Any art student who might be intrigued by using radiation or engineering would better use his time understanding the American that build a breeder reactor in his mother's garden from radium paint found in many old grandfather clocks to touch up the dials. He found his medium with a geiger counter going around his small NC town looking for antique shops.
They called him the nuclear boyscout. He suffered burns on his face and was given a lucrative career in the American navy.
Futhermore the American navy only has interest in nuclear secrets because the program by which you may gain entry to American secrets is engineering.
No. I don't mean American secret ENGINEERING. I mean American SECRET engineering.
The next boyscout, whether its at the Louvre or in Iowa will be one who puts a nuclear package in a an IronKey because low grade radioactive material is no longer something that will get you a merit badge.
It'll get you a one way ticket to the new American Lock.
1 comment
[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 11.7 ms ] threadThey called him the nuclear boyscout. He suffered burns on his face and was given a lucrative career in the American navy.
Futhermore the American navy only has interest in nuclear secrets because the program by which you may gain entry to American secrets is engineering.
No. I don't mean American secret ENGINEERING. I mean American SECRET engineering.
The next boyscout, whether its at the Louvre or in Iowa will be one who puts a nuclear package in a an IronKey because low grade radioactive material is no longer something that will get you a merit badge.
It'll get you a one way ticket to the new American Lock.