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Reason: None provided.

Yea ok ^^.

I grew up relatively close to a uranium enrichment plant. That was built illegally on a indian site of some kind. But the site was destroyed and covered up because by god no one was going to interfere with progress. One of the guys who helped clear the site had a treasure trove of artifacts.

Sargents Station is the locality between Piketon and Wakefield, along the Scioto Trail, in Pike County. It was named after the three Sargent brothers who migrated from Maryland in the 1790s, intending to establish stations for liberated slaves in Ohio. The network of "stations" thus established, named after stations of the Cross, led to later use of the term Underground Railroad. The most elaborate ancient earthworks of Pike County were located in Sargents, and the early white pioneers built their home on and overlooking the Indian works. American's first and only bomb-grade uranium enrichment plant was built in Sargents, which itself has been deemed a historic site.

People and their family's spent decades trying to get the help and compensation they deserved for being lied to and poisoned. Something I can relate to haha.

https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/local/2020/09/06/former-employees-families-sue-companies-working-on-piketon-area-nuclear-plant/42390161/

I grew up hearing about the salt that glowed green in the lunchroom and glowing ponds of water and plenty of dead fish and deer.

If your not familiar with how these old plants worked, they involved pumping gaseous uranium through thousands of miles of piping. When they shut the plant down, what was their plan? Dig a big hole, line it with concrete, bulldoze everything and push it into the hole and cap it off. Yeah, that went well. They have also spent something like 3/5 of a billion, or a billion over 20 years on a centrifuge that has never been proven to work. Where the hell is all that money going?

https://www.greencarcongress.com/2022/11/20221113-haleu.html

https://www.cincinnati.com/story/news/2019/05/30/energy-department-collects-samples-pike-county-school-uranium/1264074001/

Didnt take long before it started leaking into the ground water.

Back around the time I was born, these fools dropped a cylinder of this stuff and it dispersed into the air after cracking. To this day you can still find trace amounts of it in the surrounding soil/food/water.

Sure, small amounts of it are not to dangerous, dna has the amazing ability to repair itself, but only to an extent. Also in japans case they proably disposed of all the radioactive soil and materials which would have only been located at and near the actual nuclear event. Most of the damage was done by the blast wave from that event. From my understanding.

In Chernobyl's case, they cant remove the core so they decided to just abandon it. People still go near there today, but they all have one thing in common dont they, Geiger counters. Also different plants, and different animals have different radiation tolerances, im guessing plants are much more viable than higher life forms like monkeys or people. Also you couldn't kill something like a tardigrade with even cosmic radiation.

But sure be my guest and go check it out for yourself.

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Yea ok ^^.

I grew up relatively close to a uranium enrichment plant. That was built illegally on a indian site of some kind. But the site was destroyed and covered up because by god no one was going to interfere with progress. One of the guys who helped clear the site had a treasure trove of artifacts.

People and their family's spent decades trying to get the help and compensation they deserved for being lied to and poisoned. Something I can relate to haha.

https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/local/2020/09/06/former-employees-families-sue-companies-working-on-piketon-area-nuclear-plant/42390161/

I grew up hearing about the salt that glowed green in the lunchroom and glowing ponds of water and plenty of dead fish and deer.

If your not familiar with how these old plants worked, they involved pumping gaseous uranium through thousands of miles of piping. When they shut the plant down, what was their plan? Dig a big hole, line it with concrete, bulldoze everything and push it into the hole and cap it off. Yeah, that went well. They have also spent something like 3/5 of a billion, or a billion over 20 years on a centrifuge that has never been proven to work. Where the hell is all that money going?

https://www.greencarcongress.com/2022/11/20221113-haleu.html

https://www.cincinnati.com/story/news/2019/05/30/energy-department-collects-samples-pike-county-school-uranium/1264074001/

Didnt take long before it started leaking into the ground water.

Back around the time I was born, these fools dropped a cylinder of this stuff and it dispersed into the air after cracking. To this day you can still find trace amounts of it in the surrounding soil/food/water.

Sure, small amounts of it are not to dangerous, dna has the amazing ability to repair itself, but only to an extent. Also in japans case they proably disposed of all the radioactive soil and materials which would have only been located at and near the actual nuclear event. Most of the damage was done by the blast wave from that event. From my understanding.

In Chernobyl's case, they cant remove the core so they decided to just abandon it. People still go near there today, but they all have one thing in common dont they, Geiger counters. Also different plants, and different animals have different radiation tolerances, im guessing plants are much more viable than higher life forms like monkeys or people. Also you couldn't kill something like a tardigrade with even cosmic radiation.

But sure be my guest and go check it out for yourself.

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Yea ok ^^.

I grew up relatively close to a uranium enrichment plant. That was built illegally on a indian site of some kind. But the site was destroyed and covered up because by god no one was going to interfere with progress. One of the guys who helped clear the site had a treasure trove of artifacts.

