It’s completely safe to live in the exclusion zone. https://www.thecollector.com/chernobyl-today/. As long as you don’t dig the dirt up. Even those that live there full-time foraging and living off the land and farming only have a 25% higher chance of thyroid cancer.
Why would I move to a warzone in a country poorer than mine, of which I don’t speak the language, know nobody over there, and don’t have any connection to whatsoever?
Yes, but it’s all contained to the same area still after millions of years
Chernobyl is contained too. It’s not safe.
It is safe if you don’t enter the container; that’s what contained means.
Why don’t move next to it then?
Because uprooting their life to prove a random stranger wrong would be a figuratively bigger disaster than the event in reference.
No lives there because of the radiation, you overgrown sausage.
Tell that to the ukrainians
There’s still an exclusion zone to this day.
It’s completely safe to live in the exclusion zone. https://www.thecollector.com/chernobyl-today/. As long as you don’t dig the dirt up. Even those that live there full-time foraging and living off the land and farming only have a 25% higher chance of thyroid cancer.
Why would I move to a warzone in a country poorer than mine, of which I don’t speak the language, know nobody over there, and don’t have any connection to whatsoever?
No no no, it’s been moved outside of the environment.