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Environment

Military Waste In Our Drinking Water

By Sunaura Taylor and Astra Taylor, AlterNet. Posted August 4, 2006.


The U.S. military is poisoning the very citizens it is supposed to protect in the name of national security.
depleted
'Depleted Uranium' (2003). Oil painting by Sunaura Taylor. You can see more of Sunuara's work at sunnytaylor.org.
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In 1982 our family was living on the southside of Tucson, Ariz., in a primarily working class and Latino neighborhood not far from the airport. That year Sunaura was born with a congenital birth defect known as arthrogryposis, a condition that severely impedes muscle growth and requires her to use an electric wheelchair. On nearby blocks, women were giving birth to babies with physical disabilities and neighbors were dying of cancer at worrisome rates. Over time, we learned that our groundwater was contaminated.

Most of us are vaguely aware that war devastates the environment abroad. The Vietnamese Red Cross counts 150,000 children whose birth defects were caused by their parents' exposure to Agent Orange. Cancer rates in Iraq are soaring as a result of depleted uranium left from the Gulf War. But what about closer to home?

Today the U.S. military generates over one-third of our nation's toxic waste, which it disposes of very poorly. The military is one of the most widespread violators of environmental laws. People made ill by this toxic waste are, in effect, victims of war. But they are rarely acknowledged as such.

On Sept. 11, 2001, we were living together in New York City. In the months following the attack on the World Trade Center, the media and government routinely informed a fearful citizenry of the importance of clean drinking water. Terrorists, they warned, might contaminate public sources with arsenic. We were instructed to purchase Evian along with our duct tape.

In 2003, when the Defense Department sought (and later received) exemptions from America's main environmental laws, the irony dawned on us. The military was given license to pollute air and water, dispose of used munitions, and endanger wildlife with impunity. The Defense Department is willing to poison the very citizens it is supposed to protect in the cause of national security.

Our family knows of something much more dangerous than arsenic in the public aquifers: trichloroethylene, or TCE, a known carcinogen in laboratory animals and the most widespread industrial contaminant in American drinking water.

Disturbingly common

Last week a study was released by the National Academy of Sciences, raising already substantial concerns about the cancer risks and other health hazards associated with exposure to TCE, a solvent used in adhesives, paint and spot removers that is also "widely used to remove grease from metal parts in airplanes and to clean fuel lines at missile sites." The report confirms a 2001 EPA document linking TCE to kidney cancer, reproductive and developmental damage, impaired neurological function, autoimmune disease and other ailments in human beings.

The report has been garnering some publicity, but not as much as it deserves. TCE contamination is disturbingly common, especially in the air, soil and water around military bases. Nationwide millions of Americans are using what Rep. Maurice D. Hinchey, D-NY, has called "TCE-laden drinking water." The Associated Press reports that the chemical has been found at about 60 percent of the nation's worst contaminated sites in the Superfund cleanup program.

"The committee found that the evidence on carcinogenic risk and other health hazards from exposure to trichloroethylene has strengthened since 2001," the study says. "Hundreds of waste sites are contaminated with trichloroethylene, and it is well-documented that individuals in many communities are exposed to the chemical, with associated health risks."

The report urges the EPA to amend its assessment of the threat TCE poses, an action that could lead to stricter regulations. Currently the EPA limits TCE to no more than five parts per billion parts of drinking water. Stricter regulation could force the government to require more thorough cleanups at military and other sites and lower the number to one part per billion.

The EPA found it impossible to take such action back in 2001, because, according to the Associated Press, the agency was "blocked from elevating its assessment of the chemical's risks in people by the Defense Department, Energy Department and NASA, all of which have sites polluted with it." The Bush administration charged the EPA with inflating TCE's risks and asked the National Academy to investigate. Contrary to the administration's hopes, however, the committee's report has reinforced previous findings, which determined TCE to be anywhere from two to 40 times more carcinogenic than previously believed.


Digg!

Sunaura Taylor, a figurative painter, has written on disability for various publications. View her paintings online at www.sunnytaylor.org. Astra Taylor is a writer and documentary filmmaker. Her first book, "Shadow of the Sixties," is forthcoming from the New Press in 2007.

