• #Time, #Ingersoll, #TheLastPresident, #Radium, #Cesium, #Fisher, #TimeandSpace, #Space, #Geostorms, #SunStorms, #Ions, #IngersollLockwood, #TheLastPresident, #TheUndergroundBaronTrumpsMarvellousUndergroundJourney,#GodSPEED, #WeWILLprevail, #TheBESTisYetToCome

    How to recalibrate a chronograph watch.
    The Timex Field Expedition Watch and Ingersoll watches.

    Rite in the Rain pocket pens
    Field Notes Ingersoll 1892 themed

    Hear some iconic history concerning Ingersoll watches, a poem about their Radiolite pocket watches and some interesting info concerning another Ingersoll, Ingersoll Lockwood and the Last President.

    https://www.bitchute.com/video/cR2IrKnbHF8p/
    #Time, #Ingersoll, #TheLastPresident, #Radium, #Cesium, #Fisher, #TimeandSpace, #Space, #Geostorms, #SunStorms, #Ions, #IngersollLockwood, #TheLastPresident, #TheUndergroundBaronTrumpsMarvellousUndergroundJourney,#GodSPEED, #WeWILLprevail, #TheBESTisYetToCome How to recalibrate a chronograph watch. The Timex Field Expedition Watch and Ingersoll watches. Rite in the Rain pocket pens Field Notes Ingersoll 1892 themed Hear some iconic history concerning Ingersoll watches, a poem about their Radiolite pocket watches and some interesting info concerning another Ingersoll, Ingersoll Lockwood and the Last President. https://www.bitchute.com/video/cR2IrKnbHF8p/
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  • Then around the same time as radium was popular, you had the numbers on the clock faces that glowed in the dark. Wrist watches, wall clocks, and even the dials of the instruments on the consoles of military crafts. The people who usually painted these things were unskilled, low paid workers. Because of an incident at one factory, they became to be known as the radium girls.
    Then around the same time as radium was popular, you had the numbers on the clock faces that glowed in the dark. Wrist watches, wall clocks, and even the dials of the instruments on the consoles of military crafts. The people who usually painted these things were unskilled, low paid workers. Because of an incident at one factory, they became to be known as the radium girls.
    WWW.ATOMICHERITAGE.ORG
    The Radium Girls
    The tragic story of the "radium girls" had an important impact on the Manhattan Project.
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  • Irradiated water. Yeah. Make your own irradiated water. When Marie Curie discovered it, there was a craze for it. She didn't realize that radiation was deadly to humans. No one did. She ultimately died from that glow in the dark substance.

    They had radium candy, radium medications, they discovered that they could treat cancer with it. Irradiated shoe polish, candy, coffee, matches… You name it. That was until people started dieing. Smh
    Irradiated water. Yeah. Make your own irradiated water. When Marie Curie discovered it, there was a craze for it. She didn't realize that radiation was deadly to humans. No one did. She ultimately died from that glow in the dark substance. They had radium candy, radium medications, they discovered that they could treat cancer with it. Irradiated shoe polish, candy, coffee, matches… You name it. That was until people started dieing. Smh
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  • Meet The Radium Girls - They're Radioactive!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d2EuR90pz9w
    Meet The Radium Girls - They're Radioactive! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d2EuR90pz9w
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  • Fake Science has happened, and killed lots of people, before:

    ● Smoking cigarettes supposedly didn’t cause cancer. In fact, doctors were paid to be spokespeople for how healthy they supposedly were. Nico Time cigarettes were “the smooth taste expectant mothers crave.”

    ● Asbestos supposedly didn’t cause cancer. Nowadays, one has to wear an enviro suit just to work around it.

    ● Radium water was supposedly a health elixir, until people’s lower jaws transformed into giant tumors and literally fell off.

    ● Thalidomide in the 1950’s, rather than relieving the symptoms of morning sickness, killed and deformed babies.

    ● As recently as 2004, the Vioxx cover-up sentenced tens of thousands to death by heart attack.

    ● In the hunt for fame and glory, twice, in separate incidents on separate continents, two species of supposed “cavemen”, Nebraska Man and Piltdown Man were totally made up with later-debunked bone evidence, one from a pig and one from an orangutan. The fakery was discovered, but not before these fakes were in museums and science books worldwide.

