Amanda Sperduti Sentenced To 7-12 Years In Prison - Winston-Salem News Story - WXII The Triad
GOOD, SHE NEEDS TO SERVE TIME FOR THE PEOPLE SHE KILLED BUT THE YEARS A NOT LONG ENOUGH. THESE PEOPLE DIDN'T HAVE A CHOICE TO LIVE OR DIE SO SHE SHOULD HAVE TO STAY IN PRISON FOR THE REST OF HER LIFE.
Life is not fair and then we adjust. Get the truth about life on the Cat's Meow. The blog that talks about anything and everything.
Thursday, March 17, 2011
Tokyo Passengers Trigger U.S. Airport Detectors, N.Y. Post Says - Bloomberg
Tokyo Passengers Trigger U.S. Airport Detectors, N.Y. Post Says - Bloomberg
HERE WE GO PEOPLE. EXTREME PANIC WILL NOW START TO SET IN DUE TO PEOPLE HAVING LOW DOSES OF RADIATION ON THEM. THIS WILL NATURALLY SPIN OUT OF CONTROL BECAUSE THAT'S HOW HUMAN BEINGS ARE.
HERE WE GO PEOPLE. EXTREME PANIC WILL NOW START TO SET IN DUE TO PEOPLE HAVING LOW DOSES OF RADIATION ON THEM. THIS WILL NATURALLY SPIN OUT OF CONTROL BECAUSE THAT'S HOW HUMAN BEINGS ARE.
They’re On Sale!
Pay twice as much for half as much.
I WOULDN'T WEAR THEM FOR FREE THEY ARE UGLY AS HELL!!!!!!!!Japan crisis spikes demand for radiation pills
NOW ONCE AGAIN PEOPLE IN AMERICA ARE FREAKING OUT. THEY HAVE TO HAVE THESE PILLS BUT LIKE THE SPECIALISTS SAY BY THE TIME IT GETS TO US IT WILL NOT HURT US. PEOPLE YOU ARE SO WORRIED ABOUT RADIATION FROM JAPAN BUT YOU ARE NOT WORRIED ABOUT THE SMOG YOU HAVE CREATED WHICH IS KILLING ALL OF US. PEOPLE GET A GRIP ON YOURSELVES- IT IS NOT THE END OF THE WORLD. OH YEAH WHILE YOU ARE BUYING YOUR PILLS DON'T FORGET TO OVERSTOCK YOUR FOOD AS WELL.
WASHINGTON — Japan's nuclear crisis is spiking demand in the U.S. and a few other places for a cheap drug that can protect against one type of radiation damage _ even though the risk is only in Japan.
Health agencies in California and western Canada warned Tuesday that there's no reason for people an ocean away to suddenly stock up on potassium iodide. Some key suppliers say they're back-ordered and are getting panicked calls from potential customers.
"Tell them, `Stop, don't do it,'" said Kathryn Higley, director of radiation health physics at Oregon State University.
"There's a lot of mythology about the use of potassium iodide," added Dr. Irwin Redlener, a pediatrician and disaster preparedness specialist at Columbia University. "It's not a radiation antidote in general."
The pill can help prevent radioactive iodine from causing thyroid cancer, for which children are most at risk in a nuclear disaster.
Japan's Nuclear Safety Agency has stored potassium iodide to distribute in case of high radiation exposure, and the U.S. Navy is giving it to military crews exposed to radiation as they help with relief efforts in Japan. But government and independent experts say that Americans have little to fear from any radiation released by the damaged Japanese nuclear plant.
"You just aren't going to have any radiological material that, by the time it traveled those large distances, could present any risk to the American public," said Nuclear Regulatory Commission Chairman Greg Jazcko.
WASHINGTON — Japan's nuclear crisis is spiking demand in the U.S. and a few other places for a cheap drug that can protect against one type of radiation damage _ even though the risk is only in Japan.
Health agencies in California and western Canada warned Tuesday that there's no reason for people an ocean away to suddenly stock up on potassium iodide. Some key suppliers say they're back-ordered and are getting panicked calls from potential customers.
"Tell them, `Stop, don't do it,'" said Kathryn Higley, director of radiation health physics at Oregon State University.