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criminals
Posted by: rsaxto on Aug 4, 2006 3:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We already knew that the Bushies are war criminals and environmental criminals but most of us were unaware of the huge amounts of toxic chemicals used and casually disposed of by the military, corporations and others. No wonder USA life expectancy is so far below that of England, for example. It is because our corporations and governments are poisoning us! Another reason to IMPEACH the rich criminals who profit from us and who poison us. Get these criminals out of office, out of corporations and out of the military before they bomb and poison the entire world.

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» RE: criminals... Posted by: adp3d
» Intentional poisoning? Posted by: colinmeister
» RE: Intentional poisoning? Posted by: blitzmesser
» RE: criminals Posted by: minny
» RE: How do we change that? Posted by: DCostello
» RE: How do we change that? Posted by: dangerouslysane
» RE: criminals Posted by: sanngetalsson
» RE: criminals Posted by: symcokid
» RE: criminals Posted by: DCostello
» RE: criminals Posted by: joeaddison79
» The real criminals Posted by: Conservasaurus
This is happening all over the US
Posted by: Lizmv on Aug 4, 2006 4:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And it's not just TCE causing problems. Just ask the residents of Cape Cod. For over 20 years, they have been trying to get the contamination caused by Otis Air Force Base cleaned up. ALL of Cape Cod's water comes from the sole-source aquifer that lies under Cape Cod and the plume from Otis continues to grow. Is the huge increase in women suffering Hashimoto's Thyroiditis caused by perchlorate (known to inhibit thyroid production) that is leaching from the air force base? The Air Force refuses to release the study. Was my daughter's bladder defect causes by drinking the contaminated water (which was known at the time I was pregnant, but the information wasn't released until a year after her birth)? Do my daughter and I suffer from Hashimoto's because of the contamination? How much of the epidemic of thyroid disease in the US caused by our own military?

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» RE: This is happening all over the US Posted by: Conservasaurus
RE: criminlals
Posted by: commonMan on Aug 4, 2006 4:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"In 1982 our family was living on the southside of Tucson, Ariz". It's a bi-partisan problem. Been going on for decades. Republican or Democrat, Frick or Frack; it's the rich screwing everyone else in the name of profit. Wake up. It's the wealth accumulation oriented society we live in that's the problem.

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otto
Posted by: otto on Aug 4, 2006 5:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks for the informative article. It cvonstantly amazes me how much government - and especially the Bush administration - does and gets away with!

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What? ho hum just another "dumb and dumber' caused problem?
Posted by: concerned Canadian on Aug 4, 2006 5:56 AM   
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Just goes to show again that this is not the land of the brave and the free, unless you translate that to mean that the land belongs to those who are brave enough and feel free enough to do whatever they want because they know that the passivity rate in the US is mighty high when it comes to actually confronting those that do these deeds because they feel comfortable in the knowledge that they will get away with it no problem.
Ever miss a tax payment? they are on you like a hungry vulture at a roadside feast. Ever NOT pay a parking ticket and then try to renew your driver's license? No way. But these perps walk around as if they own the land , so DO THEY???

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US vs. UK life expectancy?
Posted by: charlief on Aug 4, 2006 6:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ok, whilst I appreciate the scare tactics about lower life expectancy here in the US than in "England", I'd really like to see some proof, stats, a link maybe, to substantiate your claim?

As a Brit living in New York for some years now, I know only too well the appalling record of companies [including the AEA in Britain] with regard to contamination of the land surrounding these facilities - whether they be chemical, nuclear or whatever.

Any Brit can tell you about Windscale, a nuclear reprocessing plant [in North West England], built in 1953. It leaked all kinds of radioactive contaminants into the surrounding countryside after a fire in its graphite cores in 1957. The seriousness was routinely covered up. Until Three-Mile-Island in 1979, it was the world's worst nuclear disaster. Both since dwarfed by Chenobyl.

So, as much as I want to vilify the US Defence Department as the next poster on here, let's have some supporting evidence when stats are thrown around.

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» RE: US vs. UK life expectancy? Posted by: Robinhio
Environmental Terrorism
Posted by: rwa on Aug 4, 2006 7:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
These monsters are now blackmailing the world with environmental terrorism. If a nation resists persistent assault, as did Lebanon, oil storage can be bombed and clean-up can be stymied.

