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Editorial: Help Elect Cedar Key News` Board of Directors
April 13th, 2003

Editorial: Cedar Key News: A Progress Report
March 11th, 2003

Editorial: Mercedes Meets the Mud
February 28th, 2003

Editorial: Happy New Year to All
December 29th, 2002

Editorial: Letter to the Editor - Thank You C.K. Police for Doing Your Job
December 15th, 2002

Editorial: Poll Results: Fact, Fiction, or Propaganda?
December 4th, 2002

Editorial: WANTED
November 27th, 2002

Editorial: 1,2,3,4 What Are We Fighting For?
October 10th, 2002

Editorial: Do We Really Want Law Enforcement in Cedar Key?
August 15th, 2002

Editorial: Levy County Emergency Management
July 26th, 2002

Editorial: We Have Our Own Heroes
July 17th, 2002

Editorial: Take a Little Time!
July 3rd, 2002

Editorial: Water Management District Trying Its Best
June 26th, 2002

Editorial: Bribery and Misuse of Public Office
June 25th, 2002

Editorial: Police Officer`s Improper Conduct Case Fades Away
June 24th, 2002

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Myths, Misinformation and Propaganda

Myths, Misinformation and Propaganda

Editorial

"Progress Energy works to dispel myths of nuclear energy," so reads a headline in the November 27, Levy county Journal. Progress Energy's John Stevenson spoke to the Chiefland Rotary Club members with the stated purpose of dispelling myths about nuclear energy. According to the report in the Levy County Journal, Stevenson referred to the industrial accident in Bhopal, India where thousands died when a pesticide plant erupted in flames. Stevenson is quoted as saying, "The worst-case nuclear scenario at a commercial nuclear power plant cannot result in a catastrophe like that. It simply cannot happen." Mr. Stevenson must believe that the nuclear disasters at Three Mile Island in the U.S. or the Chernobyl nuclear disaster in the former USSR are minor incidents not likely to happen again.

Mr. Stevenson suggested that commonplace exposures to electricity, household chemicals and gasoline are hazards we accept, and that they are no different than naturally occurring nuclear materials or nuclear reactors hazards. (We are regularly told by nuclear industry spokesmen that nuclear plants cannot become atomic explosions if a reactor goes critical.)

When Three Mile Island nuclear power plant went out-of-control radioactive water was released and there were immediate concerns that a melt-down might occur. The disaster at the Russian nuclear plant at Chernobyl was vastly more damaging than the Three Mile Island incident. Dozens of people died as a direct result. Furthermore, a fifteen hundred mile long cone of cancer causing radioactive contamination reaches from Chernobyl to Finland. These actual nuclear events cannot be equated to the hazard of gasoline can in ones garage.

Nuclear power plants are now being presented as answers to: 1. Global Warming, 2. Dependence on Arab Oil, 3. Strip Mining Coal, 4. Expensive Fossil Fuel. Along with promotion of nuclear power plants there must also be public policy regarding health, safety and economic effects from nuclear power. Health and safety may not be at risk if there is no melt-down or fire at a nuclear plant. Economically, the great cost of construction of a nuclear plant demands that the plants have little downtime. The cost of decommissioning nuclear plants and disposal of radioactive wastes are currently only estimated. Decommissioning is being pushed twenty years into the future. The scientific basis for extending the life of nuclear plants may be overwhelmed the need to defer the cost beyond the original estimate of a thirty year safe period.

The bottom line is that the public should not rely on public relations spiels at the Rotary Club or the Progress Energy Information Center. Furthermore, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission public affairs officers have not always been correct in defending or overseeing the nuclear industry.

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