DBT
Contributor
Professor Julius Sumner Miller was always asking ''why is it so?''
Is it possible to overdose on sunflower seeds?
My dose is apparently a 400 g bag.Is it possible to overdose on sunflower seeds?
That depends. What's the standard dose of sunflower seeds?
Ah, thank you.Apparently sunflower seeds can cause toxicity with their purines and salicylates. More of a risk for purines. Keep it under a peck?
Natural Food Toxins http://www.healthknot.com/natural_food_toxins.html
I would think it's possible to overdose on anything, given a sufficient quantity of it.

If you're asking why they're not legally allowed to, it's because of the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty. Iran is a signatory, so previous Iranian governments made a commitment that Iran wouldn't have them (the NPT allows a few countries to have nukes, but not Iran. Only countries that already had them when the treaty was made are allowed).Why can't Iran have nuclear weapons like so many other countries do?
Why can't Iran have nuclear weapons like so many other countries do?
Would you like the neighborhood mobster to have heavy weapons?
The basic concessions were that the five nuclear powers recognized by the treaty (US, UK, USSR - now Russia -, France and China; actually China and France didn't openly have nukes at the time of the treaty) would pursue nuclear disarmament (but without specific timetables) and also share peaceful nuclear tech.Yeah, I should have been more specific. Sorry.
I wasn't aware Iran signed the NPT saying, "We won't make nukes." I presume they received some kind of concession for that?
Was the NPT essentially worded as, "Those of us that have nukes get to keep them, and no one else can make them forever"? Seems thuggish.
I find it puzzling that so many people seem to think about this question as a matter of fairness rather than wisdom. I recall an argument with an Indian guy. I said it was a mistake for India to have developed the bomb because that made it inevitable that Pakistan would too and a nuclear Pakistan wasn't in India's best interests. His response was "America has the bomb; who are you to say other countries can't have it?".Why can't Iran have nuclear weapons like so many other countries do?

Yeah, I should have been more specific. Sorry.
I wasn't aware Iran signed the NPT saying, "We won't make nukes." I presume they received some kind of concession for that?
Or buy it from India or Pakistan, perhaps?Yeah, I should have been more specific. Sorry.
I wasn't aware Iran signed the NPT saying, "We won't make nukes." I presume they received some kind of concession for that?
Yup. Reactor tech is only to be exported to those who have signed the NPT. You want to buy a power reactor? You need to sign the NPT.
I find it puzzling that so many people seem to think about this question as a matter of fairness rather than wisdom. I recall an argument with an Indian guy. I said it was a mistake for India to have developed the bomb because that made it inevitable that Pakistan would too and a nuclear Pakistan wasn't in India's best interests. His response was "America has the bomb; who are you to say other countries can't have it?".Why can't Iran have nuclear weapons like so many other countries do?![]()
I find it puzzling that so many people seem to think about this question as a matter of fairness rather than wisdom. I recall an argument with an Indian guy. I said it was a mistake for India to have developed the bomb because that made it inevitable that Pakistan would too and a nuclear Pakistan wasn't in India's best interests. His response was "America has the bomb; who are you to say other countries can't have it?".Why can't Iran have nuclear weapons like so many other countries do?![]()
If an astrophysicist says "the 2 objects will collide in 200k years" does this mean in 200k years we will get light from the objects colliding, or does this mean that in 200k years the objects will collide?
Ok, I found the answer to the specific event question I had in mind, but still wonder, is there a standard for reporting astronomical timing? In other words, do astronomers and astrophysicists generally mean "we will receive light, G-waves, and neutrinos from the phenomena in X years" when they say something is going to happen in X years?
If an astrophysicist says "the 2 objects will collide in 200k years" does this mean in 200k years we will get light from the objects colliding, or does this mean that in 200k years the objects will collide?
Ok, I found the answer to the specific event question I had in mind, but still wonder, is there a standard for reporting astronomical timing? In other words, do astronomers and astrophysicists generally mean "we will receive light, G-waves, and neutrinos from the phenomena in X years" when they say something is going to happen in X years?