The response of liberals to
nuclear risks suggests that, in this case, liberals reduce their perception of risks away from the instinctive liberal position, the more scientifically literate they are.
Looking at the US - China relationship through the lens of «winning without fighting» and
nuclear risk suggests that the way for America to «win'this Thucydidean struggle is: «don't try to win in a conventional sense, but instead redefine winning».
Not exact matches
Indices of geopolitical
risk suggest that conventional and even
nuclear war may not be far behind....
Nigel Farage
suggested that the
risk of migrant sex attacks on women would be the «
nuclear bomb» of the EU referendum.
«The
Nuclear Regulatory Commission is still relying on 40 - year - old data that
suggests that the
risk of seismic activity is somewhere between a 1.0 magnitude earthquake and a 3.0.»
Research
suggests the
risks posed to the nation's
nuclear reactors may have been underestimated and therefore could be worse than the power plants were designed to withstand
Several large cohort studies of medical x-ray technicians and
nuclear industry workers
suggest a slight increase in cancer
risk at exposures below 100 mSv, Shore says.
Instead, B&W
suggests that the fundamental problem facing the adoption of
nuclear power is not the technology itself, but the financial
risk of committing to a build a big
nuclear reactor.
In a related editor's note, JAMA Internal Medicine Editor - in - Chief Rita F. Redberg, M.D., M.Sc., writes: «These findings
suggest that the current practice of performing a stress test on low -
risk patients in the ED is unnecessary and prolongs the length of stay in EDs as well as increases unnecessary medical imaging, with significant associated radiation
risk for tests that include
nuclear imaging.
The researchers, from the Ben - Gurion University of the Negev — Soroka Medical Center and
Nuclear Research Center Negev, Israel, said that the study «
suggests that initiating moderate wine intake, especially red wine, among well - controlled diabetics as part of a healthy diet is apparently safe and modestly decreases cardiometabolic
risk.»
Drawing on case studies of past environmental debates such as those over acid rain and ozone depletion, science policy experts Roger Pielke Jr. and Daniel Sarewitz argue that once next generation technologies are available that make meaningful action on climate change lower - cost, then much of the argument politically over scientific uncertainty is likely to diminish.26 Similarly, research by Yale University's Dan Kahan and colleagues
suggest that building political consensus on climate change will depend heavily on advocates for action calling attention to a diverse mix of options, with some actions such as tax incentives for
nuclear energy, government support for clean energy research, or actions to protect cities and communities against climate
risks, more likely to gain support from both Democrats and Republicans.
That strongly
suggests that we have a nearly zero
risk of a non-state actor successfully staging a
nuclear attack of any kind within the United States — or anywhere else, for that matter.