And what's with your hang-ups against Christianity, not that I give a rat's fart...?
All 3 satanization religions (Judaism, Christianity, Islam) are the same way bad, because all 3 phobically program (brainwash) people with hell threats to drive their followers into hate and wars and honour murders. Thus I do neither prefer nor hate any of them particularly.
But concrete threats with hell (or bad karma etc.) are a sin, and the sufferance induced by these threats makes the hell threatener go through hell next.
Tab wrote:AerialThe Sharmen wrote
When I read the term "CONTAMINATED" on a product that was sent to me, then it is the most logical first consequence to check it with a Geiger counter to test wether that contamination may be radioactive.
To own a Geiger counter is nothing special. In the era of the Chernobyl accident they were sold everywhere for 50EUR and they were even advertized in TV guides and women's magazines...
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Now this I find sad that a person has got to worry about every drop of rain that falls in case it could be radio active.
Not at all. I only fetch the Geiger counter out of my measurement instrument drawer when something is claimed to be "CONTAMINATED" or when there is a radiation hazard warning sticker on a device (e.g. certain early 1980th smoke alarm devices contained a radioactive source). I don't use that Geiger counter more than 2 or 3 times a year.
I don't know how widely the term "contaminated" is used in military environment (do you call things like cigaret ash or chocolate stains on a car seat a "contamination"?), but outside military that term is normaly only used for pollutions those constitute a severe to life threatening risk for health or environment. Because the military e.g. uses armour piercing ammunitions made from depleted uranium, those vaporize to a poisonous and radioactive heavy metal smoke cloud when they hit a battle tank, it was a very logical assumption to check a "contaminated" military object with a Geiger counter. E.g. tank wracks those have been shot with that ammo are very radioactive - the term "depleted" does not make the uranium harmless at all. When manufactured from recycled nuclear rods, the uranium even contains a small fraction of plutonium. (I don't need to stress here how toxic this is.)
Thus when the pilot suit would have come in contact with DU ammunition smoke and dust, it would be radioactive and poisonous. And to call this a "contamination" and test for it with a Geiger counter would clearly make sense, isn't it?
