Posted on 10/13/2014 8:05:09 PM PDT by bgill
Someone else suggested that all the IRS docs are in there too.
I think the logical question here....if you refuse these ashes of former toxic material burned to sterile ashes....what of the 60,000 other truckloads of former toxic material burned to ashes which got hauled into Louisiana over the past fifty years?
I can see some idiot Senator introducing a bill which authorized $500 million of federal money for his cousin’s shrimp boat operation to just haul the barrels out to the gulf and dump them there.
hahahahahahahahaha..........good one, I needed that laugh.
A link to this thread has been posted on the Ebola Surveillance Thread
Ashes are sterile. They can carry chemicals but not biological agents.
Its not about the CDC lying or telling the truth.
Store it with the nuke waste.
Or better, mix it with the nuke waste first, and then store it in the nuke waste dump.
The question was raised how far did the cleanup go?
Was there sheet rock and ceiling tile and floor tile and doors and frames and electronic monitors and IV trees and bed and etc and etc
RE: ashes
Oh yes...... I forgot and this is a biggie, a very big biggie.
It was reported that the patient received dialysis. That is a desperation move to stave off law suits from relatives pissed off because the patient died. Consider the machine, the special room and all associated with that.
That raises the even bigger question...... where in all this heroic action that is actually killing the good guys rendering the treatment is the death panel.
It would seem the death panel should have ruled out dialysis and all the totally ineffective heroic measures that were useless
I brought that up in an an article yesterday regarding a proposed bloodtest for ebola that would instantly provide results from a pinprick. What do you do with the large number of used test kits? (consider them being used at airport screening at customs and hospitals for all emergency admissions...)
And we’re to assume that water treatment plant methods are sufficient to deal with any vomit/diarrhea/bodily fluids that enter the system before infectious people are diagnosed/isolated (and if/when the number of infected overwhelms to the point that those afflicted are confined to their homes)?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.