this post was submitted on 24 Aug 2025
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For argument's sake, let's say you live near a disposal/storage site.
It's underfunded, so it leaks into the groundwater. Or maybe they don't catch a leak in time. You develop cancer because of radiation because you live close to the storage/disposal site.
It's not an uncommon scenario. Fracking has done this with wastewater being pumped back into the ground (https://news.yale.edu/2022/08/17/proximity-fracking-sites-associated-risk-childhood-cancer), and even places like Whidbey Island in Washington state have dealt with forever chemicals leeching into their groundwater (https://www.whidbeynewstimes.com/news/navy-expands-testing-of-wells-for-forever-chemical/). Yes, we need a storage site, but people should have a say about what is stored near where they live... whether it makes a difference or not.
Comparing fracking to nuclear waste is comparing apples to oranges. These are literally one of the most carefully handled materials in the world. We aren’t just dumping them in a pit and forgetting about them.
I'm not anti nuclear by any means. All I pointed out was that people should have a say in something that has the potential to cause health impacts on their communities.
I love how you take the sins of the fossil companies and try to make nuclear responsible for their actions. It's almost like the problem is the unhinged capitalism and lack of regulation and not the nuclear power itself.
Nuclear is great. I never said it wasn't. My point is that no storage solution is perfect and communities should have a say in what is stored near them.
You're not wrong in that people should have a say in what is stored where. But...
I can't say that no one lives near Yucca Mountain but almost no one lives close to it.
Yucca Mountain was considered because its a mountain of solid granite without an aquifer under it.
It also has to be transported there. One of the long running arguments is that this just uses up their roads and highways and cones through their state without their knowledge or compensation.
Look at the train derailment that have occurred.
The general public is unaware how nuclear waste works. Their fears are valid and it is their state, not everyone else's. The federal government is arguably flippant about it.