Update (2/7/2012): Taylor Wilson at the White House
by Judy Dutton
At 10, he built his first bomb. At 14, he made a nuclear reactor. Now he’s 17…

Taylor Wilson makes people nervous. While his beanpole frame and Justin Bieber–esque haircut suggest he’s just a harmless kid, his after-school activities paint a far more ominous picture. At age 10, he built his first bomb out of a pill bottle and household chemicals. At 11, he started mining for uranium and buying vials of plutonium on the Internet. At 14, he became the youngest person in the world to build a nuclear fusion reactor. “I’m obsessed with radioactivity. I don’t know why,” says Wilson in his laid-back drawl. “Possibly because there’s power in atoms that you can’t see, an unlocked power.”
Shouldn’t teams in hazmat suits descend on Wilson and shut down his operations before someone gets hurt? On the contrary, there are people in the government who think that Wilson is key to keeping this country safe. “The Cold War is really when nuclear physicists got their shot, and those people are all retiring,” points out one of Wilson’s mentors, Ron Phaneuf, a professor of physics at the University of Nevada in Reno. “I think the U.S. Department of Energy is a little concerned that the motivation of young people to get interested in that kind of science has waned. I think that’s one of the reasons doors have been opened to Taylor. He’s a phenomenon, probably the most brilliant person I’ve met in my life, and I’ve met Nobel laureates.”
When the U.S. Department of Homeland Security heard about Wilson two years ago, officials invited him to their offices to hear more about his research and determine whether or not it could be applied toward their counter-terrorism efforts. Because Wilson was only 15, they weren’t expecting much, but Wilson came prepared. After shaking everyone’s hands, he announced, “You know your building’s radio-active, right?” The pager-sized Geiger counter attached to Wilson’s belt was beeping, an indication that the granite surrounding them contained unusually high amounts of uranium—not enough to be harmful, but enough for Wilson to raise a few eyebrows.
“Their own building was radioactive and most didn’t know it,” Wilson says. “That’s when they started to take me really seriously.”
Wilson got his start on Fusor.net, a website where nuclear hobbyists who call themselves “fusioneers” fill message boards on topics that would enthrall only the geekiest subset of society, like “So where can I get a deal on deuterium gas?” The goal of every fusioneer is to build a reactor that can fuse atoms together, a feat first achieved by scientists in 1934. Ever since, nuclear fusion has been hailed as a potential “clean” energy source, although scientists have yet to figure out how to harness its power. By the time Wilson stumbled across Fusor.net, 30 hobbyists worldwide had managed to produce the reaction; Wilson was determined to become the thirty-first. He started amassing the necessary components, such as a high-voltage power supply (used to run neon signs), a reaction chamber where fusion takes place (typically a hollow stainless steel sphere, like a flagpole ornament), and a vacuum pump to remove air particles from the chamber (often necessary for testing space equipment).
Wilson also funneled money collected from Christmases and birthdays toward buying radioactive items, many of which, to his surprise, were available around town. Smoke detectors, he learned, contain small amounts of a radio-active element called americium, while camping lanterns contain thorium. In antique stores, he found pottery called Fiestaware that was painted with an orange uranium glaze. Wilson trolled websites such as eBay for an array of nuclear paraphernalia, from radon sniffers to nuclear fuel pellets, and came to own more than 30 Geiger counters of varying strengths and abilities. Most of Wilson’s radioactive acquisitions weren’t dangerous, given their small quantities. But a few—vials of powdered radium, for example—could be fatal if mishandled, which is why he’s never opened them. (Although he’s been tempted.)
To expand his collection, Wilson dragged his dad, Kenneth, on long road trips into the New Mexico desert to go prospecting for uranium ore; they returned with boxfuls. Meanwhile, Wilson’s growing obsession with all things radioactive “worried me a whole lot,” admits Kenneth, who turned to pharmacists and professors he knew around town to ask if what his son was doing was safe. “After they talked to Taylor, they’d tell me not to worry so much, because they said Taylor understands what he’s doing,” Kenneth says. He and his wife, Tiffany, tried to tell themselves that Wilson’s “nuclear phase” would pass, just like his previous obsessions. At age 3, he asked for a hard hat and orange cones and then directed traffic on his street. At age 7, he’d memorized every rocket made by the U.S. and Soviet governments from the 1930s onward. But of all of Wilson’s obsessions, radioactivity stuck.
