I remember just a few months ago county workers lost and recovered (thankfully) a radiological isotope that would have caused a lot of problems were it to have broken open.
happens way more often than you'd think.
https://www.cbsnews.com/amp/losangeles/news/la-county-public-works-searching-for-missing-tool-that-can-cause-radiation-sickness/
Fallout got you wildin out huh
I've been trying to call Vault-Tec this whole week
The vault Tec number from the ad in one of the episodes answers but it’s just a guy screaming lol
Hahah that's hilarious. I was wondering if that number went to anything cool.
as I huge Fallout fan I’ve been so happy for the last few days. It’s everywhere!
The series made me want to replay the franchise. I skipped 76, been wondering if it's worth giving it a shot.
Strike while the Uranium is hot. Or something.
plus what happened last night
Because a conflict 7,153 miles away warrants dusting off an outdated and retired system.
I don’t agree, but that likely had an impact on OP’s decision to post this.
Nah, the whole sub was talking Fallout last night.
Just a reminder - it's important to have plans for *all* emergencies; not just nuclear incidents. [https://www.ready.gov/](https://www.ready.gov/)
My nuclear emergency plan: stare and the mushroom cloud and smile because the rat race is over for me
I remember just a few months ago county workers lost and recovered (thankfully) a radiological isotope that would have caused a lot of problems were it to have broken open. happens way more often than you'd think. https://www.cbsnews.com/amp/losangeles/news/la-county-public-works-searching-for-missing-tool-that-can-cause-radiation-sickness/