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Can you believe Chernobyl was 27 years ago next month?
Hard to believe that it has been almost 27 years now ...
Hope this never happens to one of ours or yours Prypiat a town of 47,000 people is just a ghost town now and may take another 25 to 35 years to be visited again http://ts3.mm.bing.net/th?id=H.4859988329758954&pid=1.7 http://ukrainetrek.com/pripyat-city Quote:
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Guess that makes me 27 next month too :woot:
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Gosh, has it been that long?
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I was 2 months old. I think it affected me in strange ways mere mortals can't imagine |
I just got that game Duci! :haha:
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I was 4,5 years old back then and I only remember that I wasn't allowed to play outside for some time. Back then I only understood that something terrible had happened far away but not far enough away....:-?
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I must say I don't remember a thing of it, except a very slight memory of that famous footage taken from a helicopter of the burning reactor.
To think that 25 years later that there would be another level 7 incident on the other side of the planet. That's the price we pay for our vast electronic thirst. |
It's actually affected me personally - I lived in Russia at the time, and was 2 years old, and happened to be caught in a rainshower in the days after it... There is reason to suspect that some chronic health problems I experienced in the years afterwards were related to it.
The degree of disinformation following the disaster is staggering. Noone knew anything, because the information was repressed until too late. It was even tougher on family friends of hours though. They lived in Kiev; 4 days later, most of them were at the May Day parade - and even then nobody was told anything, but everybody's ears were ringing. They could tell something was wrong, but nobody stopped the event, and so most of them were there. Most of them except one of the siblings in that family, that is, because he was busy with his work as one of the "liquidators". It's hard to overstate how tragic the fate of the "liquidators" of Chernobyl is - not only are they the unsung heroes who never got their true credit, but they're also the most significant group of victims who hardly got any support until too late. Most of them had no idea how bad it was, and in fact most of them didn't even know what they were being sent into. Those who were sent in the immediately afterwards generally had neither training nor protective equipment to deal with it. The best safety measure that most of them got was to limit their exposure - but working near a melted-down reactor meant that even a few minutes was enough to kill many of them, or at least change their life forever. That brother of my family's friends never recovered from it. He was sick for the rest of his life and never even got so much as a thanks. 10 years after Chernobyl, he blew his own head off with a shotgun in front of his entire family. Hopefully someday the "liquidators" will get their rightful place in that story. Sadly, fewer and fewer of them are alive these days. |
Only 9,973 years to go before it becomes inhabitable again.:-?
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After the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster I read a lot about Chernobyl. A very compelling story. The story of the biorobots is unnerving.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5zx739LOE8U |
I still want to visit Chernobyl some day. I think it would be cool to see that.
It's tragic though. |
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Actually the flora and fauna live all over that region.There are also people that lived there that refused to leave others that left for a time and returned. Not that it is much of a benefit considering all the harm caused. http://news.nationalgeographic.com/n...chernobyl.html http://www.spiegel.de/international/...-a-412954.html Two documentaries about the children of Chernobyl.(might be difficult to watch for some) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ujAG_Ofj4M This is what governments do to people. |
I wonder if it's still deathly quiet in Chernobyl. They say there's not a sound from anything but the wind, and it would drive you mad if you were able stay there.
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To stay the night? Hell, I'd do it with proper equipment. I think it would be fun. I'm not scared of anything...but Radiation seems a bit on the bad side. The mutants and wild dogs don't scare me. :O: Chernobyl Diaries was such a bad movie.... I like seeing my friend's reactions though. That's the fun in watching horror movies. They are some stupid movies, but I like seeing the looks on my friend's face. :D To put me in perspective, I laugh through horror movies. Nothing has scared me yet. Insidious, The Shining, Paranormal Activity, Chernobyl Diaries, and several others....just don't scare me...but they scared the living hell out of my friends My friend that I get to watch horror movies with me? He's my age and he puts up a protective wall of pillows during movies. I got him to watch Insidious with me and some other friends....so he sits behind the girls and the pillows.... He saw Apollo 18 and couldn't walk through his yard after dark that night. He's a bit of a wuss when it comes to horror movies....but i have my work cut out for me. I'll see if I can't get him unscared. I think i've derailed this thread.... Sorry about that. Just had a good laugh when I thought of Chernobyl Diaries... |
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