Nuclear

Interview 1622 – New World Next Week with James Evan Pilato

[audio mp3="http://www.corbettreport.com/mp3/2021-03-11_James_Evan_Pilato.mp3"][/audio]This week on the New World Next Week: New Mexico leads the way with the first US lawsuit against mandatory vaccinations; the US loudly announces their super secret cyber offensive on Russia; and the UN claims no adverse health effects ten years after Fukushima.

‘Round Midnight

September 26th was the International Day for the Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons.  In Chicago, where Voices for Creative Nonviolence is based, activists held the third of three COVID-era “Car Caravans” for nuclear disarmament, travelling through the city from Voices’ own rapidly gentrifying Uptown neighborhood to the statue on Chicago’s South Side which marks the fateful site of Earth’s first[Read More...]

TENET (2020) Film EXPLAINED – Jay Dyer


The movie is palindrome. It’s also Back to the Memento Inception Future Part 2. In this analysis I cover the secret meaning and subtle twilight language Nolan couched within, relating to oligarchs, the new Cold War, alternate dimensions and other hot sci fi ingredients. I give this movie 2.5 Flava Flav clocks out of 5. This movie lacks the 1.21 gigawatt needed for a time travel conundrum.

Triso: Nuclear ‘Power Balls’ That Could Eliminate Reactor Meltdowns

Is nuclear power really a safe alternative to hydrocarbons? Is it worth the risk of devastating meltdowns like we saw in Chernobyl, or Fukushima?
The fact remains that there are inherent risks involved with all major energy sources, and nuclear power certainly has its drawbacks – from reactor safety, to nuclear waste, to the various  stages of fuel processing. However, because of its potential to meet base-load requirements to power modern cities, is has always been entertained as one of the leading options for power generation going forward.

US nuclear weapons in Europe are a truly bad idea

On May 15, the U.S. Ambassador in Warsaw, Georgette Mosbacher, suggested relocating U.S. nuclear weapons based in Germany to Poland. One hopes this was just a mistake by a political appointee unfamiliar with NATO nuclear weapons issues, not a reflection of official U.S. government thinking. Moving nuclear weapons to Poland would prove very problematic.
The U.S. Air Force maintains 20 B61 nuclear gravity bombs at Buchel Air Base in Germany (as well as B61 bombs on the territory of four other NATO members).