11-04-2009, 08:12 AM
(This post was last modified: 11-04-2009, 08:14 AM by Don Dresden.)
So while the feds were busy busy busy tricking Dixie with their fake foreigner mad scientists, here's a REAL foreign nuclear scientist giving multiple government agencies a serious crank yank.
This just shows what we have been saying all along, that terrorist mental cases interested in causing mischief don't need fake degrees to get into the country--they are already here, using real degrees at real schools.
Hopefully somebody will check the credentials of the rest of these loons they employ at federal research facilities, starting with that Fermilab thing. Might be somebody skulking around there who had 15 people write his dissertation for him.
This just shows what we have been saying all along, that terrorist mental cases interested in causing mischief don't need fake degrees to get into the country--they are already here, using real degrees at real schools.
Hopefully somebody will check the credentials of the rest of these loons they employ at federal research facilities, starting with that Fermilab thing. Might be somebody skulking around there who had 15 people write his dissertation for him.
Quote:Dr. Samim Anghaiehttp://www.riehlworldview.com/carnivorou...ghaie.html
Hmm. Financial fraud or otherwise, this isn't the guy you want being pulled in by the FBI because he might be corrupt.
Link: Anghaie is professor of nuclear and radiological engineering and director of the Innovative Nuclear Space Power & Propulsion Institute at the University of Florida. But he's not just an academic. He has been an advisor and consultant to companies and government agencies, national labs and policy makers, and his involvement in nuclear technology is global in scope. (Watch for his comments on the status of Generation IV reactor development in the June issue of POWER.)
I recently had the opportunity to hear Anghaie at a colloquium hosted by Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL). His audience consisted almost exclusively of LANL staff, several of whom Anghaie has consulted with over the years. His topic was the challenges and opportunities--especially for national labs--presented by the resurgence of interest in nuclear power.

