To: mikegi
I guess that guy in Connecticut can start unwrapping his house now.
2 posted on
02/13/2003 4:38:35 PM PST by
SamAdams76
('Faithless is he that says farewell when the road darkens')
To: SamAdams76
lol
To: SamAdams76
Found near death in his house the Connecticut man said: "The ony problem with all this plastic is that you cannot breath after a while."
I have a romm here I though about cordoning off with plastic and duct tape. My fear was that toxic items(not weapons) may be trapped inside the space I was creating. Cleaning all the toxic stuff out of my basement would give AQ about a week to hit me. So I am screwed.
7 posted on
02/13/2003 4:46:29 PM PST by
AdA$tra
To: SamAdams76
3M stock tip...
SELL! SELL!
To: SamAdams76
lmao
16 posted on
02/13/2003 4:56:26 PM PST by
AAABEST
To: SamAdams76
Well ... I just read here on FR that 2 middle eastern looking men just tried to buy a crop duster ... false alarm ... I don't think so!!
20 posted on
02/13/2003 5:03:02 PM PST by
CyberAnt
( Yo! Syracuse)
To: SamAdams76
The informant described a detailed plan that an al Qaeda cell operating in either Virginia or Detroit had developed a way to slip past airport scanners with dirty bombs encased in shoes, suitcases, or laptops, sources told ABCNEWS. Hold on just a minute.
My BS meter just pegged, and my monitors did not.
There is no way someone is going to lug around cesium 137, Co60, Sr90, etc. in a shoe or briefcase for more than an hour or two. No way.
Period.
There is adequate industrial experience so that the NRC and security agencies know all about what would happen, even assuming there were no radiation monitors around.
Just who is doing the BS'ing, and for what reasons, I will leave for others to speculate.
To: SamAdams76
Will Home Depot return my duct tape if I can get it all back on the rolls?
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