Hoping that the right guidance could keep their son from doing damage to himself or others, the Wilsons moved from Texarkana, Ark., to Reno and enrolled Wilson in the Davidson Academy of Nevada, a public school that caters to gifted kids. (Wilson’s IQ tested in the 99.99 percentile.) His physics teacher, George Ochs, encouraged Wilson to enter the local science fair, but did a double take when he heard that Wilson had his heart set on building a nuclear reactor in his garage.
Ochs introduced Wilson to Phaneuf, and the professor quickly saw Wilson’s potential and helped him set up shop in the subbasement of the university’s physics department. Around Wilson’s work area, a shield of paraffin and lead absorbs any radiation he might produce. A radiation safety officer stops by periodically to assess the safety conditions, and Wilson must wear a dosimeter, a badge nuclear power plant workers use to measure an individual’s radiation exposure levels. So far, Wilson says, “I’ve never gotten a dose that’s above legal levels.”
After months of researching, building, and welding, Wilson put the parts of his nuclear reactor together, using the basic blueprints posted on Fusor.net. He added his own personal touches. It looked like a cappuccino maker on human growth hormones. To find out if it worked, Wilson filled its reaction chamber with deuterium gas, retreated behind the lead wall, and then flipped the switch to the reactor’s high-voltage supply. Tens of thousands of volts of current coursed through a golf ball–sized wire grid within the reaction chamber. If all went well, this would fuse the atoms of deuterium together and release radiation—not nearly as much as fission (or the splitting of atoms) produces, but enough to cause radiation poisoning or other health complications if things went to hell.
Wilson picked up a tiny glass tube called a bubble dosimeter that he’d placed near his reactor. If he saw bubbles, the subatomic particles that make up radiation had penetrated the tube, heating the hypersensitive liquid inside. Squinting at the tube, Wilson spotted five bubbles.
On Fusor.net, Wilson was proclaimed the youngest fusioneer ever, at just 14 years old. A year later, he met with officials at both the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the U.S. Department of Energy, who offered him their expertise and equipment and encouraged him to apply for a research grant. “I started thinking, ‘What can I do with this?’” Wilson says. I wanted a real challenge. So I decided to try fighting terrorists.”
Taylor Wilson and one of his “nuclear mentors,” Bill Brinsmead, in Wilson’s basement lab at the University of Nevada in Reno. In the foreground is the nuclear fusion reactor Wilson built at 14—making him the youngest person in the world to ever do so. He spent two years scrounging the parts and radioactive materials.
Every year, more than 35 million cargo containers reach U.S. ports of entry. “They’re big, and there are so many of them. It’s the perfect way to smuggle in nuclear weapons,” Wilson says. “If I were a terrorist, that’s how I’d do it.” Making matters worse, the most sensitive radiation detectors contain helium-3, a man-made chemical that is expensive and in short supply. “The only place you can get helium-3 is in the decayed remains of nuclear weapons components, and our supply is running out,” Wilson says. He started wondering whether there were a cheaper, more plentiful alternatives.
In May 2010, Wilson entered his nuclear fusion reactor in a series of science fairs that won him a trip to Switzerland to tour the Large Hadron Collider, the world’s largest particle accelerator, where many of the most cutting-edge nuclear experiments on the planet take place. Within the collider’s labyrinthine corridors, located 300 feet below ground, Wilson gawked at swimming pool–sized Cherenkov detectors, which identify radiation by measuring the light that is emitted when these subatomic particles move through water. That got Wilson thinking: Water is plentiful. Maybe he could build a liquid-based radiation detector that would work on a smaller scale.
Wilson returned home, went to the hardware store, bought a five-gallon drum, and filled it with water. He mixed in gadolinium, a chemical element that emits light when hit with radioactive particles. Because those flashes would be too weak to be seen with the naked eye, Wilson bored a hole into the drum and inserted a highly sensitive light detector, which he hooked up to his computer. He then placed the drum next to his nuclear reactor, behind the lead wall, and flipped the reactor’s switch to produce a silent explosion of radiation. Checking his computer, Wilson was delighted to see that his detector had picked up brief emissions of light. The detector worked—and unlike helium-3 testers, which cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, Wilson’s cost a few hundred bucks.
He filed for a patent. In May 2011, Wilson entered his radiation detector in the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair against 1,500 competitors and won the $50,000 Intel Foundation Young Scientist Award. In September, once school begins, he plans to do full-scale testing of his invention by hauling a 30-foot cargo container into the Nevada desert. If all goes well there, he will start road-testing his detector at ports. “I want to get this stuff deployed—the sooner the better,” Wilson says. “Radioactive materials could be coming through ports as we speak.”
