Oh, and thanks for the resume sifting too. To be honest, I found it, as usual, incoherent, but look I live in the age of low expectations.
As for your attempt to sweep the truth under the rug because it points of the vacuuity of the anti-nuclear position: Take it up with the UN. Or the New York Times.
The fact is that weak minded anti-environmental anti-nuclear coal apologists are losing everywhere. This is because they have no case, other than the use of logical fallacy, loud cant demonstrating a poor grasp of even basic science, very selective attention and, given the number of people who are killed by fossil fuel apologetics of the type they routinely make, ethics that can only be regarded with contempt.
Contempt aside, I find it amusing also to see the ultimate practioner of "appeal to authority," in which the 50 year old work of senile cranks like John Gofman on the subject of lipoproteins is offered to suggest his competance in the wholly unrelated field of actinide toxicity, now complaining that among Dr. Baker's work is some on small mammals. In fact, Dr. Baker is an expert on small mammal genetics, and it certainly would stand to reason that he would be interested in studying the subject in the Chernobyl environment.
Now, I know that this isn't quite as impressive as the nutcase Ernest Sternglass running around Long Island playing neo-natal dentist and publishing in journals that have nothing to do with the subject he is hysterically discussing, but what the hell?
Here is a list of 31 publications by Dr. Baker on the subject of his long work at the Chernobyl reactor:
Publications on Chornobyl
Department of Biological Sciences, Texas Tech University
1. Matson, C. W., B. E. Rodgers, R. K. Chesser and R. J. Baker. 2000. Genetic diversity of Clethrionomys glareolus populations from highly contaminated sites in the Chornobyl region,Ukraine. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. 19:2130-2135.
2. Rodgers, B. E. and R. J. Baker. 2000. Frequencies of micronuclei in bank voles from zones of high radiation at Chernobyl, Ukraine. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. 19:1644-1649.
3. Baker, R. J. and R. K. Chesser. 2000. The Chornobyl nuclear disaster and subsequent creation of a wildlife preserve. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. 19:1231-1232.
4. Chesser, R. K. et al. 1999. Concentrations and Dose Rate Estimates of 134, 137Cesium and 90Strontium in Small Mammals at Chornobyl, Ukraine. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. 19:305-312.
5. Makova, K.D., A. Nekrutenko and R.J. Baker. 2000. Evolution of microsatellite alleles in four species of mice (genus Apodemus). Journal of Molecular Evolution 51:166-172.
6. Nekrutenko, A. Makova, K.D. and R.J. Baker. 2000. Isolation of binary species-specific PCR-based markers and their value for diagnostic applications. Gene 249:47-51.
7. Baker, R.J., J. A. DeWoody, A. J. Wright and R. K. Chesser. 1999. On the utility of heteroplasmy in genotoxic studies: an example from Chornobyl. Ecotoxicology. 8:301-309.
8. Makova, K. D., J. C. Patton, E. Yu. Krysanov, R. K. Chesser, and R. J. Baker. 1999. Microsatellite markers in wood mouse and striped field mouse (genus Apodemus). Molecular Ecology. 7:247-255.
9. DeWoody, J. A., R. K. Chesser and R. J. Baker. 1999. A translocated mitochondrial cytochrome b pseudogene in voles (Rodentia: Microtus). Journal of Molecular Evolution. 48:380-382.
10. Baker, R. J., K. D. Makova and R. K. Chesser. 1999. Microsatellites indicate high frequency of multiple paternity in genus Apodemus (Rodentia). Molecular Ecology. 8:107-111.
11. Nekrutenko, A., K. D. Makova, R. K. Chesser, and R. J. Baker. 1999. Representational differences analysis to distinguish cryptic species. Molecular Ecology 8:1235-1238.
12. DeWoody, J. A. 1999. Nucleotide variation in the p53 tumor-suppressor gene of voles from Chernobyl, Ukraine. Mutation Research. 439:25-36.
13. Dallas, C. E., S.F.Lingenfelser, J. T. Lingenfelser, K. Holloman, C. H. Jagoe, J. A. Kind, R. K. Chesser and M. H. Smith . 1998. Flow cytometric analysis of red and white blood cell DNA in fish from Chernobyl-contaminated ponds in the Ukraine. Ecotoxicology.7:211-219.
