Nuclear reactors I had to edit the title bc it autocorrected it to nuclear tractors at first lmao
On Friday, May 23rd, Trump signed an executive order to loosen federal regulations nuclear safety, and a Louisiana state news source posted the article.
To speed up the development of nuclear power, the orders grant the U.S. energy secretary authority to approve some advanced reactor designs and projects, taking authority away from the independent safety agency that has regulated the U.S. nuclear industry for five decades.
The order comes as demand for electricity surges amid a boom in energy-hungry data centers and artificial intelligence. Tech companies, venture capitalists, states and others are competing for electricity and straining the nation’s electric grid.
Sunday, there were sudden blackouts across several parts of Louisiana.
The outages on Sunday hit homes served by Entergy and Cleco in parts of Orleans, Jefferson, St. Tammany, St. Bernard and Plaquemines parishes. The popular Greek Festival along Bayou St. John was also affected, forcing it to take cash only for a period of time and extend its hours with free entry.
The outage raises questions about why the spike in electricity usage caught MISO, the grid operator that ordered the outage, off guard, local officials said. Some also alleged that MISO granted only a short notice for the outage directive.
Two nuclear power plants, both operated by Entergy, were out of commission as of May 23 and remained so on Sunday, according to the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s website and local officials. One was down for planned maintenance. The other went offline last week, and “tripped” as Entergy tried to bring it back online, Lewis said.
The grid operator is blaming higher than average temperatures, but it wasn't even that hot. I actually spent most of the day outside because it was pretty pleasant on Sunday.
Currently, Louisiana is trying to to fast-track environmental permitting for advanced nuclear projects under a bill that aligns the state with a national effort to accelerate next-gen reactor development and in April, Louisiana joined a lawsuit with several other states to challenge the Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s “utilization facility rule,” a licensing requirement that applies uniformly to all nuclear reactors, regardless of size or risk profile.
Landry said the state is amenable to the development of small modular reactors, or SMRs, with a capacity to produce up to 300 megawatts of electricity. By comparison, Entergy’s Grand Gulf Nuclear Station in Port Gibson, Mississippi, which provides part of the utility’s power, has more than 1,400 MW of generation capability
“Joining this lawsuit is about defending our ability to pursue advanced energy solutions like SMRs — solutions that are reliable, clean and essential for economic development in the State,” Landry said in a LDEQ news release. A 2022 research study from Stanford University that found small modular reactors may actually exacerbate challenges of highly radioactive nuclear waste, which makes the governor's statement seen a big misleading.
Mark Zuckerberg's Meta data center is still under construction in Louisiana, but as of May 16th, had caught the attention of House Democrat Sheldon Whitehouse for seeming to ignoring previous climate commitments, as well as the New Orleans based alliance for Affordable Energy, and the Union of Concerned Scientists for a lack of transparency and concerns regarding community pollution.](https://www.theverge.com/news/668934/meta-ai-data-center-gas-energy-climate-sustainability)
I feel like people of Louisiana should know that SNRs are not as a perfectly reliable and clean as the Governor might believe they are, so I posted an article about the bill on Reddit. There seemed to be a big influx of people in Louisiana that felt very strongly that this was the correct path for Louisiana, and that SNRs wouldn't pose the same risk as other nuclear reactors. Instead of arguing back and forth with them, I just decided to make a new post and include some information provided by the Union of Concerned Scientists in their article Five Things the “Nuclear Bros” Don’t Want You to Know About Small Modular Reactors
Even casual followers of energy and climate issues have probably heard about the alleged wonders of small modular nuclear reactors (SMRs). This is due in no small part to the “nuclear bros”: an active and seemingly tireless group of nuclear power advocates who dominate social media discussions on energy by promoting SMRs and other “advanced” nuclear technologies as the only real solution for the climate crisis.
Here are five facts about SMRs that the nuclear industry and the “nuclear bros” who push its message don’t want you, the public, to know.
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SMRs are not more economical than large reactors.
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SMRs are not generally safer or more secure than large light-water reactors.
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SMRs will not reduce the problem of what to do with radioactive waste.
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SMRs cannot be counted on to provide reliable and resilient off-the-grid power for facilities, such as data centers, bitcoin mining, hydrogen or petrochemical production.
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SMRs do not use fuel more efficiently than large reactors.
Now I'm permabanned from my state's subreddit.

I'm hoping more people from LA move here. The Nola sub has gotten insanely right wing, and is mainly just a business advertising platform. It got so ridiculous that r/Louisiana actually became the more progressive sub. I have my suspicions about why, especially bc several of the users have been there a very long time.
When the WaPo story about mass surveillance came out, I posted about it and the Palantir/New Orleans contract. I was here the whole time it was going on, but didn't know anything about it until the WaPo story came out.
Anyway, the city wide ban on facial recognition tech was put in place afterwards, and then in 2022, Cantrell (while under investigation for her own BS) asked the city to lift it and replace it with an ordinance that contained all kinds of crazy surveillance shit (that once again, I completely missed).
Mayor Cantrell moves to reverse bans on facial recognition, predictive policing and other surveillance tech
Definitely not the most concerning of everything in there, but this part caught my eye bc the New Orleans subreddit specifically has taken this weird pro Landry slant, and accounts seem to swarm/get sooo weirdly aggressive if you point out it's weird bc that is not how most people in the city actually feel about Landry:
I'm like 90% sure that a lot of the accounts on that sub are on duty police, and I'm absolutely sure the state police and/or ice are using it to snoop for information or get people to incriminate themselves. To be fair it could be true of any social media, even here bc it's a pretty vague thing to include.
Lately that sub has been filled with all these posts that are practically like "I'm trying to commit fraud with government assistance, can anyone tell me all the locations in the city that can help me accomplish this? Many thnxx" 🙏
Also, there was a post where I was concerned ICE could be using Reddit to try and locate someone for deportation, and when I brought up that it wasn't a good idea to give people information like that, this right wing account was like "WTF IS WRONG WITH YOU!!111!1 U R UNHINGED!!1111"
Looked back at the post several weeks later the day the WaPo story came out. Someone else had commented something like "omg that is me thank you so much!!" and the OP was like "no problem so glad I could use Reddit to help!!" 😊 and then neither account ever had any activity again afterwards lmao