[–] TheSquibblyOne 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago (edited ago)
The radiation causes white pixels story was pretty weak.
Here is more of the mini-nuke going off in Yemon. There were loads of cameras pointed at the explosion and they all had those white pixels.
This study verifies that yes, cheap CCD sensors are able to detect radiation. That is after all, their purpose. A quote from the summary:
Cheap image CCD/APS image sensors could be used both in laboratory (for radiation beam imaging) and as alarm against nuclear accidents. Their main advantages are: low price, high spatial resolution and satisfactory sensitivity. Main disadvantages are: low frame rate, small sensitive area and a compression of gathered data.
EDIT: The thing I need a citation for is "only nukes have a colour temperature this high" - Note: Colour Temp. is not measured in C (or F, or K). That whole sentence doesn't make much sense to me. Also, a colour temp. of 4000 degrees is not in any sense "high". That's like, the most general of the whole range, really.
EDIT 2: Also, now the colour temperature means it was 4000 degrees Celsius? And only Nukes get this hot. So it has to be a nuke. The entire idea is predicated on the retarded assumption that Colour Temperature = Temperature (in celcius). This is nonsense.
[–] VictorSteinerDavion 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
Nice catch, disrupting that is definitely within the scope of the acronym agencies.
Correlation doesn't equal causation, but there are so many event's happening at the same time I'm not convinced these events are not connected in some way. Even if it's a case of taking advantage of the situation type stuff.
Your analysis is worthy of it's own post, as I think it paints a much better overall picture worth thinking about, even if it is all speculation.
Given the hyper lax OHS and overall high risk operation that goes on within china it makes it a very enticing target to help these accidents along, as it's much easier to blame it as an accident if the puzzle parts are already in place.