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull." 

Don't "travel" in Indonesia

Avoid the van ride by all means necessary.

Pekanbaru isn't a place that sees tourists very much. In fact, with Pedang now having the main airport on Sumatra, and ferries from Singapore and Malaysia only heading to Dumai, Pekanbaru seems to have been forgotten. It felt like my travel partner and I were the only westerns in the whole city when we arrived. With our lack of Indonesian language, and English not being very present, this made for some interesting attempts at dialogue. Regardless, Pekanbaru made for the first hub of our Indonesian adventure.

After a night or two in the city, we decided it was time to head to a greener pasture. The ticket to West Sumatra is through a town called Bukittinggi, so we set our sights on finding a bus. Through decently successful dialogue with the reception at our hotel, we quickly found ourselves in a taxi to what we were hoping was the bus terminal. Upon arrival, we were first questioned at the gate of the park, then inundated by a pack of locals all trying to usher us in opposing directions. We hardly had time to argue with our taxi driver trying to double our fare before we were pulled into the right bus terminal.

Inside, we met an English-speaking lady setting up a "travel" to our town. Since the bus only left once a day, the seven-person hybrid car/van was our only option. This, of course, was our first questionable decision of the day.

To say the least, by the end of the ride, I despised our driver. As I tried to focus on immaculately blue lakes, surrounded by engulfing jungle and scattered mosques, our driver, I can only assume, was trying to assassinate us. Though I haven't seen much I like about Asian diving, the impossibly close tailgating, darting into oncoming traffic, and all around driving like a dickhead was the worst I've seen in the six continents I’ve visited.

When we found ourselves on wide-open roads, the driver went flaccid, only to pick up steam when the roads began to wind, flooded with cars. With each dumbass risk, his custom megaphone horn, and his ostentatious thwacking of the emergency light button, I found myself wanting to smack him in the face. But all journeys, thank God, come to an end one way or another…

Indonesia is an incredible span of over 17,000 islands, and boasts insatiable beauty. For those that want to enjoy it and don't enjoy having their life put at risk for six consecutive hours, I would suggest commuting between cities by means other than a “travel.”

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