Re: Foloow the Breadcrumbs



On Thu, 30 Nov 2006 18:29:03 -0500, Me
<no-address_for_spammers@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

On Thu, 30 Nov 2006 23:25:41 GMT, FrozenNorth
<frozennorth123@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Me tossed the following at the wall, and it stuck:

On Thu, 30 Nov 2006 18:05:24 GMT, Tannhauser Gate
<@Shoulder-of-Orion.com> wrote:


Polonium 210, huh? Talk about "leaving a trail."

Not exactly a stock item at Eckerds, is it.

Want to buy some:
http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/11/29/169254

Foly Huck! LOL. I think I'll pass as I'd probably wind up accidentally
killing MYSELF, but that IS interesting.

Below is a notice posted on the website under discussion. Note the
last line in particular...

"A SPECIAL NOTICE ABOUT POLONIUM-210

With the recent news of Polonium-210 being used as a poison, a good
deal of
incorrect information has been passed around (primarily by the media)
concerning the Polonium isotope and radioactive materials in general.
It's important to get the facts correct. The general public is quite
ignorant when it comes to knowledge about radioactive materials and
radiation in general.

The amount of Plonium-210, as well as any of the isotopes we sell is
an 'exempt quantity' amount. These quantities of radioactive material
are not hazardous - this is why they are permitted by the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission (NRC) to be sold to the general public without
any sort of license.
Although we do sell these isotopes, distributors such as United
Nuclear Scientific Supplies (and just about any isotope distributor)
do not actually stock them.
All isotopes are made to order at an NRC licensed reactor in Oak Ridge
Tennessee. When the isotope is made, it is shipped directly to the
customer from the reactor to insure the longest possible half-life.

The exempt quantity amount of Polonium-210, or any of the radioactive
isotopes sold is so small that they are essentially invisible to the
human eye.
In the case of needle sources, the radioactive material is
electroplated on the inside of the eye of a needle.

You would need about 15,000 of our Polonium-210 needle sources
at a total cost of about $1 million - to have a toxic amount."
.