Wilson’s expertise is in high demand: Raytheon, the fifth largest defense contractor in the United States, tried to hire Wilson to develop security technologies. Numerous universities, including the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, have recruited Wilson to lend a hand in various research projects. Since Wilson’s meeting with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the U.S. Department of Energy two years ago, both government agencies are checking in with him regularly to monitor his progress. For now, in order to protect his intellectual copyright, Wilson has refused their offers for funding, but once his patent is securely in place, he hopes to share his findings and roll out his radiation detectors in Iran, North Korea, and other high-risk countries.
“It would scare my mom to know I’m in some hostile country, tracking down terrorists,” Wilson admits. But if his parents have learned anything over the years, it’s to trust their son and let go.
Wilson isn’t an across-the-board thrill-seeker. Roller coasters scare him. He was reluctant to obtain his driver’s license and avoids getting behind the wheel. The only time he was grounded was when he let the family’s golden retriever out in the backyard while he was detonating bombs (not nuclear ones, Wilson clarifies, just garden-variety explosives made from household chemicals like stump remover). Now, when the dog smells explosives, he gives Wilson a wide berth.
In spite of his efforts to make the world safe from terrorists, Wilson is still sometimes seen as a menace. In March 2011, when an earthquake and tsunami in Japan caused one of the country’s nuclear power plants to leak radiation into the atmosphere, Wilson tested the groceries in his refrigerator. He found trace levels of radioactive isotopes iodine-131 and cesium-137 in milk and spinach. After posting his findings on his website and talking to the Associated Press, “I got a lot of angry calls from the dairy association,” Wilson recalls. “I had explained that the radiation levels were low and not a health threat, but still some people freaked out.” Even at the physics lab where Wilson works, “next door there’s a laser guy who was scared that my nuclear reactor was irradiating him,” he says. “I had to calm his fears. A few people at the university have said, ‘You shouldn’t do this. You’re scaring people.’ I have to keep telling people I’m not a terrorist—I’m fighting the terrorists.”
Part of the problem, says Wilson, is that “pop culture has instilled in Americans an irrational fear of radiation, when in fact the household chemicals under your sink are more dangerous. I also think it unsettles people because I’m so young. They associate age with experience. But that isn’t always true.” Carl Willis, a nuclear engineer in New Mexico and a Fusor.net member who’s tracked Wilson’s progress, agrees. “Age discrimination against the young is widespread and was a constant obstacle in my early chemistry hobby life,” says Willis, who built his first bomb at age 12. “We automatically associate young age with poor judgment and inexperience, and while that’s typically the case, that’s just not Taylor. He shouldn’t be prejudged.”
In fact, Wilson thinks his youth is an asset.
Among his peers, Wilson’s interest in science also has its perks. “At first when I was doing nuclear stuff I wondered, Is this going to make me a nerd? But I don’t think that was ever the case,” he says. “I’ve even used it to pick up chicks. I take women to my lab sometimes.” After all, what girl would be able to resist the line “Would you like to see my nuclear reactor?”

As for how he balances the demands of being a terrorist fighter/radioactivity obsessive/mad inventor with the challenges of being a 17-year-old kid, Wilson says it’s tough. “Nuclear stuff takes up most of my time,” he says. “Sometimes I have to decide: Do I want to be at my lab or hang out with Sofia?” (Sofia, a fellow Davidson student who’s an avid softball player, is his latest crush.) “She’s one of the few people who’ve been to my lab, which makes my friends mad, because not many have been able to visit,” Wilson says. But no one gets too mad, he jokes: “My friends always say, ‘Don’t mess with Taylor. He has radioactive stuff.’”
This article is your special sneak peek at the September-October issue of mental_floss magazine. Click here to get a risk-free issue!
Gee. And I’m proud that my kids can change a tire…
tim
posted by tim on 8-22-2011 at 10:12 am
He looks a lot like Fred:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fred_Figglehorn
posted by Spocker on 8-22-2011 at 10:39 am
This kid really is inspiring. I just hope in the future he is able to be as creative and independent in his research as he is now. Great story!
posted by David on 8-22-2011 at 10:43 am
“Part of the problem, says Wilson, is that “pop culture has instilled in Americans an irrational fear of radiation, when in fact the household chemicals under your sink are more dangerous.”
