back to article It's the FALKLANDS SYNDROME! Fukushima MELTDOWN to cause '10,000 Chernobyls' in South Atlantic

Molten nuclear powerplant cores from Fukushima – having burned their way down through the planetary crust and plunged into the Earth's centre – are set to emerge again on the other side of the planet and devastate the Falkland Islands, scientists believe. Sensationally, the Register can reveal full details of the impending …

      1. Nelbert Noggins

        Re: Excellent work!

        Yes, I woke to that in my inbox today :)

        Made me chuckle, although based on the current IOT hysteria I wouldn't be at all surprised to see a clone appearing on KickStarter ;)

        I also wonder if anyone tried the new Bing Palm Search

    1. returnmyjedi

      Re: Excellent work!

      Microsoft released a fear inducing trip down memory lane in the form of an MS-DOS "emulator" for Windows Phone. Had at least one minute of fun cd dot dotting before I realised that they hadn't thrown in any dos games. You can launch some apps from it which is pointless but somehow satisfying in a caveman sort of way.

      1. KingStephen

        Re: Excellent work!

        Didn't you find the rock paper scissors game in there, with Cortana?

        Cd games

        Cd rps

        Rps.exe

        I won 2-0 :)

    2. PNGuinn
      FAIL

      Re: Excellent work!

      Lousy acronim through.

      5/10. Must try harder. See me afterwards.

  1. TheFinn

    Ah, what're yer like!

    Bloody well written! Even knowing the film, I got sucked in! The author should go into writing children's fiction!

  2. Peter Gathercole Silver badge

    Best to read it all!

    I read the headline and the first paragraph or so and thought that it was a bit superficial, because if the cores descended through the crust, then gravity would hold it at or near the centre of the Earth.

    I then read on, and realised that this is all covered, at least to a non-scientist's view. It's all preposterous really, but detailed enough to appear serious, and very well done.

    Congratulations on making an obvious April Fool's article worth reading.

  3. WaveyDavey

    Bloody stupid ...

    Who would call a dachshund "Colin". Really.

    1. PNGuinn
      Thumb Up

      Re: Bloody stupid ...

      So called journos who might fall for this sort of brilliant drivel. Plausibility factor and all that.

      Look forward to seeing the plaigarism....

    2. returnmyjedi

      Re: Bloody stupid ...

      "Who would call a dachshund "Colin". Really."

      Blackadder?

    3. launcap Silver badge
      Devil

      Re: Bloody stupid ...

      Who knows? Dachshund owners are a strange lot..

    4. Anonymous Coward
      Coat

      Re: Bloody stupid ...

      my neighbour has, honest guv, he did

  4. David Pollard

    Send for Chris Busby

    He has anti-radiation pills that can save the children.

    http://www.amfir.com/AmFirstInst/Symposia/Fukushima/Experts/Busby/Chris_Busby_index.html

  5. Primus Secundus Tertius

    Had a good lunch?

    It seems that Team Register had an energetic lunch the other day. The hot curry was descending from the entrance aperture to the exit, but was countered by violent body movements and got into some kind of oscillation. No amount of beer could cool it down, but the beer made them start thinking.

  6. Zog_but_not_the_first
    Linux

    Disaster in the South Atlantic!

    Won't someone think of the penguins!?

    1. PNGuinn
      Mushroom

      Re: Disaster in the South Atlantic!

      Systemd. That is all.

  7. Alan Denman

    Now we know the truth as to why...

    we need Smartmeters.

    They ain't smartmeters after all, they are fusion collectors scoop up the debris floating around Britain.

    I mean, they wouldn't waste billions on only a fictional saving would they?

  8. Michael H.F. Wilkinson Silver badge
    Happy

    Nice!

    put a smile on my face this special day. Muons used to penetrate concrete was pushing it, however. mu neutrinos combined with the (relatively nearby) Super Kamiokande neutrino detector might have been a nice touch.

    Still, full points for a funny story

  9. Martin-73 Silver badge

    Surely the wreck of the Belgrano will stop it?

    Letters

    1. TeeCee Gold badge
      Coat

      Re: Surely the wreck of the Belgrano will stop it?

      What would put the kibosh on that one is the obligatory "Wreck of Belgrano FOUND ON MOON!!11!!" story that must be running somewhere today.

    2. stucs201
      Mushroom

      Re: Surely the wreck of the Belgrano will stop it?

      So it turns out that the Japanese are going to end up nuking the only American vessel which suffered no damage in the attack on Pearl Harbour.

