Anti-nuclear cartoon book, 1978 - anything changed? Barry Brook | 25 April 2011 | URL: http://wp.me/piCIJ-1ao |
Here is the book's cover, freshly snapped from my iPhone (with the $2 price tag still clear):
Apparently, it was first published as "The Anti-Nuclear Handbook" but was then re-titled to fit with the popular "For Beginners" series. The cover says it all really -- a death's head in the word "Power", the black and gloomy background vista, the corporate polluter with a nuclear power plant on his head, and the bright ALTERNATIVES! (with a happy, smiling sun).
It's worth reading books like this to get a perspective on the roots of anti-nuclear activism, and to reflect on what, if anything, has changed. The best thing I can say about the book is that the format is great -- cartoon books are terrific at explaining complex topics to a lay audience. (I also really like this series). Maybe I need to collaborate with an illustrator to write the new version...
The book covers all of the core anti-nuclear arguments -- power plants are unsafe (and remember, this was published before Three Mile Island, Chernobyl or Fukushima -- so they relied on Windscale, Chalk River, SL-1 etc. and good old speculation), nuclear waste is intractable, the risk of weapons proliferation is enormous and growing, fast breeder reactors just make everything worse (and are theoretical anyway), and so on. But it's the conclusion that interests me in particular, especially in the context of the arguments being presented by commenters in the Energy debates in Wonderland thread.
A succinct summary of the core argument of the book is given on p46:
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