Linda Hazelton
(17 March 2011)
"Ann Coulter on Radiation"
Ann Coulter is amazing! The comments (which I didn't include are interesting!)
http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=42347#disqus_thread
With the terrible earthquake and resulting tsunami that have devastated
Japan, the only good news is that anyone exposed to excess radiation
from the nuclear power plants is now probably much less likely to get
cancer.
This only seems counterintuitive because of media hysteria for the past
20 years trying to convince Americans that radiation at any dose is
bad. There is, however, burgeoning evidence that excess radiation
operates as a sort of cancer vaccine.
As The New York Times science section reported in 2001, an increasing
number of scientists believe that at some level -- much higher than the
minimums set by the U.S. government -- radiation is good for you. "They
theorize," the Times said, that "these doses protect against cancer by
activating cells' natural defense mechanisms."
Among the studies mentioned by the Times was one in Canada finding that
tuberculosis patients subjected to multiple chest X-rays had much lower
rates of breast cancer than the general population.
And there are lots more!
A $10 million Department of Energy study from 1991 examined 10 years of
epidemiological research by the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health
on 700,000 shipyard workers, some of whom had been exposed to 10 times
more radiation than the others from their work on the ships' nuclear
reactors. The workers exposed to excess radiation had a 24 percent
lower death rate and a 25 percent lower cancer mortality than the
non-irradiated workers.
Isn't that just incredible? I mean, that the Department of Energy spent $10 million doing something useful? Amazing, right?
In 1983, a series of apartment buildings in Taiwan were accidentally
constructed with massive amounts of cobalt 60, a radioactive substance.
After 16 years, the buildings' 10,000 occupants developed only five
cases of cancer. The cancer rate for the same age group in the general
Taiwanese population over that time period predicted 170 cancers.
The people in those buildings had been exposed to radiation nearly five
times the maximum "safe" level according to the U.S. government. But
they ended up with a cancer rate 96 percent lower than the general
population.
Bernard L. Cohen, a physics professor at the University of Pittsburgh,
compared radon exposure and lung cancer rates in 1,729 counties
covering 90 percent of the U.S. population. His study in the 1990s
found far fewer cases of lung cancer in those counties with the highest
amounts of radon -- a correlation that could not be explained by
smoking rates.
Tom Bethell, author of the "Politically Incorrect Guide to Science,"
has been writing for years about the beneficial effects of some
radiation, or "hormesis." A few years ago, he reported on a group of
scientists who concluded their conference on hormesis at the University
of Massachusetts by repairing to a spa in Boulder, Mont., specifically
in order to expose themselves to excess radiation.
At the Free Enterprise Radon Health Mine in Boulder, people pay $5 to
descend 85 feet into an old mining pit to be irradiated with more than
400 times the EPA-recommended level of radon. In the summer, 50 people
a day visit the mine hoping for relief from chronic pain and autoimmune
disorders.
Amazingly, even the Soviet-engineered disaster at Chernobyl in 1986 can
be directly blamed for the deaths of no more than the 31 people inside
the plant who died in the explosion. Although news reports generally
claimed a few thousand people died as a result of Chernobyl -- far
fewer than the tens of thousands initially predicted -- that hasn't
been confirmed by studies.
Indeed, after endless investigations, including by the United Nations,
Manhattan Project veteran Theodore Rockwell summarized the reports to
Bethell in 2002, saying, "They have not yet reported any deaths outside
of the 30 who died in the plant."
Even the thyroid cancers in people who lived near the reactor were
attributed to low iodine in the Russian diet -- and consequently had no
effect on the cancer rate.
Meanwhile, the animals around the Chernobyl reactor, who were not
evacuated, are "thriving," according to scientists quoted in the April
28, 2002 Sunday Times (UK).
Dr. Dade W. Moeller, a radiation expert and professor emeritus at
Harvard, told the Times that it's been hard to find excess cancers even
from Hiroshima and Nagasaki, particularly because one-third of the
population will get cancer anyway. There were about 90,000 survivors of
the atomic bombs in 1945 and, more than 50 years later, half of them
were still alive. (Other scientists say there were 700 excess cancer
deaths among the 90,000.)
Although it is hardly a settled scientific fact that excess radiation
is a health benefit, there's certainly evidence that it decreases the
risk of some cancers -- and there are plenty of scientists willing to
say so. But Jenny McCarthy's vaccine theories get more press than
Harvard physics professors' studies on the potential benefits of
radiation. (And they say conservatives are anti-science!)
I guess good radiation stories are not as exciting as news anchors
warning of mutant humans and scary nuclear power plants -- news anchors
who, by the way, have injected small amounts of poison into their
foreheads to stave off wrinkles. Which is to say: The general theory
that small amounts of toxins can be healthy is widely accepted --except
in the case of radiation.
Every day Americans pop multivitamins containing trace amount of zinc,
magnesium, selenium, copper, manganese, chromium, molybdenum, nickel,
boron -- all poisons.
They get flu shots. They'll drink copious amounts of coffee to ingest a
poison: caffeine. (Back in the '70s, Professor Cohen offered to eat as
much plutonium as Ralph Nader would eat caffeine -- an offer Nader
never accepted.)
But in the case of radiation, the media have Americans convinced that the minutest amount is always deadly.
Although reporters love to issue sensationalized reports about the
danger from Japan's nuclear reactors, remember that, so far, thousands
have died only because of Mother Nature. And the survivors may outlive
all of us over here in hermetically sealed, radiation-free America.