  10. Yugguy

    GODZILLA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Just sayin'

    1. I ain't Spartacus Gold badge
      Linux

      I think you'll find that's PENGUINZILLA!!!!

  11. wolfetone Silver badge

    Reg, shame on you!

    The Reg has only told half the story.

    The Fukishima core is about to burn through the crust. But what they won't tell you is that the Earth is actually hollow. So it will free fall in to the Falklands, smashing it out of the crust and in to the air.

    Gravity will then take over, pulling the Falklands in to the core, merging the core so the Falklands then becomes the nuclear core, and be thrown back through the crust and smash in to Japan. Again, the force of the impact will merge Japan with the Falklands.

    While all this happens, the UK will not be able to mobilize their Navy or the Army to prevent this from happening, as really it's a theft of the Falklands. But no one before, or will, be able to stop a country the size of the Falklands from slipping in and out of the Earths crust and across the other side of the world.

    But this isn't an accident. This has been planned all along by..... Argentina.

    Argentina are a majority sleeping shareholder of TEPCO, the people who run Fukushima. It's true, David Icke has the information on his website.

    I'm ashamed of you Reg, only telling half a story.

  12. Andy The Hat Silver badge

    I'm disgusted!

    All the comments here and none, not even one, expresses significant concern for poor Colin!

    I'm very upset, I must be as I had to wipe the tears from my eyes as I read about poor, lost, lonely Colin. I can see his poor, sad face now. Tired and starving, he pees up a broken lamppost then gnaws on the last scrawny penguin remnant on the island. The only consolation is the penguin is strangely fresh due to a touch of gamma irradiation ...

    1. launcap Silver badge

      Re: I'm disgusted!

      > The only consolation is the penguin is strangely fresh due to a touch of gamma irradiation ...

      Oh noes! Does that mean we'll shortly be invaded by giant mutated dachshunds?

  13. Dick Pountain

    Take this Lollipop

    Google beat you all to the punch by releasing Lollipop a full six months before April Fools' Day

  14. xehpuk
    Megaphone

    Foucault pendulum

    Oh no they forgot to consider the coriolis forces. It will show up in London today!

  15. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    I saw what you did there...

    >"The Falkland Islands will be a barely habitable wilderness, afterwards"

    Hahaha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha

    ha ha ha hahaha ha haha ha hahahaha

    ha hahahaaaaaaaaaaaaa

    *chokes*

  16. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    'Even in the context of Japanese cronyism, it’s astounding that nobody at Tepco has gone to jail'

    I know its April-1, but its hard to laugh at the incompetence of Tepco... On a personal note, Fukushima cost me and some of my closest friends our livelihood... Here is a sobering report....

    http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/opinion/analysis/Four-years-out-Fukushima-reactors-still-spewing-295947481.html

    1. codejunky Silver badge

      @AC

      That sounds like the worst type of biased and bull reporting I have read in a while. Why would TEPCO be punished for building the perfectly fine reactors which were taken out by 2 large natural disasters (actual disasters) which killed many people but the radiation killed a big fat zero (and expected to be about that in total).

      The raging thoughts of nationalising them and throwing them in jail for something which didnt cause the harm is amusing but rubbish. However they are to have done something to stop the unexpected (in scale) 2 natural disasters to save power stations when nobody did anything about them as far as protecting people? Sounds like hindsight and a bunch of know nothing anti nuke nutters.

      The population cant be expected to react intelligently to nuclear power stations when they have been fed only the information of nuclear bombs. In fact you can guarantee people will act in the worst way for not knowing any better.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Why would TEPCO be punished for building the perfectly fine reactors

        Financially its certainly a big disaster. The reactors shouldn't have gone into meltdown and wouldn't have if flood defences were built high enough. Tepco acknowledged this. Even the official parliamentary report said this was a preventable accident. Now Japan is left with a huge bill. This is less to do with the intricacies of Nuclear Power and more to do with cutting corners and safety.

        1. codejunky Silver badge

          Re: Why would TEPCO be punished for building the perfectly fine reactors

          @AC

          "Financially its certainly a big disaster. The reactors shouldn't have gone into meltdown and wouldn't have if flood defences were built high enough"

          That is the point. If the defences were built high enough then the many people wouldnt have died from the natural disasters. That is not the responsibility of the energy company. So if nobody thought the risk to the thousands of civilians was that big then why would an energy company expect the risk to be worse? And the key fact being that nobody died from the radiation but many died from the natural disaster. Hind sight is great but experience is always late to the party. The radiation killed nobody. The natural disasters killed many. If someone was cutting corners (defences wise) it was not the energy company

          1. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            'That is not the responsibility of the energy company"

            It was Tepco's responsibility, its in the official report! It was part of their financial arrangement with the Japanese government and supported by subsidies. Plus, Tepco claimed to be the experts....

