Monday, July 13, 2026

It's The Pits (Plutonium Pits for Nuclear Warheads, to be Precise)

The National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) is attempting to launch a massive project to produce new plutonium pits for nuclear weapons.

Comments on the Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (PEIS) for Plutonium Pit Production (DOE/EIS-0573) should be emailed to:

PitPEIS@nnsa.doe.gov

Include document number (DOE/EIS-0573) in the email subject. The deadline for comments is Thursday, July 16, 2026 at midnight.

Activists around the country have posted resources explaining what is at stake and how to comment:

https://pitpeis.com/

Here's what I'm sending in:


Subject line: Comment on Document number: DOE/EIS-0573

To whom it may concern:

There's a large field full of radioactive debris at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL). Every time it rains, the debris field spreads out a little more. Eventually it will reach the Rio Grande, drinking water for millions.

Why did this happen?

The Bomb.

Building nuclear bombs is the most environmentally destructive endeavor human beings have ever engaged in. And not just once: We didn't learn our lesson, even though that very first project, to build the first nuclear bombs, was so environmentally destructive that nearly a century later we STILL haven't finished cleaning up the radioactive contamination in dozens of places around the country: Alamogordo, LANL, LLNL, ORNL, Hanford, Portsmouth...

Since the "grand achievement" of the Manhattan Project (bombing the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki), thousands of nuclear bombs have destroyed entire cultures due to "peaceful" testing of nuclear weapons by the U.S., France, the United Kingdom, Russia, China, India, Pakistan, North Korea... Clearly the world's "most advanced" countries don't understand the fragility of our small blue dot in a vast uninhabitable universe! (Mars is only inhabitable by removing items from Earth and bringing them to Mars. And then only maybe, and only with regular resupply voyages.)

Or is it that they don't understand the fragility of life? When The Bomb was being built, DNA had not yet been deciphered. By the time the public was aware of DNA's role in reproduction, the Atoms For Peace propaganda program had already begun. That there could be severe health consequences even from low doses of radiation was well-known by then, but the role of radiation-induced DNA damage causing cancers, strokes, heart attacks, birth deformities and other complications had not yet been unraveled.

Times have changed. The way radiation damages the human genome (and all species' genomes) is well-known and has been studied extensively. Linear, No Threshold (LNT) is widely accepted (such as by the BIER-VII report) as the best rough estimate of radiation damage. LNT means that ANY amount of radiation is capable of initiating health effects. The incidence rate is roughly proportional to dose; but the magnitude of the effects are not. One alpha or beta particle, or one gamma ray, can damage one DNA chain in one cell in one body, which can start a fatal cancer.

Currently America has approximately 18,000 nuclear warheads; several thousand of which are "active" (in an airplane, missile, or submarine, waiting to be used at a moment's notice). Several thousand more are in "reserve," and about 10,000 older pits are in semi-permanent storage.

Why so many? But having them, why in the world would we need MORE?!? The current ones would still work (studies have confirmed that again and again).

We know how to make new nuclear bombs from old nuclear bombs, but the process is expensive and produces its own stream of impossible-to-manage nuclear waste. It is actually somewhat cleaner to produce new plutonium from uranium "blankets" of U-238 surrounding a neutron-producing source, but then we would have even MORE plutonium with no safe way to dispose of it, as well as the radioactive waste from the reactor producing the neutrons.

Neither "alternative" makes any sense because we don't need new bombs. Modern warfare is done with drones and cyber attacks, and that won't be changing any time soon.

There are plans to make as many as 15,000 MORE nuclear pits over the next 30 years. And no plans to throw any away, because we don't know how — and because we might want them if we're desperate and the first few thousand (the ones already in service today) don't accomplish whatever level of destruction or "payback" we think some other part of the planet deserves.

Sounds crazy because it is. They didn't call it "MAD" ("Mutual Assured Destruction") for nothing! It's crazy, but it's what the world calls "nuclear deterrence" — with no proof that it's deterred anything, or ever will. Maybe it has delayed the inevitable? Maybe someone's itching to break the logjam and use them? Maybe his name is Trump?

