this post was submitted on 29 Nov 2025
62 points (95.6% liked)

worldnews

3621 readers
2 users here now

Welcome!

We strive for high-quality standards on the latest world events.

The basis of these standards comes from the MBFC, which uses an aggregate of methodologies, including the IFCN and World Freedom Indices, to rate the Bias and Factual Reporting of News.


Does your post fit the standards? Check this thread!


Rules:


Rule 1: No Further Gaza/Israel war posts

Rule 2: No US internal news/US politics

Rule 3: Editorials, opinions, analysis, blogs, gifs, memes, etc non-serious news sources

Rule 4: Non-English articles require a translation in the post or comments (mark the title with the source language eg. [FR] for French)

Rule 5: Petitions, advocacy, surveys

Rule 6: All-caps titles

Rule 7: Old news (≥ 1-Month-old) articles

Rule 8: Unlabeled NSFW images/videos

Rule 9: URL shorteners

Thank you.

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] Madison420@lemmy.world -1 points 4 months ago (1 children)

England and the US have both had nuclear accidents just not as large of a scale and they're much much less publicized though arguably the wind scale fire was less hubris and more incompetence then Chernobyl.

[–] UltraMagnus0001@lemmy.world 3 points 4 months ago

True, but there's less safety involved when the Russians are playing to win, like the space race and so on