14. Jagoe, C. H., R. K. Chesser, M. H. Smith, M. D. Lomakin, S. K. Lingenfelser, and C. E. Dallas. 1998. Levels of cesium, mercury and lead in fish, and cesium in pond sediments in an inhabited region of the Ukraine near Chernobyl. Environmental Pollution 98: 223-232.
15. Jagoe, C.H., C. E. Dallas, R. K. Chesser, M. H. Smith, S. K. Lingenfelser, J. T. Lingenfelser, K. Holloman, and M. D.. Lomakin. 1998. Contamination near Chernobyl: radiocesium, lead and mercury in fish and sediment radiocesium from waters within the 10 km zone. Ecotoxicology 7: 1-9.
16. Nekrutenko, A., Hillis, D.M., Patton, J.C., Bradley R.D., and R.J. Baker. 1998. Cytosolic Isocitrate Dehydrogenase in Humans, Mice, and Voles and Phylogenetic Analysis of the Enzyme Family. Mol.Biol.Evol. 15(12):1674-1684
17. Baker, R.J., R.A. Van Den Bussche, A.J. Wright, L.E. Wiggins, M.J. Hamilton, E.P. Reat, M.H. Smith, M.D. Lomakin, and R.K. Chesser. 1997. High levels of genetic change in rodents of Chernobyl. Nature. 390:100.
18. Lingenfelser, S. K., C. E. Dallas, C. H. Jagoe, R. K. Chesser, M. H. Smith, and M. D. Lomakin. 1997. Variation in blood cell DNA in Carassius carassius from ponds near Chernobyl, Ukraine. Ecotoxicology 6:187-203.
19. Chesser, R. K. and R. J. Baker. 1996. Life Continues at Chernobyl. La Recherche. 286:30-31. (in French).
20. Baker, R.J., M.J. Hamilton, R.A. Van Den Bussche, L.E. Wiggins, D.W. Sugg, M.H. Smith, M.D. Lomakin, S.P. Gaschak, E.G. Bundova, G.A. Rudenskaya, and R.K. Chesser. 1996. Small mammals from the most radioactive sites near the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. Journal of Mammalogy. 77:155-170.
21. Baker, R.J., R.A. Van Den Bussche, A.J. Wright, L.E. Wiggins, M.J. Hamilton, E.P. Reat, M.H. Smith, M.D. Lomakin, and R.K. Chesser. 1996. Accelerated mutation rate in native rodents from a polluted site at Chernobyl. Nature. 380:707-708.
22. Dallas, C. E., C. H. Jagoe, S. K. Fisher, K. A. Holloman, R. K. Chesser, and M. H. Smith. 1995. Evaluation of genotoxicity in wild organisms due to the Chernobyl nuclear disaster. In, Animal World and Ecosystems in Conditions of Radioactive Pollution. Ecology of Industrial Regions 1:44-54.
23. Sugg, D.W., J. W. Bickham, J.A. Brooks, M. D. Lomakin, C. H. Jagoe, C. E. Dallas, M.H. Smith, R. J. Baker, and R. K. Chesser. 1996. DNA damage and radiocesium in channel catfish from Chernobyl. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. 15:1057-1063.
24. Dallas, C. E., C. H. Jagoe, S. K. Fisher, K. A. Holloman, R. K. Chesser, and M. H. Smith. 1996. Evaluation of genotoxicity in wild organisms due to the Chernobyl nuclear disaster. In, Animal World and Ecosystems in Conditions of Radioactive Pollution. Nauka Science Publishers, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia. (In Russian).
25. Dallas, C. E., C. H. Jagoe, S. K. Fisher, K. A. Holloman, R. K. Chesser, and M. H. Smith. 1995. Evaluation of genotoxicity in wild organisms due to the Chernobyl nuclear disaster. In, Animal World and Ecosystems in Conditions of Radioactive Pollution. Ecology of Industrial Regions. 1:44-54.
MANUSCRIPTS (IN PRESS AND IN PROGRESS)
25. Rodgers, B. E., J. K. Wickliffe, C. J. Phillips, R. K. Chesser and R. J. Baker. Experimental exposure of naïve bank voles, Clethrionomys glareolus, to the Chornobyl environment: A test of radioresistance. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. In press.
