Sabotage - Dairy Farm Fires & other threats to our food supply

OP
Rinse & rePeat
Joined
Mar 10, 2021
Messages
21,516
“According to the Times:

“Another toxicologist familiar with CTEH, who requested anonymity to avoid retribution from the firm, described its chemical studies as designed to meet the goals of its clients.“


 
OP
Rinse & rePeat
Joined
Mar 10, 2021
Messages
21,516
“When you run the numbers and do your best state-of-the-art risk calculations, that’s the number you get for the cancer risk,” said Stephen Lester, a toxicologist who has researched dioxins for 40 years and is science director for the Center for Health, Environment and Justice. “That’s why dioxins are described as one of the most toxic chemicals ever created.”

The rules were ultimately killed ”for political reasons”, Lester said. Exposure to that level of dioxin is probably widespread, and making the change would create fallout that would be extremely difficult for the government to manage, he added.“

 

David PS

Member
Joined
Jan 5, 2016
Messages
14,675
Location
Dark side of the moon

amd

Member
Joined
Aug 13, 2020
Messages
864
Before getting into weather modification, lets talk about the appalling state of the irrigation and water infrastructure in the Midwest.

"News" and "conspiracy theories" are planted on the Internet to create misdirection, to redirect the blame from the government (Federal Reserve, Weather Modification, HAARP, Russia/China).

People forget easily and talking about root causes is not as much fun as "conspiracy theories", but this is about the decades-long government negligence.

Nothing in nature stays the same over time, is not supposed to do so (floods, droughts), but government and industry contaminating water resources and farmland is criminal.


A 2021 analysis, “The widespread and unjust drinking water and clean water crisis in the United States,” found that nearly half a million U.S. households lacked complete plumbing, while many more were living in communities with unclean water.

Surveys suggest that the former problem is a disproportionately rural issue while the latter is disproportionately urban. “As it currently stands, counties with elevated levels of incomplete plumbing and poor water quality in America—which are variously likely to be more indigenous, less educated, older, and poorer—are continuing to slip through the cracks,” the authors of the study concluded.

Without urgent action, those cracks will only continue to widen. The 2021 Report Card for America’s Infrastructure, released by the American Society of Civil Engineering, gave a dismal D+ grade to the country’s more than 16,000 wastewater treatment plants, a significant fraction of which have reached or exceeded their design capacities. The U.S. drinking water infrastructure earned only a marginally better rating, with a C-grade.


“St. Louis has about 50% of its service lines made of lead and does not have detailed information on where those lead service lines are and are not,” Kite told St. Louis on The Air. “I think the lack of information is pretty across the board.”

In some cases, like that of mitigation efforts in Trenton, Missouri, chemical additives meant to reduce lead in the water supply actually made the problem worse.

“Sudden changes in the water chemistry can seep [lead] into your water,” Kite said. “So while your lead pipe might not be creating a huge problem today, it might tomorrow.”
 
Last edited:

amd

Member
Joined
Aug 13, 2020
Messages
864
 
OP
Rinse & rePeat
Joined
Mar 10, 2021
Messages
21,516
“If people better understood the nuances of milk as a seasonal product that gets richer in the winter and sweeter in the summer based on what the cows are eating, and saw the effort small dairy farmers put into producing that milk to help feed and keep rural communities alive, they might like milk better,” one of them explained.

Since what goes up must come down, perhaps dairy milk’s big comeback will arise naturally. A Canadian writer told the Times that she could see it happening as a rebellion against rapidly advancing technology. “The return of cow’s milk is kind of the cultural zeitgeist saying, ‘Screw tech. This is too fast and science is going too far,’” she said. “Just go back to normal and stop engineering the way we live.”

 

michael94

Member
Joined
Oct 11, 2015
Messages
2,419
“If people better understood the nuances of milk as a seasonal product that gets richer in the winter and sweeter in the summer based on what the cows are eating, and saw the effort small dairy farmers put into producing that milk to help feed and keep rural communities alive, they might like milk better,” one of them explained.

Since what goes up must come down, perhaps dairy milk’s big comeback will arise naturally. A Canadian writer told the Times that she could see it happening as a rebellion against rapidly advancing technology. “The return of cow’s milk is kind of the cultural zeitgeist saying, ‘Screw tech. This is too fast and science is going too far,’” she said. “Just go back to normal and stop engineering the way we live.”

Ending the mass Homogenization of Milk would be a start. I usually buy Straus brand, but that's expensive compared to the Homogenized alternatives. Organic Valley also no longer offers Cream Top in their Grassmilk, at least not in my area. It's Homogenized and Ultra Pasteurized, wasn't always this way.

And if someone wants to buy Raw Milk at a Grocery Store they can expect to pay around $20 a Gallon.
 
OP
Rinse & rePeat
Joined
Mar 10, 2021
Messages
21,516
“Retailers are looking to alternate sources of supply and preparing to face higher product costs in the wake of the Southern California cold snap that destroyed what some observers said could be nearly $1 billion worth of oranges, lemons and other crops.”

 
OP
Rinse & rePeat
Joined
Mar 10, 2021
Messages
21,516
“This is my first emergency alert in 15 years, and be sure to read to the bottom to see that you should race out to the stores and buy a bunch of sodium bicarbonate to mitigate some of the impacts of this environmental disaster. Mercury (Hg) mobilization and accumulation in the environment are directly related to forest fires. Without a doubt, the smoke these 100 million men, women, and children are being exposed to is laced with mercury and radiation toxicity.

Health experts are urging Americans in areas with air quality warnings to stay indoors and run an air filtration system that will reduce exposure. They report that wildfire smoke is a mix of gases and fine particles that can cause harm in multiple ways, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The American Lung Association says wildfire smoke can be “extremely harmful” to lung health. Wildfire smoke consists of a mix of air pollutants, including particle pollution, like PM2.5: These tiny particles can get lodged deep in the lungs and cause asthma attacks, heart attacks, and strokes.

Researchers from Harvard University’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health found PM2.5 may increase the risk of developing dementia, according to a report published in the medical journal BMJ in April. Other studies also show a link between wildfire exposure and increased mortality, respiratory illnesses, and cancer.

However, neither of these studies nor organizations are calculating mercury and radiation toxicity.”


 
EMF Mitigation - Flush Niacin - Big 5 Minerals
Back
Top Bottom