Linus Pauling — "There is no such thing as a 'safe' dose of radiation."
There is no such thing as a 'safe' dose of radiation.
There is no such thing as a 'safe' dose of radiation.
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Any amount of radiation exposure carries inherent biological risk — there is no threshold below which it becomes harmless. Even tiny doses can damage DNA and trigger cancer or genetic mutations over time. The statement challenges official assurances that small exposures are acceptable, insisting that cumulative biological harm begins with the very first particle of ionizing radiation a person absorbs.
Pauling won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1962 partly for campaigning against nuclear weapons testing. As a chemist who understood atomic structure and chemical bonds at the deepest level, he applied that knowledge to argue radioactive fallout was dangerous at any concentration. He organized a petition signed by over 11,000 scientists urging a test ban, making this quote a direct expression of his core scientific and moral conviction.
The Cold War nuclear arms race dominated the 1950s and 1960s, with the US and USSR conducting hundreds of above-ground nuclear tests. Radioactive strontium-90 was found in children's teeth and breast milk worldwide. Governments routinely reassured citizens that fallout levels were safe. Pauling's uncompromising position helped build public pressure that led to the 1963 Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, shifting testing underground and reducing global atmospheric contamination significantly.
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