Or why ELSE would anyone need 15,000 new nuclear warheads over the next 30 years? And at what cost? What environmental cost, including the environmental cost to the planet if there's a nuclear war? At what economic cost, including the cost of alternatives that there's no money for because it's all used on nuclear weapons, year after year after year?

Hundreds of billions of dollars. Enough to purchase millions of drones for soldiers actually on the battlefields. Enough to buy all the F-16s that have ever been built (the world's most successful fighter aircraft).

Enough to rebuild every school in the nation to be sure it has adequate meal service (at no cost to the parents), and well-paid teachers who are well-supplied with everything from crayons to fast global Internet access. Freedom to learn.

And should someone ever decide to use these new "pits" (or should an AI attack plan advise it, and an obedient human follow along), what if the new pits don't work? Since we can't test them, will we launch multiple nuclear missiles to be sure one works? That will probably spread the environmental pollution from the duds along with the fission products from the bomb(s) that do work — how much environmental pollution is a war crime? Does it depend on why we're fighting, as well as which poisons we unleash, and how many people are killed or wounded, and perhaps most of all: Were they involved or innocent bystanders, or people who came along later, perhaps a thousand generations later?

Some part of any decision regarding plutonium pit production is a monetary decision: In this case, nearly four billion dollars is the estimated annual cost, involving an estimated 13,000 employees. That's nearly $300,000.00 per person! For that much money, for that many people taken out of the workforce for anything else, America should get something useful: Rooftop solar build-out. Rebuilding the energy grid to modern standards. High speed rail. Free college. We could even put it into foreign aide and make friends instead of enemies!

We can only lose if we put our money and our efforts into atomic bombs. They are overkill. A war crime. A political threat than must never be carried out -- in fact it can't even be threatened — except without actually saying it: "We will wipe the enemy off the face of the earth" and similar phrases can have few other meanings, when coming from the president of a nuclear-armed war machine.

Just as it has been said that we each breath a few atoms of Caesar's last breath with every breath we take, so too do we each have the remains of not just the Trinity, Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs — but of EVERY nuclear bomb that has ever been tested! There is a trace of each one in every one of us.

History leaves its mark. We find it in baby's teeth, we find it in statistical studies of cancer clusters around nuclear power plants and nuclear waste dumps. We find it in the need to raise metal ships that sank PRIOR to the "atomic age" if we want metals that are totally free of as much radiation as possible, because ALL metal manufactured nowadays is contaminated in minute — but detectable — amounts. Amounts that can weaken alloys and ruin delicate measurements.

If there were no environmental worries regarding the use of nuclear weapons (an imaginary situation), there would still be political, moral and military problems. Politically the world has held off using nuclear weapons since 1945, having seen how horrible their use was in Japan. "War is hell" was known before the atomic age but bringing a hellfire upon so many people in a fraction of a second was something new. Morally, the radioactive debris left for future generations to deal with (and suffer from) is an outrage. And militarily, nuclear war is the most expensive way to win a war ever invented, and the most likely to result in future terrorism against the aggressing country. Why? Because everyone knows that the horror of nuclear weapons doesn't cease when the bomb explodes. And because genocide is a crime against humanity.

Plutonium is commonly described as "the deadliest stuff on earth." It's been calculated that a single kilogram, if divided evenly into barely-visible specs of dust and diabolically placed in every human's lung, would cause lung cancer in everyone on earth. And since Pu-239 has a half-life of about 24,100 years, that one particle of plutonium (comprised of billions of atoms of plutonium), if it were diabolically extracted from that person's body and inserted into the lung of someone from the next generation, would be nearly as likely to guarantee that next person's lung cancer...and this sequence could continue for more than a thousand generations, and by then that same little chunk of plutonium would still cause lung cancer in about half the victims.

Making plutonium is a terrible thing to do, an insult to humanity. Releasing it into the environment in the form of a bomb, or carelessly through abandonment, adds injury to insult.

Building nuclear weapons can't make any friends; using them can only make enemies. Nuclear weapons destroy history: Buildings, libraries, museums, schools... They destroy people: Their memories, knowledge, customs and talents. We should be building beautiful buildings with those billions, instead of building weapons that can destroy everything.

Threatening nuclear war is no way to make friends. Living in fear of nuclear war is no way to live, and no way to plan for the future.

