- Jul 25, 2002
- 10,053
- 0
- 71
Disaster in the making
This is a genuine threat to the health of the people in Iraq. More so than the alledged posibility of making a 'Nuke'.
No we don't know what used to be there, granted, but the U.N. Inspection teams had a good account of what was.
They grabbed and dumped anything that they saw, took some stuff home to use.
Mose appears to have been radioactive waste - which will be leading to many deaths to anyone exposed.
There were simular incidences in Mexico where people forund the 'Glow-Ball' from X-Ray machines and
Nucleard medicine treatment machines, usually Cesium, took it home to show the family and everyone died
from the exposure to the material (I'll try to find a link, there are many to that)
Another source of contamination is where the shielding for the medical equipment became mixed
with scrap steel and the subsequent re-melt and processing resulted in tone of batches of contaminated
steel which ended up in re-bar for home construction or in patio furniture.
The gift that keeps on giving.
Mexico incident
Another incident
Treatment for destroying pests
*Note: Some contamination may have been inadvertantly from the scraps left over after pest treatment
or poor disposal techniques of early designs of food treatment equipment.
more recently
This is a genuine threat to the health of the people in Iraq. More so than the alledged posibility of making a 'Nuke'.
No we don't know what used to be there, granted, but the U.N. Inspection teams had a good account of what was.
They grabbed and dumped anything that they saw, took some stuff home to use.
Mose appears to have been radioactive waste - which will be leading to many deaths to anyone exposed.
There were simular incidences in Mexico where people forund the 'Glow-Ball' from X-Ray machines and
Nucleard medicine treatment machines, usually Cesium, took it home to show the family and everyone died
from the exposure to the material (I'll try to find a link, there are many to that)
Another source of contamination is where the shielding for the medical equipment became mixed
with scrap steel and the subsequent re-melt and processing resulted in tone of batches of contaminated
steel which ended up in re-bar for home construction or in patio furniture.
The gift that keeps on giving.
Mexico incident
Another incident
Treatment for destroying pests
*Note: Some contamination may have been inadvertantly from the scraps left over after pest treatment
or poor disposal techniques of early designs of food treatment equipment.
more recently
