I agree with Dick on some points, for example it is impossible to waste water from an environmental standpoint. I'm not so much worried about the cans, but the plastics, prescription drugs, pesticides, and other chemicals.
http://www.ewg.org/node/26128
Pharmaceuticals Pollute U.S. Tap Water
/ 13 percent list serious side effects at levels less than 100 parts-per-billion (ppb) in human blood, with some causing potential health risks in the parts-per-trillion range./

As far as radioactive substances, it seems prudent that radiation exposure should be kept minimal, and nothing added to it when possible. A whole lot of stuff is accumulative in effect. Also remember a whole lot of stuff 'they' want you to get busy using has addictive components by design, and this is and always has been actively promoted. Mind control is mind control, regardless of what form it comes in. http://cache.wists.com/thumbnails/d/af/daf09a936076b46dac53bfa9ddd96669-orig

Consider this, and those towers all around..

http://www.cheniere.org/books/excalibur/neurophone.htm
/ By simply adding on the desired modulation patterns, the Soviets can now pump material directly into the mind-brain-consciousness-life loops of the entrained brains. The weapon implications are enormous: raw emotion such as sheer terror or panic can be transmitted; death or disease patterns of all kinds can be transmitted; informational content (thoughts and ideas) can be impressed directly into the captured brains and minds and processed as if originating inside each brain itself. Indeed, as long as the Soviets keep the effects rather gentle, an entire population can be subtly influenced without governmental notice. /


Richard Goodwin wrote:
If a radioactive substance is moved from one place, e.g. in the ground, to another place, e.g., in a smoke detector, how is that "adding" to it?

All the radioactive matter on earth is somewhere right now. When we use it, we move it from wherever it is to some place else. We don't create it.

Actually, you could make an argument that by mining radioactive substances and concentrating them into reactors, bombs, or other "products", you are making the world a bit safer, since it is easier to avoid exposure to reactors, bombs, etc, than to the same substances all spread out in the ground.

I never have understood quite why people get all wrapped around the axle about some things. For example, we take aluminum out of the ground, where it is one of the more abundant elements in the earth's crust, and we make beer cans out of it. But if we then put that aluminum back in the ground, e.g., by throwing empty beer cans into the dump, people get all in a lather about pollution. Why? We are just putting the aluminum back where we found it.

And "wasting water". People get all wound up about using too much water. But it's not like it gets used up. It's still there after whatever we use it for. And it comes back to us from rain, etc. Why all the furor? Yeah, I know, there can be local shortages, but overall the total amount of water on earth doesn't really change, does it?

Dick

------------------------------------------------------------------------
*From:* Bob Banever <[email protected]>
*To:* [email protected]
*Sent:* Thu, April 22, 2010 8:58:34 PM
*Subject:* Re: CS>A closer look at americium 241 from a smoke detector

Alan,
Yes of course. Best not to add to it. I'm sure you would agree. Cheers.

    ----- Original Message -----
    *From:* Alan Jones <mailto:[email protected]>
    *To:* [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
    *Sent:* Thursday, April 22, 2010 4:37 PM
    *Subject:* Re: CS>A closer look at americium 241 from a smoke detector

    Better go live in a lead box, even the natural world is full of it.


    On Thu, Apr 22, 2010 at 6:12 PM, Bob Banever
    <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

        No amount of radiation is trivial.  No level is safe and all
        ionizing radiation causes damage to DNA.

-- Alan Jones

    "The powers not delegated to the United States by the
    Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to
    the States respectively, or to the people."  (Tenth Amendment to
    the US Constitution)