In addition to the deadly fires that brought destruction across the state of California,
a new report suggests that the fires also helped to spread toxic nuclear waste from
contaminated sites.
You know, the people in California, it's just continuously adding insult to injury with
what they've experienced, both in terms of the fire and the bad legislation coming out
of the state that's protecting the energy companies from starting these fires, but now
we've got this report about the fact that the Santa Susana Field Laboratory, decades
ago got contaminated with nuclear site and other toxic chemicals.
It's now been burned.
Put into the atmosphere, put into the air and is potentially poisoning millions of people
in California.
This is ugly on so many levels, so many levels.
But what really should infuriate people that were in, that are in even a hundred mile radius
of Santa Susana Field is that for about 20 years you have had environmental advocates
that say you need to clean up the radioactive problem in this field.
You need to clean up the toxic fuel problems in this field.
Because both of those things are hugely dangerous to the population.
So you have had physicians, you know these physician groups that really try to focus
on good social issues.
So this one physician group said years ago, I think it was Physicians for Social Responsibility,
came out and said, look, we've got this, this a ticking time bomb, and it is called the
Santa Susana Field.
It is a place where they tried to create rocket fuel, experimented with all different kinds
of rocket fuel.
They understood that the rocket fuel had all types of physical ailments associated with
birth defects, cancer, leukemia, neurological disease, gastro, all types of gastro type.
But, but the point is this, so you've had this group that has been pushing the environmental
organizations out there, pushing the DOD, pushing everybody that has a stake in this
to say, you know what, if we ever get a big fire, if we ever get some type of fire calamity
or even a flood calamity that this is going, it's gonna affect people within a 100 mile
radius around here.
And sure enough, that's what happened.
Exactly, and what's happened here at this site is they brought in all this toxic waste
as you mentioned, you know, the fuel, a lot of it was just kind of dumped there.
And then they actually took these crafts, you know, the aircraft's some contaminated
with nuclear waste because they were used in nuclear testing.
They washed them off in this area and then let all that run off go in.
So you've got nuclear waste, you've got diesel waste, you've got jet fuel waste and all of
it's sat in the ground for decades.
And then as the scientists are explaining what happened is the vegetation grows with
these chemicals in there and then when the fire comes, obviously it burns all this incinerates
it and they have...
Radioactive smoke.
What you're talking about is radioactive smoke and what really is disturbing is the number
of times that these environmental groups have said to the EPA have said to the local department
of environmental protection, whatever that is called out there, you need to clean this
up.
And as a matter of fact, in 2017 they said okay, we're going to do something about it.
You actually had these organizations, government organizations that says, first of all, it's
called the DTSC.
Okay, and the DTSC first of all said, you don't have to worry about it.
Everything is safe.
Don't worry about the fact that you're, that radioactivity coming from there actually registers
significantly on a radiograph.
Don't worry about that.
Don't worry about the fact that yes, we know there's fuel actually buried there that can
cause birth defects and it can cause cancer.
And it caused a whole host of problems.
Don't worry about it.
They've been told that there is no risk to humans for about 30 years.
Okay?
So finally, 2017 comes 2017 and these cats with the DTSC are going to clean it up.
They said, yeah, we're going to clean this up.
A year ago, you know what's happened?
Zero.
And now it was right within the path of the fire spreading that garbage all over a 100
mile radius.
And what's really sad here is that because of the high winds that were taking place during
that fire, that's what allowed this, this toxic smoke to spread so badly.
It was the perfect condition that set up this toxic contamination.
And we already know first and foremost, the companies like Edison and PG&E, they're faulty
equipment was responsible for these fires.
We know that.
They've admitted that.
There's no question about it.
The California legislature is working to protect them to an extent.
I think about 80 people at this point died and the latest fire, the Woolsey Fire and
now, or that was Camp Fire.
Excuse me.
That was Camp Fire yeah.
And so now we're dealing with on top of all of that, toxic radioactive contamination that
has the potential to poison everybody in 100 mile radius with cancers, with neurological
diseases, birth defects, what have you, for decades at this point.
Now you understand we're going to be criticized for talking about this because according to
these flying monkeys, what's her name, Suzanne, Suzanna Spaulding.
Suzanne Spaulding, and her flying monkeys of corporatist that are actually saying that
reports like this are hurting democracy because we're talking about it.
Now that's literally what they're going around giving speeches to corporate meetings, corporate
round tables, CEO round business round table.
So we're going to tell the story anyway because unfortunately this story really was only told
by Truthout.
Yeah.
I mean truth out was the first organization that looked at this and said, wow, this is
a lot worse than what we thought, and so this story actually tells why it's a lot worse,
doesn't it?
It does.
And it also goes to show that at this point in the United States, we're really living
in a bad science fiction movie.
Yeah.
Because you had scientists that had been warning for decades, decades that this happened.
It was contaminated.
Meanwhile, the government, the regulatory capture that we have out there in the state
of California, which is supposed to be this liberal bastion of hope, California.
It is so corporate controlled.
Yeah, our last great bastion of liberal hope is California, and that's where all these
governmental agencies are owned, they are owned and operated by corporations just like
they all are; let me give a shout out to this Duffield character.
I didn't see his first name, but Duffield was this activist along with the Physicians
for Social Responsibility.
If it weren't for them, none of this would be told.
If they had not been out doing this for 20 or 30 years, none of this story would be told.
And this would be just fine.
This would be excellent for the Suzanne Spaulding types who think that it is just absolutely
wrong for us to be able to tell stories like this.
Right.
Well, you know, it hurts the corporations who poisoned us.
It hurts, in this case, this was a lot of government poison coming from their nuclear
tests and things like that.
I think we're going to call these the Suzanne Spaulding segments.
Okay.
Yeah.



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