Yes, but we’re also instilled with an irrational fear of terrorists. What the kid is doing is admirable but he should be more energy focused in my opinion. Regardless, the kid’s a genius and I hope he succeeds at whatever he does!
posted by Joe in PA on 8-22-2011 at 11:07 am
I. I am afraid of Taylor Wilson.
I’m just jealous.
posted by adrienne on 8-22-2011 at 12:09 pm
And here is proof of my long standing opinion: nerds are cool! So cool I married one. The conversation never gets old or boring.
posted by Elizabeth S. on 8-22-2011 at 1:16 pm
The next Lex Luthor!!!
posted by Charlie on 8-22-2011 at 1:26 pm
This kid is amazing. People like this are one in a trillion. Could be the next Tesla, Edison, Einstein or Da Vinci.
posted by Red Bunny on 8-22-2011 at 1:40 pm
This kid is remarkable!!! I hope is future is as bright as it seems today and I look forward to reading about his new projects.
posted by Richard on 8-22-2011 at 4:07 pm
seems too honest to be an edison…
posted by burt on 8-22-2011 at 4:12 pm
Awesome…..absolutely awesome! Had to laugh about the dog avoiding him. Quite inspirational even to the aged!
posted by Robigus on 8-22-2011 at 4:21 pm
I’m glad to see that while brilliant and driven, he seems to have found a reasonable work/life balance. I’ve heard stories of young prodigies that obsessed with their work and burnt out at a young age. Hopefully this doesn’t happen to this young man, because I think he could truly move the world.
posted by Matt on 8-22-2011 at 4:45 pm
This is amazing. Thanks for telling us about this kid! Nerds are the coolest.
posted by andiekaufman on 8-22-2011 at 4:52 pm
A real life Sheldon Cooper but saner no doubt.
posted by Tiarella on 8-22-2011 at 5:05 pm
@Red Bunny with his interest in the ladies, I think he could be more like the next Feynman.
posted by stan on 8-22-2011 at 5:07 pm
I’m glad he’s on our side.
posted by rotaman on 8-22-2011 at 5:43 pm
I once heard a teacher tell some girls “don’t overlook the nerds. They’ll be the most successful adults.” The girls, of course, rolled their eyes and went ahead chasing the jocks.
posted by Siobhan on 8-22-2011 at 5:53 pm
fission, not fusion
posted by Yams on 8-22-2011 at 6:37 pm
Sorry, meant to say in the beginning paragraph
posted by Yams on 8-22-2011 at 6:39 pm
I am not afraid of Taylor Wilson.
I am, however, terrified of his barber.
posted by Wallis Lane on 8-22-2011 at 7:45 pm
“Sometimes I’ll blow up something in the backyard that’ll rattle all the windows in the house,” Wilson says. “My mom will come out, shake her head, and then head back in.”
Oh that boy! – this sit-com style Doogie Howser story is what can really grate some readers (me included) about this site.
“We automatically associate young age with poor judgment and inexperience,..” ..said the young man who built his “first bomb” at age 12.
posted by Ken on 8-22-2011 at 7:48 pm
Can we see a picture of sofia? Just want to see what he likes…..
posted by James on 8-22-2011 at 10:20 pm
“Tens of thousands of volts of current coursed through a golf ball–sized wire grid within the reaction chamber.” — stopped reading here.
posted by dumb on 8-23-2011 at 1:52 am
Whoa, Tony Stark.
posted by Daniel on 8-23-2011 at 2:16 am
Is this the same site that published several chicken-little articles about nuclear “disasters?”
posted by Ryan on 8-23-2011 at 3:09 am
I used to go Taylor’s school, in fact I’m a friend of his. He’s just as smart as they say, and a little scary sometimes, but he’s a great guy. He can say things that are a bit arrogant, but hey, he’s deserved that. He’s going to go on and do something great.