People and their family's spent decades trying to get the help and compensation they deserved for being lied to and poisoned. Something I can relate to haha.

https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/local/2020/09/06/former-employees-families-sue-companies-working-on-piketon-area-nuclear-plant/42390161/

I grew up hearing about the salt that glowed green in the lunchroom and glowing ponds of water and plenty of dead fish and deer.

If your not familiar with how these old plants worked, they involved pumping gaseous uranium through thousands of miles of piping. When they shut the plant down, what was their plan? Dig a big hole, line it with concrete, bulldoze everything and push it into the hole and cap it off. Yeah, that went well. They have also spent something like 3/5 of a billion, or a billion over 20 years on a centrifuge that has never been proven to work. Where the hell is all that money going?

https://www.greencarcongress.com/2022/11/20221113-haleu.html

https://www.cincinnati.com/story/news/2019/05/30/energy-department-collects-samples-pike-county-school-uranium/1264074001/

Didnt take long before it started leaking into the ground water.

Back around the time I was born, these fools dropped a cylinder of this stuff and it dispersed into the air after cracking. To this day you can still find trace amounts of it in the surrounding soil/food/water.

Sure, small amounts of it are not to dangerous, dna has the amazing ability to repair itself, but only to an extent. Also in japans case they proably disposed of all the radioactive soil and materials which would have only been located at and near the actual nuclear event. Most of the damage was done by the blast wave from that event. From my understanding.

In Chernobyl's case, they cant remove the core so they decided to just abandon it. People still go near there today, but they all have one thing in common dont they, geiger counters. But sure be my guest and go check it out for yourself.

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Yea ok ^^.

I grew up relatively close to a uranium enrichment planet. That was built illegally on a indian site of some kind. But the site was destroyed and covered up because by god no one was going to interfere with progress. One of the guys who helped clear the site had a treasure trove of artifacts.

People and their family's spent decades trying to get the help and compensation they deserved for being lied to and poisoned. Something I can relate to haha.

https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/local/2020/09/06/former-employees-families-sue-companies-working-on-piketon-area-nuclear-plant/42390161/

I grew up hearing about the salt that glowed green in the lunchroom and glowing ponds of water and plenty of dead fish and deer.

If your not familiar with how these old plants worked, they involved pumping gaseous uranium through thousands of miles of piping. When they shut the plant down, what was their plan? Dig a big hole, line it with concrete, bulldoze everything and push it into the hole and cap it off. Yeah, that went well. They have also spent something like 3/5 of a billion, or a billion over 20 years on a centrifuge that has never been proven to work. Where the hell is all that money going?

https://www.greencarcongress.com/2022/11/20221113-haleu.html

https://www.cincinnati.com/story/news/2019/05/30/energy-department-collects-samples-pike-county-school-uranium/1264074001/

Didnt take long before it started leaking into the ground water.

Back around the time I was born, these fools dropped a cylinder of this stuff and it dispersed into the air after cracking. To this day you can still find trace amounts of it in the surrounding soil/food/water.

Sure, small amounts of it are not to dangerous, dna has the amazing ability to repair itself, but only to an extent. Also in japans case they proably disposed of all the radioactive soil and materials which would have only been located at and near the actual nuclear event. Most of the damage was done by the blast wave from that event. From my understanding.

In Chernobyl's case, they cant remove the core so they decided to just abandon it. People still go near there today, but they all have one thing in common dont they, geiger counters. But sure be my guest and go check it out for yourself.

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: Original

Yea ok ^^.

I grew up relatively close to a uranium enrichment planet. That was built illegally on a indian site of some kind. But the site was destroyed and covered up because by god no one was going to interfere with progress. One of the guys who helped clear the site had a treasure trove of artifacts.

People and their family's spent decades trying to get the help and compensation they deserved for being lied to and poisoned. Something I can relate to haha.

https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/local/2020/09/06/former-employees-families-sue-companies-working-on-piketon-area-nuclear-plant/42390161/

I grew up hearing about the salt that glowed green in the lunchroom and glowing ponds of water and plenty of dead fish and deer.

If your not familiar with how these old plants worked, they involved pumping gaseous uranium through thousands of miles of piping. When they shut the plant down, what was their plan? Dig a big hole, line it with concrete, bulldoze everything and push it into the hole and cap it off. Yeah, that went well.

https://www.cincinnati.com/story/news/2019/05/30/energy-department-collects-samples-pike-county-school-uranium/1264074001/

Didnt take long before it started leaking into the ground water.

Back around the time I was born, these fools dropped a cylinder of this stuff and it dispersed into the air after cracking. To this day you can still find trace amounts of it in the surrounding soil/food/water.

Sure, small amounts of it are not to dangerous, dna has the amazing ability to repair itself, but only to an extent. Also in japans case they proably disposed of all the radioactive soil and materials which would have only been located at and near the actual nuclear event. Most of the damage was done by the blast wave from that event. From my understanding.

In Chernobyl's case, they cant remove the core so they decided to just abandon it. People still go near there today, but they all have one thing in common dont they, geiger counters. But sure be my guest and go check it out for yourself.

1 year ago
1 score