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» RE: nvironmental Terrorism Posted by: symcokid
Clean drinkable water?
Posted by: AlienSlave on Aug 4, 2006 9:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now I understand the intense interest in the Triple Border area of South America. The Guarani Aquifer is the biggest reservoir of fresh, potable water in the world. And Guess what!!!!! The terrorist must already be there, so now that Iraq and the middle East is in uncontrollable full blown civil war we will need open a new front in defense of the world’s last clean water supply.
Alienslave

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RE: Freedom and our Military are more important than the "environment"
Posted by: Maryanne on Aug 4, 2006 9:33 AM   
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I don't use questionable language but...

ARE YOU NUTS?

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RE: Freedom and our Military are more important than the "environment"
Posted by: ladywhosmokes on Aug 4, 2006 9:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
WHAT!!!!

Ok, how are we supposed to live if the destruction of Mother Earth continues, all for the sake of "freedom" and our "military." That makes no sense. To sacrifice our Mother Earth for those two illusions is demented.

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distilled water bbbabies at play
Posted by: timeless on Aug 4, 2006 9:53 AM   
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distilled water may help the situation of babies at play poison is the game....hide under the sand another game....kill other self because of rejection,another game....and the children play and die.

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RE: Freedom and our Military are more important than the "environment"
Posted by: DCostello on Aug 4, 2006 10:09 AM   
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Except that our military has never fought for our freedom. The only thing our military fights for is corporate profits. Always has, always will.

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RE: Freedom and our Military blah, blah----damn, Cristo, shoulda known
Posted by: DCostello on Aug 4, 2006 10:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That is was you. You're just as nutty and dangerous about national policy as you are about Christianity. Good to see you again, mush brain.

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More Government BS
Posted by: NoPCZone on Aug 4, 2006 10:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Congress routinely exempts itself from many workplace laws and regulations while requiring it of everyone else. The problem is the basic attitude that rules, laws and regulations apply to everyone else. It's close relative is Bush's declaration that he is incapable of breaking the law in the performance of official duties. Arrogance and elitism, plain and simple.

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Please do not feed the trolls!
Posted by: Lizmv on Aug 4, 2006 10:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Jesse Crist? How original is that!

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US military bases cause health problems all over the world
Posted by: Haz Mom on Aug 4, 2006 10:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Unfortunately there is no shortage of communities with alarming health problems living near military bases with known contamination problems. Here are some more of them:

Fallon childhood leukemia cluster Reno Gazette Journal portal site to dozens of articles about the childhood leukemia cluster near Fallon, NV--home of the Navy's "Top Gun" flight training facility, and most severe leukemia cluster known in history

Sierra Vista childhood leukemia cluster, near Fort Huachuca army base in AZ.

Guam childhood leukemia cluster Pacific Daily News profile of a father fighting to clean up PCBs and other military toxics.

Kelly Air Force Base in San Antonio LA Times: "Cancer Stalks a Toxic Triangle."

Military toxics in Alaska

Marine training base Camp Lejeune in NC has a long history of toxics in the water and contaminated base housing, with terrible health results.

Toxic Kitsap and Polluted Puget Puget Sound Naval Shipyard has a leukemia cluster in their workers.

Pratt & Whitney Jet Engine Factory in Connecticut, where 87 workers have been diagnosed with brain cancer since the 1960s, and 36 have died.

Norwich England Esophageal Cancer Cluster, the British military tested chemical weapons spreading by dropping cadmium, a known carcinogen, on the townspeople of Norwich.

BE SAFE overview of military toxics.

It is easy for this subject to fall into an argument between the right and the left, but we should rise above these party lines. One of the most exposed populations are the enlisted personnel themselves. These exposures on military bases lead to an increase in infertility, birth defects, and children suffering chronic illnesses like cancer, asthma, ADD, autism, etc. Our troops are willing to risk their lives to defend our country, but they never agreed to sacrifice their children's lives as well.

We need to follow Europe's lead in shifting the burden of proof for toxicity to the polluters, not their victims. We need to take a precautionary approach, and find safe substitutes for the toxic chemicals currently in widespread use by the military and others.

For more information, visit Families Against Cancer & Toxics

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RE: Freedom and our Military are more important than the "environment"
Posted by: babs on Aug 4, 2006 11:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why doesn't he just post as Jesus Christ? how many stupid handles does he have?

There's a new breed of troll out there - they're called shills - can't the neocons hire sombody with a brain? Oh wait, I forgot, Bush is their leader so never mind.

