Plastic is a cover/a shell/a panel of sorts like TV panels and the stuff inside can get exposed a storm, if something like say a tornado hurls debris which penetrates the shell, exposing the innards which rain carries to the ground.
Well it does happen frequently - no matter what you care to imagine. Just the cost of doing business on big solar power farms.
Blaming the messengers is always an excellent way to deflect and discredit.
Sure, except what you described doesn’t happen. You’ve got two people here telling you that what you’re describing isn’t a thing. You should read about what materials are actually in the finished product. There’s plenty of issues with solar panels, including the dirty manufacture process, but seriously, the panels aren’t leaking stuff into the ground the way you say. They *can*, if the glass breaks, and if the air tight encapsulation breaks and then if it’s left unrepaired for years. Generally those are situations that happen once they are decommissioned and sent to landfills. Go. Read. Learn something. Good luck to you.