Post AdCIjf6R1gh1joDaq0 by Logan5@noagendasocial.com
 (DIR) More posts by Logan5@noagendasocial.com
 (DIR) Post #AdCHvoiV0XWT4lFqWu by Logan5@noagendasocial.com
       2023-12-26T08:37:41Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       The story explains that the nuclear waste dump sites are on the "dark side" of the moon. Meaning the hidden side, that always faces away from Earth.Problem is, if a dump site on that side, did fission as a propulsive force. It would more likely propel the Moon in, toward the Earth, not away from it.It would have to be close to the visible's edge, or well on the visible side. In order to propel the moon out of orbit, into deep space.Unless it first spun up the rotation before it blasted off
       
 (DIR) Post #AdCHvph7NA0o6lcG12 by Klaatu@noagendasocial.com
       2023-12-26T09:32:10Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @Logan5 you talking about Space 1999 here? There was no fission explosion. Victor, the old British scientist figured out it was some kind of weird magnetic field overload from storing so much radioactive waste close together. Made up junk to facilitate moving the story along as usual.In one episode Koenig wanted to give away the waste but the aliens planned to blow it up on the moon and consume the energy released which would have destroyed Alpha.
       
 (DIR) Post #AdCIjf6R1gh1joDaq0 by Logan5@noagendasocial.com
       2023-12-26T09:41:08Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @Klaatu There certainly seemed to be an explosion in episode one, that would make Michael Bay proud.The weird magnetic field you mention was what Prof. Bergman theorized caused the waste piles to interact and go into a critical state, sort of.I doubt atomic waste of any quantity and proximity, could ever do that, in reality. At most, it might warm up, very slightly.