Ace Hoffman, Carlsbad, California USA

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Contact information for the author of this newsletter:

Ace Hoffman
Carlsbad, California USA
Author, The Code Killers:
An Expose of the Nuclear Industry
Free download: acehoffman.org
Blog: acehoffman.blogspot.com
YouTube: youtube.com/user/AceHoffman
Email: ace [at] acehoffman.org
Founder & Owner, The Animated Software Company



Tuesday, June 30, 2026

In Trump v. Slaughter, SCOTUS handed the president new power to remove independent agency commissioners without cause!

FYI (from a friend):

In the recent ruling in Trump v. Slaughter, SCOTUS handed the president new power to remove independent agency commissioners like the FTC and NRC without cause.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor’s dissent, joined by Kagan and Jackson, names the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) directly as one of the agencies losing its independence as a result.

“For most of this Nation’s history, Congress and the President together have decided that some Government functions should operate at a distance from partisan politics. Those include the management of nuclear energy; the security of the monetary supply; and the safety of American workplaces, consumer products, and chemical hazards.”

“Dozens of independent commissions are now likely to become purely executive agencies, shifting tremendous power over broad swaths of American life into the President’s hands: the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, with responsibility for managing the Nation’s energy supply… the Chemical Safety Board, tasked with investigating chemical disasters… the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, responsible for the regulation of nuclear power… and the Merit Systems Protection Board.”

“the Court gives the President a power unknown even to the English Crown against which the Founders revolted, elevating him above his once-coequal branches by transforming a duty to take care that the laws be faithfully executed into a license to act in defiance of those very laws.”

“with the most extreme exercises of at-will removal, the multimember structure itself could be eliminated, by executive fiat, with sufficient arbitrary firings to winnow a commission down to a sole remaining chair.”

“Ordinary Americans and regulated firms alike have organized their affairs understanding that some Government decisions will depend not on political favoritism or partisan advantage… but on expertise, adherence to law, judgment, and the public good.”

“In granting the President this unbridled authority, the Court upends its precedent, misconstrues our history, and sheds any pretense of judicial modesty. I respectfully dissent.”

Full opinion: https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/25pdf/25-332_qn12.pdf

These quotes are formatted as an image here:



Contact information for the author of this newsletter:

Ace Hoffman
Carlsbad, California USA
Author, The Code Killers:
An Expose of the Nuclear Industry
Free download: acehoffman.org
Blog: acehoffman.blogspot.com
YouTube: youtube.com/user/AceHoffman
Email: ace [at] acehoffman.org
Founder & Owner, The Animated Software Company



Sunday, June 28, 2026

The DOE wants to bypass existing legislation and weaken radiation protections. The deadline is MONDAY for comments! (June 29, 2026)

Comments on DOE-HQ-2025-0603 are due on June 29, 2026. (https://www.regulations.gov/docket/DOE-HQ-2025-0603)

Thanks to Lynda Williams for alerting us to this outrageous attempt to bypass normal legislative and rulemaking processes and for her in-depth summary of the issues involved (see link below).

Confusingly, there are actually two different ways to comment on this rulemaking with two different document IDs: https://www.regulations.gov/commenton/DOE-HQ-2025-0603-0001

https://www.regulations.gov/commenton/DOE-HQ-2025-0603-0002

Our comment as submitted:

We strongly oppose allowing DOE-HQ-2025-0603 to proceed without full public hearings and congressional oversight.

This "direct final rule" is an attempt to bypass existing legislation including the allocation of funds without addressing the harm that will occur, the intent of Congress, or outstanding commitments from the federal government.

If the rule is allowed to proceed, major protections for the environment, public health, and public funding will cease to exist. There will be no review of the rules that are being dropped and there will not be any notification to the communities involved. Funds that Congress has allocated for specific purposes will be reallocated at the discretion of the Secretary of Energy with no public oversight.