I can’t believe he mentioned Sofia though(oh wait, yes I can.)
posted by Sec on 8-23-2011 at 3:18 am
You are implying the energy density per reaction of fusion is less than fission; this is not the case. It is debatable that fusion is occurring, and certainly not in useable quantities… Yet.
posted by draj on 8-23-2011 at 6:15 am
What an awesome kid! Good for him, and for us…
posted by Blondyy on 8-23-2011 at 10:31 am
Ender’s game. but instead of a military genius, we have a physics genius. But the end point of failing to nurture the young talent is the same, destruction of the earth. In Ender’s game, via alien invasion, here, via pollution and energy crisis
posted by vince on 8-23-2011 at 12:29 pm
draj — no, it is not debatable that fusion is occurring. Fusion reactions have been achieved many times. (It’s the principle behind the hydrogen bomb, for one thing.) The problem is that it takes enormous power to cause fusion to occur, and more power is consumed than produced. You’re probably confusing fusion in general with cold fusion — that’s what’s debatable. No cold fusion experiment has ever been successfully replicated, making it impossible to be certain it ever really worked in the first place.
yams — no, the word “fusion” is actually correct in the first paragraph. This kid built a fusion reactor. That’s quite a few steps beyond the homemade fission reactor another kid made back in the 90s (IIRC). Fusion is very hard to sustain, which in some respects makes these experiments safer than fission reactions; a supercritical mass can undergo a runaway fission reaction spontaneously, but fusion takes enormous external effort. Hydrogen bombs use fission bombs to do that work; fusion reactors use gigantic amounts of electricity; the Sun uses the stupendous pressure and heat generated by its own gravitational compression, which is sufficient to overcome the forces within hydrogen atoms.
This kid is seriously impressive.
posted by Calli Arcale on 8-23-2011 at 12:43 pm
Hahaha the comments on this crack me up. Lol at the awk Sofia stalker one. That nuclear reactor pickup line makes you an idol to nerds world wide. You make everyone else at the DA look bad. Keep up the great work and keep on setting off Geiger counters!
posted by Boom on 8-23-2011 at 2:58 pm
It’s sad the US’s irrational fear of “terrorists”—“nuclear terrorists” even—is something this young man has to care of. It’d be better for him and the world if he concentrated on building working large-scale fusion reactors to solve mankind’s energy problem or advancing science and knowledge by experiments like those at LHC.
posted by Weirdo Wisp on 8-24-2011 at 3:19 am
Calli Arcale, YOU are seriously impressive.
posted by Red Bunny on 8-24-2011 at 10:43 am
Taylor, you only have 4 years left to get Mr Fusion on top of my car. Get to it!
posted by Mako on 8-24-2011 at 6:25 pm
Why isn’t Homeland security doing something that will actually keep people safer, like buying up all the radium on ebay before children and terrorists do?
posted by daedalus2u on 8-24-2011 at 8:15 pm
Am I missing something here? Fusion power is something that has yet to be successfully done. FISSION has, but fusion has not. What gives?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fusion_reactor
posted by Btone on 8-26-2011 at 4:05 am
Btone, fusion *power* has yet to be mastered, but fusion *reactions* have been accomplished, and that’s what Taylor did.
It’s a long step from creating a reaction to finding a way to harnessing its power, and that’s what researchers have yet to figure out.
posted by Sandy Wood on 8-26-2011 at 8:28 am
wilson,
i had a really close friend growing up, and he was considered different by most people. after many investigations and expirements, some not so good! one day montie called me to show me the patients he finally recieved after years of work we had done. we spent many nights on the phone, him working for intel, me working for the phone company. after many refinements to what we wanted, well you would know this invention as USB!
you have my total support!
chris
posted by chris dunagan on 8-27-2011 at 11:04 am
While I admire his drive, I am a little of afraid of him.
posted by Sara in Al on 8-29-2011 at 3:53 pm
he sceres mee :O
posted by jjnbo on 9-2-2011 at 11:59 am
ENFP or ENTP. Surely one or the other. Either way, a credit to his personality type.
posted by Johanan Rakkav on 9-2-2011 at 7:55 pm
I am a 12 year old homeschooler, I thought that this is really cool and amazing that a 16 year old came up with a device to detect nuclear weapons and I am sure he did not learn how to make a nuclear fusion rector at public school. I think that all patents should let there kids experiment.
posted by Randomtv on 9-12-2011 at 2:12 pm
Given that only about 100 billion humans have ever lived, then even if he’s as smart as the 4 men you mentioned, and if they are the 4 smartest people ever (very doubtful, especially Edison), then he’s only one in 20 billion tops.
In term of raw IQ, if he’s in the “99.99 percentile” he’s only 1 in 10,000.
Still an incredibly smart and capable kid, but let’s not get silly about it.
posted by Analemma on 9-14-2011 at 12:18 am
Red Bunny wrote: “People like this are one in a trillion”
Given that only about 100 billion humans have ever lived, then even if he’s as smart as the 4 men you mentioned, and if they are the 4 smartest people ever (very doubtful, especially Edison), then he’s only one in 20 billion tops.
