Satire ahead: As part of the Twitter thread about Carter, an old Saturday Night Live skit was posted spoofing the Three Mile Island accident. He did not prevent a nuclear meltdown or single-handedly save the nearby(ish) Ottawa from nuclear destruction.” He acted bravely in volunteering for a shift inside the high-radiation environment as part of a three-man team. Mummah concluded, “President Jimmy Carter deserves to be commended for his role in cleaning up the world’s first nuclear meltdown. Mummah supplied background on the accident and the cleanup, and then provided an actual recap of the event. The reactor had already melted down, he was aiding the cleanup- Katie Mummah December 16, 2021
Very exciting to see so many tweeting about nuclear history because of Jimmy Carter! Also, let's not over-exaggerate, the facts alone are commendable enough: Jimmy Carter was part of a cleanup team, not a solo hero. One commenter then aptly tweeted, “Through my relatively short career, the stories of Carter went from ‘He was just one of the navy lads they had help decontaminate after the accident’ to ‘He single handedly stopped the reactor from destroying Ottawa!’”Ĭontext brought to you by: After becoming aware of the trending Twitter thread about the former president, nuclear influencer and ANS member Katie Mummah began providing context via tweets and then followed up with a blog post on M edium. A number of Twitter comments stated that Carter saved Ottawa from disaster and joked about Carter being a superhero. They let us get probably a thousand times more radiation than they would now.”Īs is the case with many trending topics, it is hard to separate fact from fiction. We were fairly well-instructed then on what nuclear power was, but for about six months after that I had radioactivity in my urine. According to an article published in 2011 on CNN’s website (following the Fukushima accident), Carter recalled, "There were 23 of us, and I was in charge. The accident: The Ottawa Society’s post referenced the December 12, 1952, partial meltdown of the NRX research reactor at Chalk River. The naval officer, Jimmy Carter, was a 28-year-old lieutenant under Rickover. naval officer was brought in to help in the cleanup. Carter’s involvement at Chalk River was brought to light by a tweet from a Canadian professor who earlier this week cited a post by the Historical Society of Ottawa noting that “the world’s first nuclear reactor meltdown” had occurred in 1952 in the Ottawa Valley and that a young U.S.