In the first year alone (by July 13, 2027) the proposed rule would:

Remove whistleblower protections for contractors working on DOE projects. This means that it would be even more difficult to find out when contractors are bypassing required safety and quality guidelines. Contractor employees are professionals in their fields. If these people are not protected when they raise concerns about the professionalism of the work that is being completed, inevitably mistakes will be made and covered up, and shortcuts will be taken. Whistleblowers speak up at great risk (both economic and psychological). Whistleblowers have saved many lives across many industries. Such courageous actions require and deserve legal protection, and attempts to remove whistleblower protections is proof that the DOE does not expect its contractors to do things properly — and also is proof that that's okay with the DOE.

Allow reallocation of funds that have been designated for legally required cleanup at multiple Superfund sites. Many Superfund sites are already being targeted for new nuclear activities which will further pollute the environment and endanger the health of local residents. By cancelling the existing legal requirements for cleanup at these sites, the government is abdicating its responsibility for both past and future damage. The DOE should not be able to reallocate these funds -- both the cleanup requirements and the funds are legal obligations of the federal government. The funds were allocated to mitigate damage that has already been done, as well as to prevent further harm.

Eliminate many of the guidelines for siting nuclear waste. The reality is there is no place and no technology to safely store nuclear waste, and certainly not at an affordable price and with the approval by a majority of local citizens. That's why we have to stop making more. But eliminating the few guidelines that do exist will make it even more difficult for communities, states, and indigenous nations to protect their lands from being turned into nuclear waste dumps. Perhaps that is the DOE's intent, but that doesn't make it legal or morally correct. The government could try to write new legislation concerning the disposal of nuclear waste (this has been attempted many times with no success, because it's an INTRACTABLE problem). What the government should not do is unilaterally eliminate rules at the whim of a few people in a secretive agency.

Do away with the definition of an "extraordinary nuclear occurrence" which is the only way victims get any money under the Price-Anderson Act (PAA). PAA already would pay only a fraction of the real costs if a nuclear accident occurs, and it only exists because nuclear accidents cannot be properly insured. However, removing the definition of a triggering event makes PAA even more disingenuous. We are for repealing PAA, but that requires congressional action. If PAA is repealed, every nuclear power plant in the country will shut down because they will not be able to find insurance against the potential financial (let alone environmental and health) consequences of a nuclear meltdown, spent fuel fire, or dry cask breach.

DOE-HQ-2025-0603 allows additional rules to expire over the following five years so that by 2032, rules covering almost every part of the DOE's nuclear program would disappear.

The exceptions to automatic expiration are rules that the DOE believes would have "a chilling effect" on its ability to sign contractors. This alone is proof that the intent of this rulemaking is to promote new nuclear projects without ANY regard for public safety, existing legislation, or cleanup obligations. It is also further proof that the DOE doesn't trust contractors to do things correctly.

If the rules the DOE intends to expire are not effective, then the DOE should be asking how the rules can be changed instead of unilaterally removing and/or relaxing the rules without any useful discussion with either the public or Congress.

We incorporate by reference and adopt as our own the comments submitted to docket DOE-HQ-2025-0603 by Lynda Williams for Nuclear Free Hawai’i, nuclearfreehawaii.org (https://www.regulations.gov/comment/DOE-HQ-2025-0603-0012).

Ace and Sharon Hoffman
Carlsbad California

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Background material:

Lynda Williams' excellent discussion of this attempt to bypass existing rules and legislation: https://open.substack.com/pub/nuclearfreehawaii/p/doe-set-its-own-nuclear-safety-rules

Link to Lynda Williams' comment on this rule:

https://www.regulations.gov/comment/DOE-HQ-2025-0603-0012

Link to the Federal Register proposed rule-making. The following text provides incentive to comment, despite the fact that the DOE is attempting to make the rule final without comment.: "If DOE receives significant adverse comments, DOE will publish a notice of withdrawal for the direct final rule and will proceed with this proposed rule." Presumably, a proposed rule requires the DOE to address the public comments in some way.

https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2026/05/29/2026-10729/zero-based-regulating

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Contact information for the author of this newsletter:

Ace Hoffman
Carlsbad, California USA
Author, The Code Killers:
An Expose of the Nuclear Industry
Free download: acehoffman.org
Blog: acehoffman.blogspot.com
YouTube: youtube.com/user/AceHoffman
Email: ace [at] acehoffman.org
Founder & Owner, The Animated Software Company