For clarification for those wondering, the name of the ero-manga they’re talking about is “Emergence”.
Fun(?) Fact: It has been given an official English release by the company FAKKU, though you won’t find it on their site with the original name, as they’ve given it the new name of “Metamorphosis”, which the original author, ShindoL, is perfectly fine with since he had Franz Kafka’s novella “The Metamorphosis” in mind when coming up with the original title, and the Japanese title for Kafka’s story is simply “Henshin”.
You can probably guess how the original title “Emergence” was chosen based off of that, and why the name was changed for the English release.
"I'VE COME TO MAKE AN ANNOUNCEMENT..."
https://fiverr-res.cloudinary.com/images/t_main1,q_auto,f_auto/gigs/120124802/original/71e0683799385ed50749f318ff629e95671dd69d/say-or-sing-anything-you-want-as-toad-from-super-mario-bros.png
https://twitter.com/i/status/1129757815365656576
*Shane Dawson
It's been three days but I must point out that's not the guy who played The Tick. Joshua Schubart plays Frank the henchman. The Tick is played by Peter Serafinowicz, stellar comedian and the OG voice of Darth Maul. He's also responsible for voicing this old gold:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N7NjE3UXuP8
Too be fair, storing hazardous material off-world does seem like a much better and more permanent solution then keeping it on Earth where it can harm people and the environment.
Problem is transportation. There's only so much shit you can load into a rocket, especially due to the added weight of either its own containment vessel, or radiation-proofing the storage compartments. And that shit is expensive.
Plus there's the thing about a lot of it being reusable with certain designs, but we're veering a bit far off topic.
https://files.facepunch.com/forum/upload/107127/05e61b9c-c976-4ac7-a932-8e9fade6ef67/mtf-e-11.png
And if the rocket explodes in the atmosphere you spread the radioactive material all over the world. Burying it is the only means of storing it. Either in lead lined, concrete bunkers or in water storage tanks, the main issue is preventing ionising radiation from escaping.
Well, yeah, I get it, at this point in time transporting said waste off-world is difficult, but if at some point in time that sort of thing becomes more feasible, then yeah, I'd rather we find some uninhabited rock out in space and dump it there.
Content:
https://i.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/original/001/494/200/2b1.jpg
i think you guys are missing the funniest part
this guy clearly just hates the moon
I did get that, I'm just pointing out that part of her inane anger actually makes sense.
Content:
https://twitter.com/szbrown209/status/1129808671616188417
You would need about 4000 of the most high capacity rockets to even get it all into low-Earth orbit, and it'd likely cost you in the order of trillions to do it.
Transporting it any further would add a lot to this.
And there's something about putting radioactive materials in an orbital rocket that probably would upset many countries - especially since rockets have about a 5% failure rate.
http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/barge.png
Todd Howard knows
https://i.imgur.com/JKzhG5q.jpg
(Sound of bones cracking as one of the corpses turns its head to face him)
"Rargh, so yourrr frrainirry arrrarke..."
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