Here's a comment from the news this morning ... about the radioactivity that's reaching California.

"A diplomat who has access to radiation tracking by the U.N.'s Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty Organization told The Associated Press in Vienna that initial readings show tiny amounts of radiation have reached California. But it's not dangerous in any way — "about a billion times beneath levels that would be health threatening," the diplomat said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the organization does not make its findings public."

I'm not excited by the actual events - because I think that the levels of radiation reaching CA are indeed tiny.

But what's also noticeable is that we've got hordes and hordes of experts who have the data at their fingertips ... but none of them are saying what it actually is. The problem here is POLICIES, PROTOCOLS, LEGAL CONSTRAINTS, and MEDIA RESTRICTIONS.

But does this make any sense? Literally it means that the general public cannot get the info it needs ... when there is a major disaster going on somewhere in the world. Even when the global community is affected.

Pete #2



Edited by Pete (03/19/11 03:43 PM)