In term of raw IQ, if he’s in the “99.99 percentile” he’s only 1 in 10,000.
Still an incredibly smart kid, but let’s not get silly about it.
posted by Analemma on 9-14-2011 at 12:19 am
Mesmersed by their own song! decieved Americans! Even Germany now pulls away from nuclear. China next. Uranium as fuel to be banned by even the U.N.? as the real world pulls away from any sources of humanocidal plutonium. China looks to Thorium fueled, LFTR reactors as quickly as possible to avoid the ‘Oil Price Crunch” coming to this world.
posted by Uncle B on 9-21-2011 at 4:01 pm
I think people are scared of children and young adults who research fields such as radioactivity not because of technical inexperience but because of emotional inexperience.
posted by bobloblaw on 9-21-2011 at 5:29 pm
Great Kid wish him the best.Calli Arcale you hit the nail on the head. We’ve been trying to produce a sustained fusion reaction since the 50s. Currently they’re two processes that have promise, Laser which Lawrence Livermore is attempting and tokamac, this might be misspelled, both of these show the most promise. The ITER being built in France will have the most promise of having a sustained reaction. This won’t be ready for years. This country had a chance to be a leader in particle physics like the LHC but Reagan cancelled the project after a billion and half was spent. Very stupid mistake. I wish this young man the best. Its nice to see all the support.
posted by Frank Corley on 9-22-2011 at 10:54 pm
I was really into this article until I read that he built a fusion reactor. There isn’t one in the world. Mental Floss… come on.
posted by Ryan on 9-24-2011 at 2:08 pm
Jeez, what now?
posted by NotGiven on 9-26-2011 at 10:31 pm
This is odd to me that this is the reaction that the government had when they found all this out. There was another boy who did basically the same thing and got in a large amount of trouble for it. He then tried to join the navy to work on nuclear subs so he could work in the nuclear industry legally and they would not let him. Read about him in a book called the radioactive boy scout.
posted by Quinn on 10-9-2011 at 2:28 am
Oh and ryan there have been and are fusion reactors they just do not output more energy then they consume. If what this kid did is possible I do not know. Though I do not know why someone would fabricate the story. It is the internet though.
posted by Quinn on 10-9-2011 at 2:30 am
You know, I don’t think its that Taylor Wilson is amazing or special. I think the rest of us just assume learning things we don’t know is going to be hard. The kid just learned a specific thing, it just happened to be applied nuclear physics. If any of us decide we want to learn something we too can dedicate enough of our time and we can learn it. Think of how much time the average person spends passively watching TV. Apply this time to any goal and there is a Taylor Wilson in all of us. Turn off the TV and go learn something. You’ll thank yourself later.
posted by bramlet on 10-14-2011 at 5:31 pm
Hello, would you like to hang out sometime? Play some golf or something…lmk. peace
posted by kyle on 10-17-2011 at 9:37 am
Waste of EXTREME TALENT. It takes far less capable people to do what he wants to do. His research is what could save the world. As long as he’s happy though…
posted by Monday on 12-8-2011 at 6:13 pm
I wonder if this “kid” has done any work with LFTR reactors?
posted by Carlos on 1-9-2012 at 6:20 pm
This kid does not need to be praised. He needs to have his dangerous “toys” taken away. Humanity has had the piss out of bomb building warmongers and this kid is a hazard to humanity.
posted by deseed on 1-12-2012 at 7:51 pm
I am from the town that produced Fiestaware. The pottery is 5 minutes from my house. I had always known that they used to produce radioactive plates. Glad they came in handy for something.
posted by Andrew on 1-29-2012 at 11:38 pm
Fission, not fusion. No one has made a working fusion power plant yet.
posted by Chris on 2-4-2012 at 12:46 pm
Too bad hes into the whole terrorist schtick
posted by umm on 2-4-2012 at 9:10 pm
Too bad he is ‘fighting terrorists’ instead of figuring out cold fussion.
posted by Jared on 2-7-2012 at 1:36 pm
I bet all the power provider companies are scared now.
posted by SPEKTRE76 on 2-12-2012 at 3:46 am
This guy has potential. This guy could solve cancer. We need more people like THIS GUY! This guy is going to make the future everything we hope the future will be like. THANK JESUS GOD CHRIST!
posted by thank god on 2-16-2012 at 1:00 pm