Friday, April 25, 2025

Does Potassium Iodide Expire?

 Does Potassium Iodide Expire?

For those of you who don’t know what these tablets are… They’re basically ‘nuke pills’. They help prevent radioactive iodine from getting into the thyroid gland during a nuclear radiation emergency.

But every little bit helps, right?

With all the uncertainty in the world, and considering the asshole democrats who hate America, now might be a good time to check your preps. 

I found these articles over at Modern Survival Blog.

Nuclear Targets In The USA


1 comment:

  1. Potassium iodide is very closely related to table salt (that is, an alkali metal and a halogen). Does it expire? No. It's a rock. KI will be KI for the next umpty-gazillion years, minus the 0.012% of radioactive potassium half of which will decay in about a billion years. Iodine has no natural radioisotopes. So you're good; the potassium iodide won't go anywhere. The starch (etc) in the table may mold, but the KI isn't going to be affected.

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