11.26.2013, 09:58 AM
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#24
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Banned
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: NYC
Posts: 4,055
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SuchFriendsAreDangerous
Dude, the people it talked about being affected by cancer in that movie shoot weren't Mormons from Saint George, Utah, they were movie people from LA, and it specifically said that the director and crew members who died from cancer were smokers 
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There's alwasy some talk that John Wayne's cancer came from this.
Arnie Gundersen, Fairewinds Chief Engineer: Unlike a cloud of smoke that passes over, Fukushima continues to spew cesium into the ocean and strontium too, I have to add. So the net effect is that the spigot hasn’t been turned off yet, and we’re contaminating the Pacific Ocean in the process […] It’s not heavier than water, it’s very, very small particles that sort of float almost like dust in air, so that it is moving in the entire water column across the Pacific. […] We’ve got contamination of the aquatic chain. […] the top of the food chain animals will likely become contaminated.
supposedly the radiation plum in the ocean is about to hit the west coast - so there must be something with a half life of more than 8 days int he plum or the "experts" would be harping on that
http://enenews.com/nytimes-unprecede...stion-is-why-v
New York Times, November 24, 2013: It began with the anchovies, miles and miles of them [...] in the waters of Monterey Bay. Then the sea lions came, by the thousands [...] the pelicans [...] bottlenose dolphins [in groups of 100 or more have been spotted] [...] But it was the whales that astounded even longtime residents — more than 200 humpbacks [...] and, on a recent weekend, a pod of 19 rowdy orcas [...] the water in every direction roiled with mammals [...] For almost three months, Monterey and nearby coastal areas have played host to a mammoth convocation of sea life that scientists here say is unprecedented in their memories [...] never that anyone remembers have there been this many or have they stayed so long [...] Last month, so many anchovies crowded into Santa Cruz harbor that the oxygen ran out, leading to a major die-off. Marine researchers are baffled about the reason for the anchovy explosion. [...]
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