In Gabon, ancient uranium deposits naturally initiated and sustained nuclear fission for millions of years, activated by rainwater. This discovery proves that fission is a natural phenomenon, not just a human invention, challenging perceptions of it as "unnatural."

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The massive energy consumption of AI has made tech giants the most powerful force advocating for new power sources. Their commercial pressure is finally overcoming decades of regulatory inertia around nuclear energy, driving rapid development and deployment of new reactor technologies to meet their insatiable demand.

Facing immense electricity needs for AI, tech giants like Amazon are now directly investing in nuclear power, particularly small modular reactors (SMRs). This infusion of venture capital is revitalizing a sector that has historically relied on slow-moving government funding, imbuing it with a Silicon Valley spirit.

Contrary to popular imagery, spent nuclear fuel is a solid that is initially stored in deep pools of water. Water is such an effective radiation shield that trained divers can safely swim in the pools for maintenance. This highlights the managed safety of nuclear waste.

In the 1970s, France built 57 reactors in 15 years through its government-led utility, which repeatedly built the same design. In contrast, the US's fragmented private utility system, with each company building different designs, failed to achieve similar cost reductions and scale.

Public perception of nuclear power is skewed by highly visible but rare disasters. A data-driven risk analysis reveals it is one of the safest energy sources. Fossil fuels, through constant air pollution, cause millions of deaths annually, making them orders of magnitude more dangerous.

The same fear-based arguments and political forces that halted nuclear fission are now re-emerging to block fusion. Ironically, the promise of a future fusion 'savior' is being used as another excuse to prevent the deployment of existing, proven zero-emission fission technology today.

Perception of nuclear power is sharply divided by age. Those who remember the Three Mile Island accident are fearful, while younger generations, facing the climate crisis, see it as a clean solution. As this younger cohort gains power, a return to nuclear energy becomes increasingly likely.

Fears that the Large Hadron Collider could create a world-ending black hole were mitigated by a simple astronomical observation: Earth is constantly bombarded by cosmic rays creating collisions with far greater energy than the LHC can produce. Since the planet has survived billions of years of these natural, high-energy events, the risk from the collider was deemed negligible.

For decades, electricity consumption was flat. Now, the massive energy demands of AI data centers are making clean, reliable, baseload power like nuclear an essential component of the energy grid, not just an option.

Intricate mechanisms like the DNA double helix and cellular energy production are identical across all life forms. The sheer complexity makes it statistically impossible for them to have evolved twice, serving as irrefutable evidence that all species descended from one common ancestor.