Tuesday, February 9, 2021

Because it's often hard to find specific news online back before about 5 or 10 years ago:

Often people might use my site to find things that they cannot find easily online, specific news incidents that they might be doing a news report on for High school or college or just general research for an area that they might live or work in.

So, when I see things like the "70 tornadoes hit" article in my top ten I think to myself; "OH, someones doing a term paper or report or something like that when it's an article from 2013 like that one.

You see, I have news here at my sight that is compiled and often commented upon by me or the author when it happened back to Fall of 2007 here at my site. Some times the body of the news is accompanying the story and sometimes just the headline name is there but sometimes if you click on the URL or Link it still might exist somewhere under that title or a similar one. 

For example, in 2011 I believe a really bad earthquake and tsunami hit Japan and killed thousands and thousands of people and also caused Fukushima Nuclear power plant to have 3 nuclear meltdowns. At the time I advocated Crowd Sourcing using geiger counters and at that time my readership ballooned up as far as 100,000 visits a day by the mid teens. It was sort of interesting that people took me much more seriously after my advocating crowd sourcing because the Japanese and U.S. government wasn't telling people enough information like they did during Chernobyl. But, during the Japanese Fukushima the news was probably about 10,000 times worse than Chernobyl and no government, not Japan not the U.S. not EU wanted to tell people just how bad this was going to get for the next 25,000 years time as radiation from the meltdowns spewed through the water tables into the oceans of  the next 25,000 years on currents which has by now reached all interconnected oceans on earth from the pacific to the Atlantic to the Mediterranean ocean etc. IF you look on a map all the main oceans of the world are connected by currents and water. So, what happens radiation wise one place eventually gets to all places just like Cesium went through the air and traveled all over the northern Hemisphere then. Cesium's half life is at least 30 years so it's going to keep radiating the atmosphere of the earth (if it hasn't fallen to earth or water by now) for at least another 20 years of radiation all over the earth or more than this. 

So, the only way people could protect themselves in Japan or anywhere else was by getting their own geiger counters to detect the radiation levels of their food, their air, their ground and their water wherever they were on earth. Radiation will be leaking into the oceans of the world from Fukushima for the next 25,000 to 50,000 years by the way from the three meltdowns because one of them was reprocessing weapons grade plutonium when the meltdown happened then.

This is really weird. I wonder if we are definitely on a new timeline because I remember Fukushima being in 2011 not 2016? What's up with that?

I did some research and I 'm right here's the date it actually happened: 11 March 2011
It must be a 
misprint on the wikipedia page.
About 2,920,000 results (0.88 seconds) 

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