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Terry
Posted by: tctech on Aug 4, 2006 12:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article is just the very tip of the iceberg on toxic chemicals and their effects on health. I just finished my second reading of a really well-written and thoroughly documented new book, 'The Hundred Year Lie', How Food and Medicine Are Destroying Your Health', by Randall Fitzgerald, investigative journalist. There is also a website www.hundredyearlie.com. The book documents the health disaster created by the last 100 years, during which synthetic chemicals have been introduced into our air, water, food and medicine at ever-increasing rates, with truly devastating and accelerating consequences for the health and reproduction of our own and many other species. The book is scary as hell, necessarily so; but the good news is that Fitzgerald demonstrates that these toxins can be cleaned out of the body. It is absolutely essential that people learn about issues like this one and global warming, and confront and overcome the inevitable denial that results when we are forced to make changes in our lives. Obviously we can't rely on the government to protect us...we have to make the choices about what goes into our bodies, and for detoxifying what winds up there because it is unavoidable. I highly recommend this book to everyone.

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POLLUTERS SELF- POLLUTED THEIR BRAINCELLS
Posted by: chanceny on Aug 4, 2006 2:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If these guys regard global warming as junk science and pay off faux experts to dissemble their bogus information to contest credible scientific data, why would they acknowledge the poisonous conditions created by their nifty killing machinery? Amass all the statistics you can, show slides of the deformaties exemplefying what such pollutants produce, but it won't crack their reality-protected hardened shells formed by limitless callous greed and just plain sadistic warmongering warprofiteering that compose their governing principles. We need a documentary, ala Al Gore's "Inconvenient Truth", a Michael Moore expose or some vehicle that could reach enough Americans and inject enough anger that change is demanded!!!

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So this is what "trickle down" supply-side economics is all about?
Posted by: Sojourner on Aug 4, 2006 3:04 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It means living in a nation where the enemy seems to be everything alive. The importance of the story told in this piece is to help us all recognize that when measured against levels of toxic pollution, our system is broken.

China kills their own people with pollution. Russia, Poland, Germany, France, and the US likewise. The so-called First World is committing suicide.

I remember reading the novel "Amboy Dukes" as a teenager, where I learned that the gang members' motto was "Live fast, die young, and have a beautiful corpse."

We are now officially as sick as the criminal class. The US has become a criminal enterprise. As with all criminals, we eat our young.

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The Price We Pay for the Military-Industrial Complex
Posted by: hotlipsin61 on Aug 4, 2006 4:23 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You nearly had to turn your head away from the gruesome photo of the deformed child at the beginning of the article.
You can multiply that photo by X and see the results of pollution near a weapons plant in many American towns and cities.
I remember reading about Times Beach, Missouri, a dot of a twon SW of St. Louis which was evacuated by a dioxin spill in the mid eighties. Let's say that dioxin is not something you add to Kool-Aid.
Anyway, lots of us work in weapons factories across the country and who knows how many of us are infected with military effluence. Are we willing to pay a very hefty price for being a part of the military-industrial complex?
We've bragged and boasted about how powerful our military is to the world, and now people's health is suffering.
Northwest of Los Angeles is a small town called Simi Valley, where high levels of waste from beryllium, molybdenum, copper, were found at the now closed Santa Susana Lab and there have been a number of former workers whose lives are wrecked from the contaminants left over from the Cold War lab.
Numerous lawsuits were filed. It takes years to get a judgment.
The area near the 118 Freeway heading into Simi is eerily void of life. Only a few homes are located there. Only the hardiest of chaparral and drought resistant vegitation can survive in this environment. There are few trees. The landscape is bleak.
Yes, the EPA says cleanup efforts are underway, but the money isn't enough and there are too few workers available to do this dirty and hazardous work.
We're trying, at least, to understand what is going on at Rayhteon, Westinghouse, General Dynamics, Northrop, Boeing, TRW, etc. I know we all have to work, but ask yourself what price do we pay for the catastrophe we've created.
This is an indictment on the lives we lead. This is our lasting legacy. It is a foorprint that can't be erased from our mental landscape.
We could quit making weapons but that would swell the unemployment ranks. Which way do we go?

