Kyle Hill, known pro-nuclear science communicator, was banned from the Reddit community r/NuclearPower for his pro-nuclear stance.

Turns out the community has been taken over by anti-nuclear mod(s).

Posting about this I’ve been banned too 😂

If you remain on Reddit, r/Nuclear is still a valid community. Otherwise we exist of course!

Kyle’s post on Threads on this: https://www.threads.net/@sci_phile/post/C8xqujdy2ge/

  • @yesman
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    05 months ago

    have such strong nuclear opinions but don’t seem to actually know anything about it…

    I would point out that doubt is the appropriate response when one doesn’t have all the facts. You’re not asking people to trust science, you’re asking people to trust in the institutions that were certain people around Chernobyl and Fukushima were totally safe and trust us bro.

    I think you could make a great argument that faith in governments, regulators, and industry to protect public health is the irrational position.

    I’m pro nuke, but you shouldn’t dismiss those who fear nuclear tech as irrational and stupid.

    • @givesomefucks
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      5 months ago

      You’re not asking people to trust science, you’re asking people to trust in the institutions that were certain people around Chernobyl and Fukushima were totally safe and trust us bro

      So have you even heard of a power coefficient before?

      Everyone knew Chernobyl was inherently unsafe, because a positive power coefficient is just an insane design which is why only the Soviets were doing it.

      And Fukushima was concurrent earthquakes and a tsunami… Like, you can’t really prepare for everything.

      Your heart might be in the right place, but you clearly haven’t actually learned about nuclear power.

      I’m sure you’ve watched some YouTube videos tho, made by other people who don’t understand nuclear power.