[ RadSafe ] How tough is it to build a dirty bomb?

Bernard L. Cohen blc at pitt.edu
Mon Feb 14 11:22:42 CST 2011


I meant that a large segment of the public believes that exposure would 
cause many immediate severe health impacts and deaths. Since these would 
not occur, this segment of the public would be productively educated.

On 2/11/2011 2:32 PM, Stewart Farber wrote:
> Dr. Cohen writes below about a dirty bomb attack. As he notes the goal 
> is fear and chaos, and:
>
> "This could only work once, because when the public recognizes that no 
> one was harmed by the plutonium, it would be a very useful public 
> information event".
>
> Of course the problem in the public determining that "no one was 
> harmed" [ by even a mBq in a so-called "dirty bomb" ] would, according 
> to those who would want to capitalize on the event to advance their 
> own agenda, claim that epidemiological studies carried out over the 
> lifetime of all individuals possibly exposed initially or due to 
> residual contamination were necessary. [Excuse the preceding run on 
> sentence, but I read a log of German lit in college, and got used to 
> verbs being at the end of loooog sentences]. :-)
>
> And then once the "required" epidemiological studies were completed [ 
> one study would clearly not be enough, right? ] the results would be 
> disputed and debated ad nauseum by countless scientific, public, 
> environmental anti-nuclear activist,  regulatory, and legislative 
> bodies who have a vested interest in the issue.
>
> Consider the case of the Chernobyl accident. Claims of people "killed" 
> by the accident range from the 32 acute deaths among emergency 
> responders, to countless millions due to trivial radiation exposure 
> and residual global contamination,  integrated over all time if one 
> listens to scaremongers like a Bertell or a Caldicott [ or our radsafe 
> favorite the "Tooth Fairy" project].
>
> Stewart Farber, MSPH
> Farber Medical Solutions, LLC
> Linac, Imaging, and HP Equipment Brokerage
> Bridgeport, CT 06604
>
> [203] 441-8433
> farber at farber.info
> ===========================
>
> --- On *Fri, 2/11/11, Bernard L. Cohen /<blc at pitt.edu>/* wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>     From: Bernard L. Cohen <blc at pitt.edu>
>     Subject: Re: [ RadSafe ] How tough is it to build a dirty bomb?
>     To: "The International Radiation Protection (Health Physics)
>     Mailing List" <radsafe at health.phys.iit.edu>
>     Date: Friday, February 11, 2011, 1:04 PM
>
>     On 2/10/2011 4:53 PM, Franz Schönhofer wrote:
>     >   Since the aim of such an "attack" would be to raise fear and
>     > chaos the amount and the concentration of such radioactive
>     substances is
>     > hardly of any importance. Headlines in the mass media like
>     "Plutonium bomb
>     > spreads deadly radioactive material in downtown...." would be
>     enough to
>     > create chaos - whether it were a mBq or some GBq.
>     >
>             This could only work once, because when the public
>     recognizes that no one was harmed by the plutonium, it would be a
>     very useful public information event
>
>     -- Bernard L. Cohen
>     Physics Dept., University of Pittsburgh
>     Pittsburgh, PA 15260
>     Tel: (412)624-9245  Fax: (412)624-9163
>     e-mail: blc at pitt.edu  web site: http://www.phyast.pitt.edu/~blc
>     <http://www.phyast.pitt.edu/%7Eblc>
>
>     _______________________________________________
>     You are currently subscribed to the RadSafe mailing list
>
>     Before posting a message to RadSafe be sure to have read and
>     understood the RadSafe rules. These can be found at:
>     http://health.phys.iit.edu/radsaferules.html
>
>     For information on how to subscribe or unsubscribe and other
>     settings visit: http://health.phys.iit.edu
>


-- 
Bernard L. Cohen
Physics Dept., University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, PA 15260
Tel: (412)624-9245  Fax: (412)624-9163
e-mail: blc at pitt.edu  web site: http://www.phyast.pitt.edu/~blc



More information about the RadSafe mailing list