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by vlovich123
885 days ago
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> We literally carry them on ourselves constantly, trash them every few years at most and usually keep them within range of a power outlet. I mean if we’re legit trashing the phone, is that radioactive material actually worse than all the other toxic materials in a phone including the lithium ion battery? Saying “nuclear radiation scary” and leaving it at that doesn’t actually tell us as the radioactive material matters a lot (eg plutonium is chemically toxic separate from its radioactivity and while short half life radiation is more dangerous than long in the abstract, the specific decay products matter a lot). Besides, the battery could easily retain its value well beyond the use of the phone which would encourage harvesting rather than trashing (if you force a standard battery connection there would probably be a large thriving secondary market). |
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The thing about radioactive material is that you need very little of it to become a serious contaminant. But as the thread is about, you also actually need very little of it, so it really doesn't look that out of place.
Another issue is that radioactive material emits energy, what is harder to handle than inert contaminants. You don't want all of that trash with uncontrolled material to catch on fire.
That said, I do agree that our previous carelessness around things like lead and mercury were much more harmful. It's just that we are best careful with both, and the past actions do not excuse doing a harmful thing now just because it's less harmful.