Desantis signs radioactive waste for roads bill.

Odd that no other state thinks spreading it out makes it safer. Here's part of what's known as the Pasadina Alps, a massive phosphogypsum storage faclity right out of Houston. phosphogypsum is too radioactive to be used in roads. That's why all the other attempts to get past EPA regulation have failed.
phosphogypsum-hill.jpg
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Spreading it out thin everywhere makes it 1000s of percents less dangerous and radioactive than concentrating it all in 1 place.


Mosaic has learned this since that big fiasco several years back. I forget the name of the site.


Possibly in Polk county?
 
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the epa would ban water if they thought they could get away with it,,,

glad to see you blindly bowing down to the government gods,,,

its a study you stupid fuck,,
Cool. You don't mind if I shit n your drinking water. Nobody believes the EPA anyway, right?
 
Desantis just signed a bill that could allow radioactive waste to be used in road construction. Evidently there isn't enough stone, gravel, or sand in the state to use for agregate in Florida's roads. Seems Desantis thinks that would be a good place to get rid of all that radio active phosphogypsum that has been piling up since th EPA started regulating it in 1989. More than 20 environmental groups urged him to not sign the bill, but he apparantly figured his supporters were more likely to prefer to stick it to the tree huggers and not worry about all the birth defects that amount of radioactivity might cause.
Go to Florida, glow in the dark. :heehee:

Imagine all the fun when Florida floods again and again and again and again.
 
material, but decades later is the radioactivity the same?

Again, any gravel or soil you use has some radioactivity in it.
Processing phosphate ore into phosphoric acid, which is predominantly used in fertilizer produces radioactive waste that has a 1600 year half life. That means in 1600 years, it will be half as active as it is right now. The material in question isn't much more than a decade or two old.
 
Cool. You don't mind if I shit n your drinking water. Nobody believes the EPA anyway, right?
of course you would come up with some stupid analogy that makes no sense and has nothing to do with the topic,,

of course if you want to do a study on poop in water and the effects it has,,

you could mine bidens underwear for the poop,, I hear hes got a lot of poopy pants,,
 
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Spreading it out thin everywhere makes it 1000s of percents less dangerous and radioactive than concentrating it all in 1 place.


Mosaic has learned this since that big fiasco several years back. I forget the name of the site.


Possibly in Polk county?
Such an appropriate response from you. a MAGA with no more intelligence than Sponge Bob.
 
Processing phosphate ore into phosphoric acid, which is predominantly used in fertilizer produces radioactive waste that has a 1600 year half life. That means in 1600 years, it will be half as active as it is right now. The material in question isn't much more than a decade or two old.

What is the method of decay? If it's alpha radiation, it's harmless unless you eat it.

And since the waste is of multiple nucleotides, you are giving an average half life, or one you just made up.

Try again.
 
This is an excellent idea for Florida. They should drop all EPA and OSHA regulations there too.
 
of course you would come up with some stupid analogy that makes no sense and has nothing to do with the topic,,

of course if you want to do a study on poop in water and the effects it has,,

you could mine bidens underwear for the poop,, I hear hes got a lot of poopy pants,,
You're a MAGA. I don't doubt that you hear lots of batshit crazy stuff,
 
Processing phosphate ore into phosphoric acid, which is predominantly used in fertilizer produces radioactive waste that has a 1600 year half life. That means in 1600 years, it will be half as active as it is right now. The material in question isn't much more than a decade or two old.
And do tell us, cupcake, exactly how radioactive is it? :abgg2q.jpg:

You probably don't even know how that material is extracted from the earth.

I'll tell you this: Spreading it out far and wide is the best thing that can be done.

Eat a dick, you moron.

"• The overall radioactivity in the stacked phosphogypsum is actually less than what was in the original phosphate ore that was taken out of the ground."

 
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You're a MAGA. I don't doubt that you hear lots of batshit crazy stuff,
whats wrong with making the country a better place?? we all know you want to degrade it into a socialist shithole,,

as for the EPA and water,, yeah they did even ban water when they wont let farmer put a pond on their land,,,
 
What is the method of decay? If it's alpha radiation, it's harmless unless you eat it.

And since the waste is of multiple nucleotides, you are giving an average half life, or one you just made up.

Try again.
I confess. I am not a nuclear physicist, and I didn't personally determine the nature of the radioactivity. If I was smart enough to know those things as well as you seem to want people to believe you are, I wouldn't be wasting my time on a discussion board. I do trust the EPA over some blowhard on the internet who thinks 5 minutes of Google makes them competent to make judgments about nuclear hazards.
 
I confess. I am not a nuclear physicist, and I didn't personally determine the nature of the radioactivity. If I was smart enough to know those things as well as you seem to want people to believe you are, I wouldn't be wasting my time on a discussion board. I do trust the EPA over some blowhard on the internet who thinks 5 minutes of Google makes them competent to make judgments about nuclear hazards.

the EPA that wants to treat CO2 as a pollutant like SOX or NOX?
 
And do tell us, cupcake, exactly how radioactive is it? :abgg2q.jpg:

You probably don't even know how that material is extracted from the earth.

I'll tell you this: Spreading it out far and wide is the best thing that can be done.

Eat a dick, you moron.

"• The overall radioactivity in the stacked phosphogypsum is actually less than what was in the original phosphate ore that was taken out of the ground."

Then you should tell the EPA. I'm sure they would appreciate you telling them how they are wrong.
 
I confess. I am not a nuclear physicist, and I didn't personally determine the nature of the radioactivity. If I was smart enough to know those things as well as you seem to want people to believe you are, I wouldn't be wasting my time on a discussion board. I do trust the EPA over some blowhard on the internet who thinks 5 minutes of Google makes them competent to make judgments about nuclear hazards.
Apparently you're not smart enough to not shoot your mouth off when you don't know what the fuck you're talking about.

What I know comes from people that deal directly with that material and have college degrees and doctorates, and they explained to me

how it works. (in layman's terms) :rolleyes-41:

That's what they do. Their job is dealing with things like that, and they are experts at it.
 
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