26. Chesser, R. K., B. E. Rodgers, J. K. Wickliffe, C. J. Phillips, S. Gaschak and R. J. Baker. Accumulation of 137Cesium and 90Strontium through abiotic and biotic pathways in rodents at Chornobyl. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. In press.
27. Rodgers, B. E., R. K. Chesser, J. K. Wickliffe, C. J. Phillips and R. J. Baker. Sub-chronic exposure of BALB and C57BL strains of Mus musculus to the radioactive environment of the Chornobyl exclusion zone. Environmental and Molecular Mutagenesis. In Review.
28. Wiggins, L. E., R. A. Van Den Bussche, M. J. Hamilton, R. K. Chesser and R. J. Baker. Analysis of heterochomatin in voles (Microtus sp.) from Chornobyl. Journal of Heredity. Submitted.
29. Wicklife, J.W., B.E. Rodgers, R.K. Chesser and R.J. Baker. Assessing the genotoxicity of chronic, environmental irradiation using mitochondrial DNA heteroplasmy in the bank vole (Clethrionomys glareolus) at Chornobyl Environmental and Molecular Mutagenesis. Submitted .
30. Baker, R.J., A.M. Bickham, M.Bondarkov, S.Gashsak, C.W.Matson, B.E. Rodgers,J.W. Wicklife and R.K. Chesser. Consequences of polluted environments on population structure: The bank vole (Clethrionomys glareolus) at Chornobyl. Invited paper Ecotoxicology. In Press.
31. Rodgers, B.E. and L.K. Baker. An examination of chromosome damage in residents of Slavutych Ukraine and radiation workers at Chornobyl. In Manuscript.
These certainly look like papers written after a twenty minute visit, and they must all be nonsense because poorly educated anti-environmental anti-nuclear radiation paranoids say so.
And let's face it, they have no fear of sounding like idiots, having spent so much time contemplating Lyndon Larouche, the boogie man who scares them almost as much as gasp terror horror oh my god a few hundredths of a microcurie of shit duck scream fear fear fear uranium.
Now of course, a person who had a religious bent, who wanted to swear up and down that Chernobyl is the worst disaster ever because he is terrified of the word "radiation," would likely swear that these 31 publications, with international scientists including Russian, American and Ukrainian researchers are part of a plot by the nuclear industry. What else could you do. You don't like the message try to kill the messenger. And the New York Times is part of a plot by the nuclear industry. And the UN too.
But I know that not one of the radiation paranoids here has been to chernobyl. They think their heads would fall off and that they'd mutate into deformed giants as in those 1950's Japanese monster movies. But they know all about Chernobyl. They read about it on the Greenpeace site and Ratical.org.
These of course are great places to learn how to chant and how to recite, and how to draw amusing attention to yourself, but they certainly aren't places to address the important issues of humanity, to learn issues, and as we see again and again and again and again, or to learn how to think independently. When it comes to teaching thinking what they teach at Greenpeace is either how to think poorly or how to think not at all.
Let's face it, you can't be a member of the church of
Our Lady of the Curse on Alpha, Beta and Gamma and know doodly squat about how science works.
Now about Dr. Baker.
Dr. Baker heads an
international team of scientists. He, unlike radiation paranoids who cower at the thought of having to put uranium on their microscope slides (if we believe that they ever have, been in the presence of a microscope), has been to Chernobyl. Many of his co-authors are in fact Ukrainian. His research team consists of 7 Americans and 18 Ukrainians. His work is posted and cited in
reputable journals that are relevant to his work, journals like Nature, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry...and many other journals that are
relevant to his speciality.
That would certainly contrast with the anti-environmental anti-nuclear twit hero, Ernest Sternglass, who finds the need to be published in public health social science journals, like this precious bit of toomfoolery:
http://www.radiation.org/journal/nuclink_jan3104.html.Of course, I do not expect either of the two most religious anti-nuclear chanters, the coal apologists, the bemoaners of lost oil rigs, to know the first thing about rational argument. I have too much experience with them all ready. I am familiar with their writings, all of which, were they not so morally disgusting, would almost be amusing and it really hard for me to imagine myself thinking any worse of them, since I have zero respect for them already.
And even the word zero is not hollow enough.