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Garlic Farmer Wards Off High-Speed Internet

DocVM writes "A Nova Scotia farmer is opposing the construction of a microwave tower for fear it will eventually mutate his organic garlic crop. Lenny Levine, who has been planting and harvesting garlic by hand on his Annapolis Valley land since the 1970s, is afraid his organic crop could be irradiated if EastLink builds a microwave tower for wireless high-speed internet access a few hundred meters from his farm."

6 of 475 comments (clear)

  1. Idiots by Covalent · · Score: 5, Informative

    His crop is already being irradiated...BY THE SUN. Idiots. Sheesh.

    --
    Great warrior...hrmph! Wars not make one great.
    1. Re:Idiots by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 5, Informative

      If anything vegatables and milk should be intentionally irradated as is commonly done in Europe to:

      ...reduce their vitamin content, add toxic radiolytic products like 2-ACBs, and attempt to compensate for unsafe food handling practice that shouldn't have been allowed in the first place? Not to mention increasing the availability of radioisotopes that are perfect for a "dirty bomb"?

      Yes, there are ignorant folks out there who think that irradiation makes food radioactive, which is plainly wrong. That does not mean that irradiation does not have deleterious effects.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
  2. Wrong kind of radiation by fishnuts · · Score: 5, Informative

    He should stick to farming and leave the radio vs radiation science up to the smart people.

    Someone go point him to the definitions of "Microwave Radiation" and "Ionizing Radiation"

  3. Re:Side note by Demonantis · · Score: 4, Informative

    Found it. Thought some people might be interested

    Organic Food

  4. Re:Speaking of idiots... by Sandbags · · Score: 5, Informative

    Well, actually, the microwave internet system is a Line-of-sight point to point beam, so the amount getting to his crops in the ground is actually a number approaching zero. The microwave in his KITCHEN probaly puts more energy into his field than that tower would, not to mention the dozens of sattelites beaming down microwave radiation as well.

    Also, if the atmosphere was THAT good at shielding that radiation, then why would Microwave solar orbital power even be a consideration? If the atmosphere only blocks 30% of visible light, but far more microwave was blocked, then how would that system be a net gain?

    Of course, Microwave radiation is not ionizing radiation anyway, so the argument is completely moot... Mutation from microwave exposure would require rediculous doses of concentrated radiation, far, far more than it would take to cook the garlic outright.

    --
    There is no contest in life for which the unprepared have the advantage.
  5. "Radiation"... by Entropius · · Score: 4, Informative

    The scientific and engineering community doesn't mean the same thing by this word that you mean -- namely, that shit that makes your ass glow green, or whatever.

    I propose that people not be allowed to rant and rave about this stuff until they:

    --Learn the basics of the electromagnetic spectrum and the sources and engineering uses of radiation at each point along it.
    --Learn the basics of nuclear radiation, and understand its effects and where it comes from
    --Leave a Geiger counter near a nuclear power station and take one on a plane across the country at 40,000 feet, and compare the counts

    I teach physics labs to premeds at the university. They come in and I'm munching peanuts off of a pretty bright orange tray, and offer them some; some of them accept.

    A little later I'm showing them how to use a Geiger counter, and show them radiation from a few sources we have in the room -- lookie, radioactive rocks! Lookie there, a bit of caesium! Oh, wait ... where'd these radioactive peanuts come from?

    The students freaked out. (For those who don't know, the bright orange glaze on old Fiestaware was made from uranium oxide. It's safe, unless maybe you eat the plate, in which case you have a .01% risk of cancer and a 10% risk of a perforated bowel.)