RE: E85 fuel information..

From: Rick Barnes (rascal@scrtc.com)
Date: Fri Mar 31 2006 - 10:00:49 EST


Oh heck Miles, it is not you, its just the nature of some of US...take no
fault in the foibles of another man.

Rascal

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-dakota-truck@bent.twistedbits.net
[mailto:owner-dakota-truck@bent.twistedbits.net] On Behalf Of Miles D.
Oliver
Sent: Friday, March 31, 2006 9:07 AM
To: dakota-truck@dakota-truck.net
Subject: RE: DML: E85 fuel information..

  Sigh......

   I ask a question and get a pissing match.

   Thank you to those who have offered valid input about my questions.

On Fri, 31 Mar 2006, Josh Battles wrote:

>
> On Thu, March 30, 2006 6:43 pm, Rick Barnes wrote:
>>
>> Yeah, that figures...the one thing we have plenty of, coal, you want to
stop
>> using....radioactive? pfffttt...by the way, nuclear plants do not give
off
>> ANY radioactive emissions...nice fictional site though...don't believe
>> everything you read tree hugger. State of Fear by Michael Creighton will
>> snap you out of your fog.
>
> Whether you believe me or not is irrellivant, coal ash IS radioactive and
the
> plants emit more radiation than a nuclear plant does.
>
> Perhaps a little light reading about nuclear plant emissions is in order:
>
http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/doc-collections/nuregs/staff/sr1437/v1/part03.
html#39
>
> Perhaps some more light reading from the office of nuclear energy?
> http://www.nuclear.gov/pubs/answers.pdf
> Directly from pages 7 & 8 of this pdf:
>
> "We also receive radiation from man-made sources. In the U.S., most
man-made
> radiation comes from mechanical and dental sources, including X-rays,
medical
> diagnoses, and treatment. It also comes from smoke detectors, television
> sets, nuclear power plants, and emissions from coal-fired power plants."
>
> Note the listing of coal-fired power plants, which you say don't give off
> radiation either.
>
> Which site was fictional? All sites I've listed, save for one, have been
> government sites.
>
> Good job basing your entire argument on a *fictional* piece of literature.
> While parts of that novel may be based on truth, it's still a work of
fiction
> as a whole. Perhaps you are the one who needs to not believe everything
they
> read. Start with this message if you like but that won't change the facts
> I've posted here.
>
>

-- 
  Miles D. Oliver
  www.mmoliver.org

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