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title: Transparency - Wyoming Liberty Group - Wyoming Liberty Group
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by Wyoming Liberty Group Who can predict what will happen in a thousand years? Or tens of thousands of years? Better yet, what will happen in fifty years? No one, of course, can reliably say what will happen in the future—and yet, that is one of the chief questions that comes up when political and business forces talk about making Wyoming a storage...



 

 



In this episode of Eye on the Issues, we sit down with Mary Olson, founder of the Gender and Radiation Impact Project. With decades of experience in nuclear policy and radiation research, Mary offers a practical look at how radiation exposure affects the human body—and why understanding those risks is more important than ever as nuclear energy and ...



 

 



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by Wyoming Liberty Group Louis Slotin isn't a household name. But maybe he should be, at least in Wyoming. A bit of history. Slotin was a chemist and physicist from Canada. Back in the 1940s, he went to work at the Manhattan Project, the secret project during World War II that developed the first atom bombs. On May 21, 1946, he was working on a nuc...



 

 



<a> ![](https://mail.wyliberty.org/images/easyblog_articles/1535/b2ap3_large_Nuclear-Accidents-Know-No-Borders-01.jpg) </a>

 



by Wyoming Liberty Group When it comes to nuclear accidents, there are the big three. Many, if not most of us, have heard about the infamous trio of catastrophes: The Three Mile Island partial core meltdown in Pennsylvania in 1979. The Chernobyl disaster in Ukraine in 1986, which led to the release of radioactive material. And the Fukushima acciden...



 

 



<a> ![](https://mail.wyliberty.org/images/easyblog_articles/1533/b2ap3_large_Nuclear-Energy-Cant-Happen-Without-Fossil-Fuels.png) </a>

 



by Wyoming Liberty Group Here's a paradox to consider: You can't have nuclear energy without fossil fuels. Why does this matter? Well, for one, some folks—and there are a lot of them, including in Wyoming—pushing the expansion of nuclear energy, and not all of them particularly like fossil fuels. That's because fossil fuels are competitors in the b...



 

 



As Wyoming considers its role in the future of nuclear energy—including proposals around spent nuclear fuel storage—it's essential to examine how other countries have approached the same challenge. In this episode of Eye on the Issues, we welcome Johan Swahn, former director of Sweden's NGO Office for Nuclear Waste Review and longtime advisor on nu...



 

 



<a> ![](https://mail.wyliberty.org/images/easyblog_articles/1531/b2ap3_large_Energy-Report-Banner-1152-x-384.png) </a>

 



Wyoming Liberty Group, working with Always On Energy Research, released a policy report titled "Balancing the Scales: How Wyoming Can Protect Its Energy Revenues," authored by Trevor Lewis and Gabriel Collins, with project oversight by Isaac Orr. For the past several decades, Wyoming has benefited enormously from tax revenues generated from extract...



 

 



<a> ![](https://mail.wyliberty.org/images/easyblog_articles/1530/b2ap3_large_storing-waste-in-casks-01.jpg) </a>

 



by Wyoming Liberty Group Recently, state lawmakers said no to the idea of storing other states' nuclear waste in Wyoming. But if history has taught us anything, it's that just because a bill dies in committee doesn't mean the issue is dead. The idea of Wyoming as a repository for spent nuclear fuel has resurfaced repeatedly for decades. With nuclea...



 

 



<a> ![](https://mail.wyliberty.org/images/easyblog_articles/1511/b2ap3_large_Yucca-Mountain-Failed-Option-01.jpg) </a>

 



by Wyoming Liberty Group As political and industry forces move ahead, seeking to make Wyoming a storage site for nuclear waste, it may be instructive to understand what happened when another state faced the specter of becoming a dumping ground for toxic garbage: They utterly rejected it. Again and again. You may have heard of the place—Yucca Mounta...



 

 



<a> ![](https://mail.wyliberty.org/images/easyblog_articles/1509/b2ap3_large_Stored-for-Thousands-of-years-01.jpg) </a>

 



by Wyoming Liberty Group Why does it take thousands of years—even tens of thousands of years—to store nuclear waste? Better yet, why should we in Wyoming care? The answers to both questions are important to the Cowboy State, especially now that the legislature's Minerals, Business and Economic Development Committee recently approved a draft bill th...



 

 



 

 

 

 

 

 









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**Wyoming Liberty Group**  
P.O. Box 9 • Burns, WY 82053  
Phone: (307) 632-7020
