Hallo, 
conscientious viewers, 
and welcome to 
Healthy Living. 
On March 11, 2011, 
a massive, 9.0-magnitude 
earthquake with 
accompanying tsunami 
struck Japan’s east coast, 
causing 
widespread destruction. 
Among the facilities 
seriously damaged 
was the Fukushima 
Daiichi nuclear-power 
plant complex. 
The resulting explosions 
and reactor meltdowns 
at the plant 
released large amounts 
of radioactive material 
into the atmosphere, 
surrounding land 
and the Pacific Ocean, 
raising grave concerns 
about the short and 
long-term health effects 
from the nuclear disaster. 
According to the Union 
of Concerned Scientists, 
a US-based science 
advocacy organization, 
the radioactive isotopes 
which pose the largest 
cancer causing risk 
following 
a nuclear power accident 
are iodine-131 
and cesium-137. 
On today’s program 
we present an interview 
with American author, 
independent researcher 
and lecturer 
on radiation safety 
Mr. Paul Zimmerman, 
who will discuss 
some of the very serious 
health concerns 
related to this 
power generation method. 
He is the author 
of “A Primer 
in the Art of Deception,” 
a book about the dangers of 
depleted uranium weapons 
and human exposure 
to nuclear radiation.
Nuclear plants use fission 
to produce power 
from highly concentrated 
forms of uranium 
or plutonium fuel. 
Under normal 
circumstances, the fuel 
and fission by-products 
from a generating station 
are contained within 
a support structure 
called the core.  
But if the core 
becomes damaged, 
massive amounts 
of radioactive material 
may be released 
into the atmosphere 
or leak into the ground.
What happens 
with nuclear power 
is that human beings 
concentrate 
radioactive material; 
they bring it 
out of the Earth, 
they put it together 
in a concentrated form 
which doesn’t exist 
in nature. 
Or they run it 
through nuclear reactors 
and create a tremendous 
amount of waste. 
And it’s because of 
this concentrated material 
it has to be isolated 
from life, and anytime 
that it escapes 
its confinement and 
comes in contact with life 
there’s biological hazard, 
whether it’s animal life, 
plant life, or human life. 
And so the technology’s 
only effective 
if it can be contained. 
And we see 
enough examples 
where containment fails 
and then people suffer.
Volumes of research 
clearly demonstrate 
that contact with 
radioactive material 
can cause 
severe health conditions. 
The government of Japan 
has imposed a 20-kilometer 
“no-go” zone around 
the Fukushima plant 
to protect citizens from 
radioactive contamination. 
This means 
no one is allowed 
to live in the zone 
and people cannot 
enter this area unless they 
have special permission.
There’s no doubt 
that fission products 
have been released 
into the environment. 
Fission products are a 
result of nuclear reactions. 
And it’s either from 
the reactors themselves 
or from 
the waste-storage ponds 
of the used reactor fuel. 
But if fission products 
are being released, 
you’ve got 
a very hazardous situation. 
And particularly 
the inhalation 
of that material 
creates a threat to health, 
even in low doses. 
But there’s 
a lot of information 
from a similar accident 
from Chernobyl 
that very low doses 
created illness 
in the population, 
particularly childhood 
leukemia in children that 
were still in the wombs 
of their mothers 
developing when 
the mothers were exposed 
to this kind of radiation. 
Or there were 
high incidence 
of infant birth defects. 
There’s a tremendous 
amount of study 
that was carried out 
in Russia and the Ukraine 
that testifies to this. 
What happens 
when radioactive materials 
enter the food supply? 
One of 
the most important things 
often not recognized is 
that the human body 
is an accumulator 
of radioactivity 
from the environment. 
So they might pick up 
a little from this vegetable 
and a little 
from this water, 
and from the milk that 
has entered the food chain 
through animals eating 
contaminated feed. 
And it’s all being 
concentrated in our bodies. 
And so the dose 
that a human being 
ends up accumulating 
might be very significant.
As Mr. Zimmerman 
explains, 
one of the challenges 
in determining the 
health effects of exposure 
to nuclear materials is that 
they may not be evident 
until decades after contact.
Some of the workers 
that have responded to 
the (Fukushima) accident, 
trying to keep 
the reactor, the waste, 
the used fuel rods 
covered with water, 
they are taking a very high 
radiation exposure. 
And those people 
might suffer 
acute radiation syndrome 
and feel it very quickly. 
In terms of 
longer term pathology, 
we're not going to know 
for a long time 
how many people 
are going to develop 
thyroid difficulties 
because of the absorption 
of iodine-131
into their bodies, 
or more long-term 
in terms of cancer rates. 
So this is one of 
the insidious problems 
with nuclear energy, 
because of the way 
radiation affects 
the human body 
in non-deterministic ways. 
It takes years or decades 
to get a picture 
of the health problem. 
And by that time, 
the world has moved on. 
And they don't take it 
quite as seriously 
as they would 
if they could evaluate 
the hazard right now.
In 1986, 
in what is considered 
the worst disaster 
in nuclear power 
generation history, 
a plant in Chernobyl, 
Ukraine exploded, 
causing huge amounts 
of radioactive material 
to be released 
into the atmosphere, 
contaminating humans 
and animals, agricultural 
products and soil 
in Belarus, Russia, Ukraine 
and most of Europe. 
A recent study suggests 
that Chernobyl’s overall 
impact on human health 
was much, much more 
severe than 
is commonly understood.
There was a book 
recently published 
in New York (USA) 
by the Academy of Sciences. 