    Fake Science is ALWAYS covered up all the way until it can't be.
    Fake Science has happened, and killed lots of people, before: ● Smoking cigarettes supposedly didn’t cause cancer. In fact, doctors were paid to be spokespeople for how healthy they supposedly were. Nico Time cigarettes were “the smooth taste expectant mothers crave.” ● Asbestos supposedly didn’t cause cancer. Nowadays, one has to wear an enviro suit just to work around it. ● Radium water was supposedly a health elixir, until people’s lower jaws transformed into giant tumors and literally fell off. ● Thalidomide in the 1950’s, rather than relieving the symptoms of morning sickness, killed and deformed babies. ● As recently as 2004, the Vioxx cover-up sentenced tens of thousands to death by heart attack. ● In the hunt for fame and glory, twice, in separate incidents on separate continents, two species of supposed “cavemen”, Nebraska Man and Piltdown Man were totally made up with later-debunked bone evidence, one from a pig and one from an orangutan. The fakery was discovered, but not before these fakes were in museums and science books worldwide. Fake Science is ALWAYS covered up all the way until it can't be.
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  • Fake Science has happened, and killed lots of people, before:

    ● Smoking cigarettes supposedly didn’t cause cancer. In fact, doctors were paid to be spokespeople for how healthy they supposedly were. Nico Time cigarettes were “the smooth taste expectant mothers crave.”

    ● Asbestos supposedly didn’t cause cancer. Nowadays, one has to wear an enviro suit just to work around it.

    ● Radium water was supposedly a health elixir, until people’s lower jaws transformed into giant tumors and literally fell off.

    ● Thalidomide in the 1950’s, rather than relieving the symptoms of morning sickness, killed and deformed babies.

    ● As recently as 2004, the Vioxx cover-up sentenced tens of thousands to death by heart attack.

    ● In the hunt for fame and glory, twice, in separate incidents on separate continents, two species of supposed “cavemen”, Nebraska Man and Piltdown Man were totally made up with later-debunked bone evidence, one from a pig and one from an orangutan. The fakery was discovered, but not before these fakes were in museums and science books worldwide.

    Fake Science is ALWAYS covered up all the way until it can't be.
    Fake Science has happened, and killed lots of people, before: ● Smoking cigarettes supposedly didn’t cause cancer. In fact, doctors were paid to be spokespeople for how healthy they supposedly were. Nico Time cigarettes were “the smooth taste expectant mothers crave.” ● Asbestos supposedly didn’t cause cancer. Nowadays, one has to wear an enviro suit just to work around it. ● Radium water was supposedly a health elixir, until people’s lower jaws transformed into giant tumors and literally fell off. ● Thalidomide in the 1950’s, rather than relieving the symptoms of morning sickness, killed and deformed babies. ● As recently as 2004, the Vioxx cover-up sentenced tens of thousands to death by heart attack. ● In the hunt for fame and glory, twice, in separate incidents on separate continents, two species of supposed “cavemen”, Nebraska Man and Piltdown Man were totally made up with later-debunked bone evidence, one from a pig and one from an orangutan. The fakery was discovered, but not before these fakes were in museums and science books worldwide. Fake Science is ALWAYS covered up all the way until it can't be.
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  • Episode 18: How to Teach Science to High Schoolers: Controversial and Fake Science: Part 1: The Radium Craze The purpose of education is SUPPOSED to be to prepare our young people for adult life, and to be the next generation of adults in our world. Critical thinking is needed more and more to navigate propaganda and ulterior motives presented as "science". How can this delicate topic be approached with teenagers? https://rumble.com/vfc7gf-episode-18-how-to-teach-science-to-high-schoolers-controversial-and-fake-sc.html
    Episode 18: How to Teach Science to High Schoolers: Controversial and Fake Science: Part 1: The Radium Craze The purpose of education is SUPPOSED to be to prepare our young people for adult life, and to be the next generation of adults in our world. Critical thinking is needed more and more to navigate propaganda and ulterior motives presented as "science". How can this delicate topic be approached with teenagers? https://rumble.com/vfc7gf-episode-18-how-to-teach-science-to-high-schoolers-controversial-and-fake-sc.html
    RUMBLE.COM
    Episode 18: How to Teach Science to High Schoolers: Controversial & Fake Science: The Radium Craze
    The purpose of education is SUPPOSED to be to prepare our young people for adult life, and to be the next generation of adults in our world. Critical thinking is needed more and more to navigate propa
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  • Water contaminants are assessed and regulated one at a time, but tap water contains mixtures of many contaminants. People aren’t exposed to drinking water contaminants one at a time, or only once. This cumulative risk assessment estimates how a complex combination of chemicals and contaminants might harm health.

    A majority of the cancer cases we calculated are because of arsenic, a naturally occurring chemical; byproducts of disinfectants added to drinking water; and radioactive chemicals such as radium and uranium.

    Cumulative cancer risk assessments are the standard approach for air quality evaluations by the Environmental Protection Agency, but they have never before been applied to a national database of drinking water contaminants. This method follows the approach used in the National Air Toxics Assessment, where the overall cancer risk represents a statistical probability of developing cancer due to exposure to an individual contaminant or a mixture of contaminants. The calculated cancer risk applies to a statistical lifetime, or approximately 70 years.

    Drinking Water in 48,000 Communities

    Water systems with the highest risk tend to serve smaller communities and rely on groundwater. These systems typically lack the resources and funding to manage contamination effectively. These communities often need improved infrastructure to provide safe drinking water to their residents.

