From a Pro-Thorium Reactor Blog:
http://thoriumenergy.blogspot.com/2009/ ... lanet.html
As the away teams reported back to the Starship Enterprise, the reports were all the same. Everywhere on the planet were signs of an advanced civilization. Great abandoned cities were found al over the planet. In each the signs were the same a loss of energy followed by a drastic population drop. The fossil fuel resources of the planet appeared to have been exhausted, and as power plants died computers had been shut down.
Wind generators were everywhere, but when Scottie looked at their pictures he shook his head. “Good God,” he said, “you cannot run a planet on wind.”
Mr. Spock nodded. “I don’t understand why they did not build nuclear power plants,” he said. One away tam returned from the North East quadrant reporting a single life sign and recommending a follow up.
Captain Kirk named himself to head the final awat team. He asked Mr. Spock to join him. Scottie said he would tag along. Using a tricorder they picked up the life sign. In the ruined shell of what had once been a house, they found her, a shriveled old women in ragged cloths. The offered her food, which she accepted.
"What happened to your civilization?” Jim Kirk asked.
“After we stopped using fossil fuels, we could not get reliable electricity from the windmills. Things started to deteriorate, and people started to die. The people who knew how to fix the windmills started to die too, so they bgain to fail and more people began to die. There was a famine and even more people died. Eventually the as windmill stopped working, there was never enough food, people fought over food. The losers starved, but the winners did not last longer.”
“How did you survive?” Spock asked.
“I discovered a warehouse full of dog food. No one else knew about it.”
“Why,” Spock asked, “did your society not adopt nuclear power?” “Some people wanted to, but we stopped them,” she said.
She ran back into the shell of the house and brought out a sign. The sign said, “No Nuks.” “No nuks,” the woman said and grinned.
“But why?” Spock asked. “Nuks are dirty. We save the planet. A lot of people would have been killed in a nuclear accident. Responsible people just could not let that happen.”
Jim Kirk and Mr. Spock exchanged glances. “You are welcome to come with us,” Kirk said.
“Well I might, if it is safe. You don’t use nuclear power do you?”
“Good Lord almighty woman,” Scottie said. “Do you think we power space flight at Warp 9 with windmills? Of course we use nuclear power.”
“It would not be safe,” the woman replied. “We have not had a nuclear accident since 1986,” Scottie said. "It is very safe."
The old woman replied, “You are a shill of the nuclear industry, and nuclear shills always lie.” The offered to leave her a several years supply of food, but she turned them down, because as she explained, it was probably radioactive from the nuclear drive of the replicators. “No thanks,” she said. “I’ll stick with dogfood.”
Think Polywell will fall prey to the same kind of thinking?
The Enterprise visits a dead planet
rj40 wrote:If it works as advertised, then no. There will be some who react like this, but that will make the whole process all the more special. And fun! I must admit, it would be kind of enjoyable to have at least a few groups react negatively.
There is nothing more exhilarating than to be shot at without result. Winston Churchill.
Engineering is the art of making what you want from what you can get at a profit.
Re: The Enterprise visits a dead planet
joedead wrote:“Good Lord almighty woman,” Scottie said. “Do you think we power space flight at Warp 9 with windmills? Of course we use nuclear power.”
Throwing my life away for this whole Fusion mess.