            .

  17. Kubla Cant

    Giveaway

    This sounds like a good time to tell the Argies "We've changed our minds. You can have the Malvinas. But you have to take immediate posession."

  18. Electric Panda

    Some say...

    That from the hole shall come a 1991 grey Porsche, registration mark H982 FKL.

  19. Sir Barry
    Pint

    I enjoyed that story, you have been awarded one pint.

  20. Frumious Bandersnatch

    Playmobil reconstruction

    Or it didn't happen.

  21. Patrician

    While this is a very funny April Fool there are lot's of "fools" that will be running for the hills about now...

  22. Roger Kynaston
    Pint

    And another thing

    I liked the pictorial reference to the new bit of Navy. We saw them last summer in the Tamar and the rotating ball got them the name of bollock of death!

    Beer because we are closed tomorrow and a virtual one for the writers.

  23. zanshin

    Kudos

    When I saw the headline I was quite sure this was an April Fool's prank, but I must say that the first first page of the article had me wondering for a bit. I have to give credit to the author for the part about the missing cores in particular - the telling of that part feels quite plausible. Up until you get to the bits about Krakatoa + Chernobyl x1000 (the details of which are happily consigned to page two), I think this could fool a lot of people. I agree that we might see this republished in seriousness, especially if they don't read the whole thing.

  24. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Some thoughts on this calamity

    A) There's actually no way that even a scorchingly hot melted core is going to get to the Falklands. Thanks to our buddy gravity, the core would melt its way towards the core of the Earth and then find that the long climb back to the surface at the Falklands is a little exhausting.

    B) If it did though--mutant sheep!! (In Soviet Falklands, mutton eats you!)

    C) Evacuate the Falklanders and the remaining herbivorous sheep, then tell the Argentinians you have a present for them.

  25. A Ghost
    Thumb Up

    Wishful thinking

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ldQpRMegYc0

    Great band that China Syndrome, though!

    Crisis? What crisis?

  26. Oninoshiko
    Pint

    Amusing

    but going on for two pages? Beers all around!

  27. Fink-Nottle

    According to unnamed sources, the MOD is working on large shield that can be lowered into the earth by means of five finger-like projections. The hope is that this huge device, nicknamed 'Diego', will be able to deflect the ball of radioactive material towards the mainland, thereby saving the Falklands. Despite Argentinian protests of foul play, a referee appointed by the UN has given the project his approval.

  28. Ron Christian

    Starting to get interesting

    The more I read about this, the more it sounds like a prelude to a monster movie.

  29. csaguy

    Makes Jeremy Clarkston happy.

  30. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    April Fools!

  31. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Good April fools

    Your links however highlighted something of interest...

    Records of the past DPBAC Meetings

    Amended Minutes of a Meeting held on Thursday 6 November 2014

    3. Finally, the Secretariat advised on only one book during the period: Lord Ashcroft's 'Special Ops Heroes' which was to be launched later this month.

    add to that

    Lord Ashcroft resigns from House of Lords to focus on polling and publishing 31/03/15

    Coincidence?

  32. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Gets better, that DPBAC website is a treasure trove of information

    8. The Intelligence Agencies. Some 68 of the occurrences and requests for DA Notice advice during the period had involved the Intelligence Agencies. The possible naming by the media of intelligence agency officers continued to be a concern. However, most of the occurrences and requests for advice were related to further publications by The Guardian of extracts from the Snowden documents. The Secretary reported that the engagement of the DPBAC Secretariat with The Guardian had continued to strengthen during the last six months, with regular dialogues between the Secretary and Deputy Secretaries and Guardian journalists. Also, because of an agreement between The Guardian and allied publications overseas to coordinate their respective disclosures of Snowden material, advice given to The Guardian had been passed on to The New York Times and others, helping to guide the disclosures of those outlets. The process had culminated by the appointment of Paul Johnson (Deputy Editor Guardian News and Media) as a DPBAC member.

    I take it the Guardian are happy to bend over to get one on the team?

  33. blueprint

    Oh dear

    Sadly this is an all too believable example of the kind of hilariously transparent right-wing nonsense that the Register churns out on a daily basis, the lunacy of which is only even close to being matched by the Torygraph.

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