From: coderman <[email protected]>
 To: Georgi Guninski <[email protected]> 
Cc: [email protected] 
 Sent: Sunday, April 19, 2015 3:32 PM
 Subject: Re: Welcome to the FUTURE: US cops pay Bitcoin ransom to end office 
hostage drama
   
On 4/19/15, Georgi Guninski <[email protected]> wrote:


> ...
> I suspect cleaning the mess will be much more expensive
> than $300. This appears non-trivial in times of crisis
> like this and recent shutdowns.

>Josh Gates & crew at Chernobyl were encouraged to take a special
>liquid antidote as an additional precaution,

>"Thyroshield. Thyroid blocking in a radiation emergency only. Blueberry flavor.
>Blueberry flavor? Who gives a **** what the flavor is? If the atom
>bomb has just dropped, you don't care what the flavor is. It could be
>any flavor. It could say, 'Feces flavor', and if there was a radiation
>emergency, you'd be like, 'I WILL DRINK THIS.'"
>- Joshua Gates - Destination Truth : Ghosts of Chernobyl


>in terms of pen-test through self evidence, a part BTC fee perfectly
>logical resolution :P

So-called "anti-radiation pills" are made of potassium iodide (or sodium 
iodide; most any common iodide would work.).  They work by flooding the thyroid 
with iodine, so that extra radioactive iodine (from fallout) mostly passes 
through the body without effect.  They SHOULD be dirt-cheap; and they should 
have no expiration period.  (Although, I hear they are usually given such an 
expiration period; ignore it.)        Jim Bell



 



 

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