Infant mortality in the Northwest up 35% following Fukushima disaster

It happened at Chernobyl, and it is happening here. The consequences of the multiple melt-downs are starting to appear. One of the first effects of “low-level” radiation is a rise in infant mortality. Statistics on infant mortality in the Pacific Northwest were analyzed and showed a significant upturn in the first weeks of the Fukushima crisis. (Janette D. Sherman, ND and Joseph Mangano) The original essay looked at eight cities: San Jose, Berkeley, San Francisco, Sacramento, Santa Cruz, Portland, Seattle, and Boise. The time frame of the report was the four weeks preceding and the ten weeks after the disaster.

Scientific American claims to debunk this analysis, criticizing its choice of cities and time period as “cherry picking”. However, Counterpunch’s statistician investigated further and his analysis strengthened the results. (Scroll down to headline “Post-Fukushima Infant Deaths in the Pacific Northwest”)

Counterpunch’s staff statistician analyzed all the northernmost Pacific cities, extended the period to ten weeks before and after, and compared deaths in 2011 with the same period a year before (to avoid any seasonal bias). They found a greater increase in infant mortality than the original essay.

Radioactive tritium is leaking at 48 nuclear power sites in the US

Three quarters of U.S. commercial nuclear power sites are leaking radioactive tritium. Although most leaks appeared to have stayed within plant boundaries, drinking wells have been contaminated near two plants in Illinois and near one plant in Minnesota. So far the levels do not exceed federal standards, however many scientists and organizations, including The National Academy of Sciences are convinced that any amount of additional radiation increases ones risk of cancer. See AP report.

Congressional Committee on Nuke Safety Takes in Big Dollars From Nuclear Power Industry

Members of Congress that sit on the House Energy and Commerce and Senate Environment and Public Works committees receive an average of $9,024 per year from the nuclear industry. This is almost 3 times what other Congressmen receive from the industry.

MAPLight.org has analyzed contributions to lawmakers sitting on the above committees . See details.

Switzerland bans nukes, radiation sickness in children, large area is uninhabitable

Rather then send you 3 separate alerts, we are combining the stories.

Every day there is news from Japan. The following are a few of the most newsworthy:

• Switzerland voted recently to phase out nuclear power. This came on the heels of a 20,000 person march against nuclear power. NPR.

• An area 17 times the size of Manhattan is off limits for habitation. Let’s demand US newspapers and TV stations report this staggering news. Natural News

• Children 32 miles from Fukushima are falling sick. Many Japanese children have “inexplicable” symptoms reported Tokyo’s Shinburn newspaper.

90 to 95% of Cancers are Preventable: due to lifestyle or environment

Cancer is a Preventable Disease that Requires Major Lifestyle Changes says study published in Pharmaceutical Research,
An Official Journal of the American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists

The 2008 study concludes that up to 10% of total cancer cases are likely induced by radiation, both ionizing and non-ionizing. It is likely that this percentage will increase significantly in the post-Fukushima world. Radiation induced cancers include some types of leukemia, lymphoma, thyroid cancers, skin cancers, sarcomas, lung and breast carcinomas.

Women, breast cancer and nuclear power

“Breast cancer and ionizing radiation: Ionizing radiation has long been regarded as the most established environmental risk factor for breast cancer.” Article

On Radiation Truth’s Facebook page, female fans outnumber male ones by 2 to one. What do you think is the reason women are more concerned about side effects of nuclear power?

MOX fuel

MOX is considered orders of magnitudes worse than the isotopes used in most reactors for a number of reasons. Here’s one reason: it contains plutonium, which has a half-life of 24,000 years. Plutonium is a by-product of nuclear energy production: it is found in the spent fuel rods of all nuclear reactors. It is sometimes added to new fuel rods is to save money and reduce the amount of waste they have to store. Learn some other nasty facts about DOX fuel in this article published by Time magazine.