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water filtration resources & FACTS
Posted by: waterfilters on Aug 4, 2006 9:18 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Solid carbon block technology is considered the most effective method for reducing contaminants of health concern. In addition to the removal of cysts, a solid carbon block filter also reduces:
· chemicals;TCE, MTBE
· pesticides;
· herbicides;
· disinfection byproducts;
· heavy metals;
· cysts;crypto bug
· asbestos
· particulates
· chlorine.
. Arsenic
Chris Anderson
waterfilters@gmail.com
10 years Independent distributor Multipure Drinking Water Systems
#223193
www.multipureusa.com/canderson

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They planned to turn us all into nuclear waste:
Posted by: pjrsullivan on Aug 4, 2006 9:27 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If our nuclear war criminal elite had it to do over again, they may have made a different choice. As it stands, they planned all along to exterminate us with the use of nuclear weapons.

So if you child gets cancer or grows an extra head from drinking water contaminated with TCE from cleaning out the fuel lines of a missile, what the heck, that missile was designed to kill us all so that we would all die before we figured out that they are poisoning us.

America is more than an ordinary criminal enterprise, it is no longer a viable organization. At the moment the decision was made to go ahead with a build-up of nuclear weapons, and the plans were made to use them, any agreements that we had with our "Master" class, ended.

America is and has been operating strictly on the basis of Force and Fraud, a classic good old fashioned Extortion Murder racket.

Our nuclear war criminal elite have already pulled the nuclear trigger on us, though most people find it hard to believe. We continue to exist due only to the fact of the continuing intervention into our world from some still unknown "Higher Level Power."

.

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one mistake
Posted by: Status Quo Exile on Aug 5, 2006 7:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
why do we need nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons? because "they" have them too. why do they have them? because we developed them to combat the pervious generations of weapons, e.g. h-bomb, a-bomb, ICBM's. why were those developed? so that fewer people would be in the way of machine guns, etc. and why were those developed? so people would be out of range of a sword or canon. why were those invented? longer range than a knife. why is a knife a weapon instead of a tool? because some fucker 20,000 years ago figured out that you could end an argument really fast with one. evolution of weaponry. darwinism in the arms race. and I just can't wait to see what crawls out of the soup next.
humanity's one mistake was not stopping this accelerating cycle of its own destruction. and now...no one even wants to make the effort. why are weapons made? war. why is war made? greed. there is not one war in history that wasn't started by greed. and now greed is fashionable. what next?

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» RE: one mistake Posted by: maxpayne
Where are the "pro-life" shenanigans when you need them the most?
Posted by: maxpayne on Aug 6, 2006 3:07 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Oh, I forgot, they must be bribed. According to them, poisoning and killing people is "pro-life". I guess for them, if they want to get all the bribes they can get, all they got to do is dangle a fetus around on the telly and government and distract the nation into being POISONED ! Tell the "pro-lifers" to protest the military instead of abortion clinics and they'll tell you the same old lie "support the troops" bullshit. If it weren't for the Laci Peterson distraction, the American people would have held our government accountable for drowning US into a war with Iraq. If it weren't for the media goose-chasing on Chanda vs Condit, our corrupt government wouldn't be able to allow 9/11 to slip through. Just terrorism, "pro-life" bullshit is a business in the worst regards.

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Do Not Need Terrorists
Posted by: PeaceThinkTank.org on Aug 7, 2006 8:32 AM   
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I bet if we counted up all of the dead bodies caused by the military and its pollution of the whole world, that it would dwarf by comparison all of those killed by all terrorists worldwide.

We do not need terrorists when the US military is doing it to us right here at home.

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H.A.A.R.P.
Posted by: saywhat on Aug 9, 2006 10:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You might want to view "Holes in Heaven? H.A.A.R.P. And Advances In Tesla Technology." It's about weather modification, mind control, and advanced surveillance.
IT'S HAPPENING.

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Let's fix the gaping head wound....with a bandaid!
Posted by: AFWXMAN on Aug 24, 2006 9:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes the military made mistakes regarding toxic waste in the past, the same way many civilian corporations did. Love canal, Three Mile Island, and DDT overspraying were all civilian issues. These days the military bends over backwards to follow all federal and state environmental regulations. They don't do this because they're altruistic; they do it because fighting lawsuits is a pain in the butt!

Do you know what I see civilians doing when military bases go away? Often I see them overdeveloping the heck out of it! I don't think the upper peninsula in Virginia would have any green areas left if it weren't for military reservations. The snowy plowers would be closer to extinction if it weren't for Vandenberg AFB. The only place I've seen wild antelope in Cheyenne WY was at FE Warren AFB. Pointing the finger at the military won't solve this type of problem. Respect for the environment and for the value of green spaces is the only thing that will help, but that requires a societal change.

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