
Starting with the recognition that nuclear waste recycling is a critical avenue in nuclear technology innovation, Congress should support the development of new technologies that greatly reduce radioactive waste while recovering valuable materials like uranium fuel, blended transuranic fuels for advanced reactors, and a plethora of other isotope commodities to support various industries (that are now completely reliant on Russia). This means adapting a closed fuel cycle policy as the foundation of its nuclear energy development. This is why Congress must work in a transpartisan fashion with the Biden administration to unlock the potential of fission. government comes to terms with the fact that fusion is far off and major investments in fission are key to decarbonizing our future, the path to a clean and sustainable future will remain elusive. With the risk that commercially available tritium stockpiles in the 2050s will be insufficient to meet the fusion demands, the idea that fusion is some silver bullet to climate change seems fantastic. Such a platform requires nuclear waste recycling and next-generation fission reactors - as the forebears of nuclear energy had imagined. This is mainly because the West has failed to incorporate a closed fuel cycle. We could use the Alpha Multiply node, or we could simply decrease the RGB channels by the same amount as the Alpha.One of the most reliable forms of energy known to man, fission has yet to reach its maximum potential. This is, because we need to multiply our RGB channels with the Alpha to see the correct transparency. If you look at the Alpha channel, you will see that it does get darker, but the text stays visible (at least were it is completely white).

Try this, deselect R, G and B in the BrightnessContrast node and reduce the Gain Slider.

You might be wondering, if we simply want to change the Alpha Channel, why do we need to change the brightness on the R, G and B channel as well?

If you look at the Alpha Channel we can see, the bright parts are getting darker, meaning the pixels above in the Red, Green and Blue channel are showing transparency. You can see that we can select and deselect the R(ed), G(reen), B(lue) and A(lpha) channels separately. Drop down a BrightnessContrast node after your node branch.