"There's a lot of mythology about the use of potassium iodide," added Dr. Irwin Redlener, a pediatrician and disaster preparedness specialist at Columbia University. "It's not a radiation antidote in general."
The pill can help prevent radioactive iodine from causing thyroid cancer, for which children are most at risk in a nuclear disaster.
Japan's Nuclear Safety Agency has stored potassium iodide to distribute in case of high radiation exposure, and the U.S. Navy is giving it to military crews exposed to radiation as they help with relief efforts in Japan. But government and independent experts say that Americans have little to fear from any radiation released by the damaged Japanese nuclear plant.
"You just aren't going to have any radiological material that, by the time it traveled those large distances, could present any risk to the American public," said Nuclear Regulatory Commission Chairman Greg Jazcko.
US authorizes American evacuations out of Japan
In this March 15, 2011 photo released by US Navy, Naval Air Crewman 2nd Class Zack DelCorte, holding boxes, assigned to the Black Knights of Helicopter Anti-Submarine Squadron (HS) 4, currently embarked with the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76), hands bottled water to a Japanese citizen at a northeastern coastal city of Japan affected by Friday's tsunami. Ships and aircraft from the Ronald Reagan Strike Group are conducting Search and Rescue (SAR) operations and resupply missions throughout northern Japanýs affected areas in support of Operation Tomodachi which means ''Friends'' in Japanese. (AP Photo/U.S. Navy, Kevin B. Gray) EDITORIAL USE ONLY, CREDIT MANDATORY, NO SALES
WASHINGTON — The United States has authorized the first evacuations of Americans out of Japan, taking a tougher stand on the deepening nuclear crisis and warning U.S. citizens to defer all non-essential travel to any part of the country as unpredictable weather and wind conditions risked spreading radioactive contamination.President Barack Obama placed a telephone call to Prime Minister Naoto Kan on Wednesday to discuss Japan's efforts to recover from last week's devastating earthquake and tsunami, and the nuclear crisis at the Fukushima Dai-chi plant. Obama promised Kan that the U.S. would offer constant support for its close friend and ally, and "expressed his extraordinary admiration for the character and resolve of the Japanese people," the White House said.
But a hastily organized teleconference late Wednesday with officials from the State and Energy Departments underscored the administration's concerns. The travel warning extends to U.S. citizens already in the country and urges them to consider leaving. The authorized departure offers voluntary evacuation to family members and dependents of U.S. personnel in Tokyo, Yokohama and Nagoya and affects some 600 people.
Senior State Department official Patrick Kennedy said chartered planes will be brought in to help private American citizens wishing to leave. People face less risk in southern Japan, but changing weather and wind conditions could raise radiation levels elsewhere in the coming days, he said.
Pentagon spokesman Col. Dave Lapan said it will coordinate departures for eligible Defense Department dependents.
The decision to begin evacuations mirrors moves by countries such as Australia and Germany, who also advised their citizens to consider leaving Tokyo and other earthquake-affected areas. Tokyo, which is about 170 miles from the stricken nuclear complex, has reported slightly elevated radiation levels, though Japanese officials have said the increase was too small to threaten the 39 million people in and around the capital.
Anxious to safeguard the U.S. relationship with its closest Asian ally, Obama told Kan Wednesday evening about the steps the U.S. was taking, shortly before the State Department announced the first evacuations.
But the alliance looked likely to be strained, with the U.S. taking more dramatic safety precautions than Japan and issuing dire warnings that contradicted Japan's more upbeat assessments.
Earlier Wednesday, the Obama administration urged the evacuation of Americans from a 50-mile radius of the stricken nuclear plant, raising questions about U.S. confidence in Tokyo's risk assessments. Japan's government was urging people within 20 miles to stay indoors if they could not evacuate.
White House spokesman Jay Carney sought to minimize any rift between the two allies, saying U.S. officials were making their recommendations based on their independent analysis of the data coming out of the region following Friday's massive earthquake and tsunami.
THEY ARE URGING OUR PEOPLE WHO ARE IN JAPAN TO LEAVE BECAUSE OF RADIATION LEVELS. WELL WHERE ARE WE GOING TO EVACUATE WHEN THE RADIATION COMES TO AMERICA- IRAQ?
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