And in that book, 
"Chernobyl: 
Consequences to People 
and the Environment," 
they said that 
between 1986 and 2004, 
985,000 people died 
as a result of Chernobyl. 
They did deep research, 
and consulted 5,000 
sources while they were 
preparing their report. 
The Chernobyl disaster 
prompted 
many research studies 
on its health consequences. 
Scientists have concluded 
that, among 
other deleterious effects, 
exposure to radiation 
is linked to increases 
in thyroid cancer, 
severe mental retardation 
in newborns and 
genetic damage in humans, 
animals, and plant life.
A tremendous amount 
of research 
has come to light 
since Chernobyl. 
And it’s proven 
that the risk factors 
that are published 
by the radiation 
protection agencies 
are inadequate. 
They do not 
accurately represent 
the health detriment 
that’s produced 
in a population that’s 
exposed to radiation. 
The fuel 
used in nuclear plants 
is also an extreme threat 
to human health.
There’s a tremendous 
amount of research 
that’s been done on 
the toxicology of uranium. 
How hazardous is it? 
And how does it 
affect the human body 
and how does it 
affect the cells? 
And things that were 
never known before 
are coming to light 
in terms of the radiation 
emitted from uranium. 
And, research has shown 
that uranium is genotoxic. 
It’s toxic to DNA. 
It is mutagenic. 
It causes mutations 
in DNA. It’s cytotoxic. 
It causes 
adverse functioning 
in cells. It’s teratogenic. 
It has the capacity 
of affecting 
fetal development. 
And it’s also a neurotoxin. 
So anybody that 
brushes aside uranium 
saying, “Ah, 
it can’t be hazardous,” 
is not keeping up 
with the modern research. 
Even living in the vicinity 
of a nuclear power plant 
can affect one’s health. 
Research by 
the German Federal Office 
for Radiation Protection 
shows that children living 
within five kilometers of
nuclear-generating stations 
are more than twice 
as likely to get leukemia 
as those living farther away. 
And Mr. Zimmerman 
has another concern 
about nuclear plants; 
the spent fuel 
remains toxic 
and highly dangerous for 
extremely long periods.
Iodine-131, 
which is escaping from 
the reactors in Japan, 
the half-life 
of that radioisotope is 
approximately eight days. 
And they say generally 
that if you count 
10 generations 
of radioactive decay, 
it decays to harmless levels. 
So for radioactive iodine, 
after 80 days it will 
no longer be hazardous. 
But now if you take 
something like plutonium, 
plutonium has a half-life 
of 24,000 years. 
So if you're waiting for it 
to decay 
for over 10 generations, 
you're talking about 
240,000 years 
that it has to be isolated 
from life in order to 
be completely safe. 
And now the major fuel 
in a nuclear reactor 
is uranium- 238. 
And that has a half-life 
of four and a half 
billion years. 
And so you’re going 
to have to wait 
45 billion years 
before the uranium 
is totally harmless.
Given the spent fuels 
remain 
a gigantic bio-hazard 
for a length of time that is 
beyond comprehension, 
how do we keep 
not only ourselves, 
but those that will live 
on Earth long after us 
safe from these substances?
Then the question also 
becomes the disposal 
of radioactive waste. 
And I think 
it's a bit of a folly to believe 
that human beings can 
think thousands of years 
into the future, 
that they know 
what's going to happen 
in such a way 
that they can keep 
that radioactive waste 
from escaping 
into the water, escaping 
into the environment, 
and affecting generations 
of people that 
we can't even imagine yet. 
So we create 
all this waste and we have 
very imperfect ways 
of anticipating what's 
going to happen to it. 
But it's going to be lethal 
to all living creatures 
wherever it escapes.
The byproducts from 
nuclear power generation 
jeopardize 
not only our own lives, 
but also those of our 
animal co-inhabitants.
Once again, the question 
has to be asked, 
“Do human beings have 
the authority or the right 
to release dangerous, 
radioactive material 
into the environment 
that we share with 
all other creatures? 
Though human beings 
might be protected 
from radiation that’s 
washed into the ocean, 
what about the fish? 
Are we stewards 
of the Earth, 
protecting the Earth? 
Or is the garbage that 
we release into the world 
affecting life in ways that 
we don’t even think about? 
We're poisoning 
our common planet 
and poisoning 
our fellow human beings. 
And we're destroying 
values and cultures 
in the belief that our way, 
our technological way 
is the way of the future.
What is the solution 
to the life-threatening 
problems that are caused 
by nuclear-power plants? 
Immediately switching 
to safer, greener sources 
of energy is the only option.
We have to find 
a sustainable way of living 
and more appropriate 
technology. 
I’m very curious to see 
what’s going to happen 
in Japan after this event. 
Choices have to be made 
about lifestyle, 
what kind of lifestyle 
do you want to live? 
And is it worth 
having energy production 
that can do what is 
happening now in Japan. 
Is it worth that to continue? 
So maybe the Japanese 
can be the conscience 
of the whole world, because 
they’re now having 
more intimate experience 
with what it means 
to be contaminated. 
Many thanks to you, 
Paul Zimmerman, 
for your diligent research, 
and providing the public 
with a clearer understanding 
of the highly hazardous 
health effects 
of nuclear power. 
May your important work 
continue to help 
shift our world to 
sustainable power sources 
that are in harmony 
with planet Earth. 
For more information 
on Paul Zimmerman 
and his book, 
“The Primer 
in the Art of Deception,” 
please visit: 
www.du-deceptions.com
Enlightened viewers, 
thank you 
for your presence today 
on Healthy Living. 
May humanity always 
embrace only 
what is good and beneficial 
for our world.