I can't believe you are talking like this right after you suggested the NRC 
shut 
down Rossi's factory and force him to spend 100 million dollars on testing.





________________________________
From: Jed Rothwell <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Sat, January 22, 2011 4:41:26 PM
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Monday Update to Release Information on Self Sustain Mode


Horace Heffner <[email protected]> wrote:


What a beautifully ironic possibility!  We could quickly go from assertions 
from 
powerful experts that CF doesn't exist, CF is ludicrous, to assertions it is 
dangerous!

Well, in all seriousness: Mizuno's cell and at least 5 others exploded;  Rossi 
said it is dangerous without power input; and he had trouble shutting it down 
when it was in self-sustaining mode. So, yes, cold fusion can be dangerous. At 
this stage we don't know how it works. My guess is that Rossi is using the kind 
of empirical methods of control that people used to control fire before they 
understood modern chemistry. He has not had enough experience with these 
methods 
to be sure they will work on all cells, at any scale.

When x-rays were first discovered, people did not realize they were dangerous 
to 
living tissue. Some poor patient in a hospital had to have x-rays, as I recall 
because he was shot, and they could not find the bullet. They x-rayed him 
repeatedly, and killed him. Madam Curie inadvertently killed herself with 
radiation, and her lab notebooks are so contaminated they are stored in lead 
boxes and cannot be examined by people without protection. Radium salts were 
sold as medication for a while, and some of the old bottles are quite 
radioactive. With a brand-new discovery, you cannot anticipate every possible 
danger or failure mode. You have to do lots of tests -- thousands, in many 
different labs. You have to use every known means to detect harmful radiation, 
and also expose lab rats to the device, just in case there is some form of 
radiation or other effect we do not know how to detect.


Yep, better stick with coal and oil, it's much safer.  That's my story and I'm 
sticking to it!  8^)

I am sure they will also say that! Even people in favor of cold fusion may feel 
this way. When new technology appears, people tend to hold it to a much higher 
standard than the old technology used for that purpose. Sometimes they demand 
unrealistically high standards of performance and safety. They go into a tizzy 
when they find out that influenza vaccines kill 5 or 10 people per year, 
overlooking the fact that the disease kills tens of thousands of people. 
They fear airplane accidents far more than they fear automobile accidents, and 
they will drive long distances to avoid the risk, even though the accident and 
fatality rate per passenger mile is much higher for cars. They oppose nuclear 
power even though that means there will be more coal generators, and burning 
coal releases orders of magnitude more radioactive garbage into the atmosphere 
than nuke plants do. 

Sooner or later autonomous automobiles will be introduced. Even not, I will bet 
that the Google self-driving car is safer than a car driven by an average 
driver, but sooner or later they will start selling lots of cars like that. One 
of them will get into an accident, which will probably be caused by the other 
car's driver. But people will shriek and carry on demanding that the 
self-driving cars be banned. When the Prius came out they claimed the 
electrical 
system would electrocute people or firemen in auto accidents.

People always fear the new. They fear the future, and cling to the past and the 
Devil they know. I am sure the opponents of cold fusion will fan the flames of 
fear and ignorance. The Congressman representing Big Coal (D-WV) is trying to 
pass a law banning wind turbines ostensibly because they kill birds. He ignores 
the fact that burning coal kills far more birds than wind turbines do.

 
What a pie in the face of many true believer skeptics.

I can't wait!

 
 Of course they'll start soon saying they knew it was real all the time. 
>

That, they will.

- Jed



      

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