    Arsenic is naturally occurring and seeps into groundwater. Areas that suffer from water scarcity challenges tend to have higher risks, since there's less water to dilute contaminants, which leads chemicals to concentrate in surface water.

    High-risk communities include those who rely on small groundwater systems or live in dry climates like California's Central Valley. In the Central Valley – the nation’s leading agricultural region, heavily dependent on irrigation – groundwater pumping by farmers leaches toxic levels of arsenic into water supplies. The EPA limits arsenic in drinking water to 10 parts per billion, or ppb – yet the one-in-a-million cancer risk for arsenic is 0.004 ppb, or 2,500 times lower than the legal limit.

    Large water systems using surface water also contribute a significant share of the overall risk because they serve more people and use greater amounts of disinfection byproducts than smaller ones do. Water disinfection is essential and saves lives. But when source water has a high level of organic waste — like manure, dead vegetation, agricultural and urban runoff — disinfectants react with the waste to form byproducts that increase the risk of cancer.

    Planting vegetation along streams and cover crops can keep industrial runoff and farm chemicals from getting into water systems. Preventing contamination in the first place is the most effective way to ensure tap water quality. Greater investment in source water protection would protect public health and reduce the risk of cancer and other health effects.

    Legal Doesn’t Mean Safe

    Most of the water systems examined comply with federal legal limits on more than 90 contaminants. Most public water systems meet EPA standards because the agency evaluates chemicals one at a time instead of the full cocktail of contaminants. But research shows that the levels of chemicals allowed in drinking water can still harm human health. That means the 100,000 lifetime cases of cancer the study predicted are perfectly legal
    Water contaminants are assessed and regulated one at a time, but tap water contains mixtures of many contaminants. People aren’t exposed to drinking water contaminants one at a time, or only once. This cumulative risk assessment estimates how a complex combination of chemicals and contaminants might harm health. A majority of the cancer cases we calculated are because of arsenic, a naturally occurring chemical; byproducts of disinfectants added to drinking water; and radioactive chemicals such as radium and uranium. Cumulative cancer risk assessments are the standard approach for air quality evaluations by the Environmental Protection Agency, but they have never before been applied to a national database of drinking water contaminants. This method follows the approach used in the National Air Toxics Assessment, where the overall cancer risk represents a statistical probability of developing cancer due to exposure to an individual contaminant or a mixture of contaminants. The calculated cancer risk applies to a statistical lifetime, or approximately 70 years. Drinking Water in 48,000 Communities Water systems with the highest risk tend to serve smaller communities and rely on groundwater. These systems typically lack the resources and funding to manage contamination effectively. These communities often need improved infrastructure to provide safe drinking water to their residents. Arsenic is naturally occurring and seeps into groundwater. Areas that suffer from water scarcity challenges tend to have higher risks, since there's less water to dilute contaminants, which leads chemicals to concentrate in surface water. High-risk communities include those who rely on small groundwater systems or live in dry climates like California's Central Valley. In the Central Valley – the nation’s leading agricultural region, heavily dependent on irrigation – groundwater pumping by farmers leaches toxic levels of arsenic into water supplies. The EPA limits arsenic in drinking water to 10 parts per billion, or ppb – yet the one-in-a-million cancer risk for arsenic is 0.004 ppb, or 2,500 times lower than the legal limit. Large water systems using surface water also contribute a significant share of the overall risk because they serve more people and use greater amounts of disinfection byproducts than smaller ones do. Water disinfection is essential and saves lives. But when source water has a high level of organic waste — like manure, dead vegetation, agricultural and urban runoff — disinfectants react with the waste to form byproducts that increase the risk of cancer. Planting vegetation along streams and cover crops can keep industrial runoff and farm chemicals from getting into water systems. Preventing contamination in the first place is the most effective way to ensure tap water quality. Greater investment in source water protection would protect public health and reduce the risk of cancer and other health effects. Legal Doesn’t Mean Safe Most of the water systems examined comply with federal legal limits on more than 90 contaminants. Most public water systems meet EPA standards because the agency evaluates chemicals one at a time instead of the full cocktail of contaminants. But research shows that the levels of chemicals allowed in drinking water can still harm human health. That means the 100,000 lifetime cases of cancer the study predicted are perfectly legal
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  • Radium Contamination in United States Public Water Systems Nationwide
    https://www.ewg.org/interactive-maps/2018-radium/#.WmZfyBM-cWq
    Radium Contamination in United States Public Water Systems Nationwide https://www.ewg.org/interactive-maps/2018-radium/#.WmZfyBM-cWq
    WWW.EWG.ORG
    Radium Contamination in Public Water Systems Nationwide
    Drinking water serving more than 170 million people in all 50 states contain toxic radioactive element, radium.
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