The RoanokeSlant

This file is a US personal journal of commentary of examples of the Roanoke Times and Liberal Media Slant...... lbhagen@aol.com

Friday, December 15, 2006

 

Cancer and the 500 Nuclear Air Bursts

Roanoke Times, 12/15/06, Pg 1: Breast cancer rates plunge 7% in 2003. May have a connection to stopping hormone therapy in 2002.
-
It is highly unlikely that a significant change would occur within one year of stopping hormone therapy. Most cancers take considerable time to develop.
There also are other data trends for breast cancer and prostate cancer and lung cancer that indicate we may be close to a major downturn in cancer diagnosis and illness and death.
-
The most likely cause of the major cancer pandemic we have experienced during the last 50 years is the nuclear fallout from 500 nuclear-air-bursts that occurred from 1944 through 1965.
-
This fallout from US and other country tests swept across the US for 20 years moving west to east with the prevailing winds and jet-stream.
-
The primary sources of exposure for people came from food chain “accumulators”. The two accumulators that caused the most damage was milk cows and tobacco products.
-
Anyone doubting the grass-to-milk pass-through should try drinking raw milk the first week cows are let out to pasture in the spring. The onion taste and odor is so strong that typically many batches of milk are dumped and not allowed to go to market.
-
The tobacco products are a significant risk because the large leaves catch large amounts of dust falling on them and the growing and processing systems do not scrub or washout these particles. They then are inhaled directly into the lungs and plastered there with tars.
-
The government clearly understood the fallout-milk connection and belatedly had a funded program in place to compensate farmers who were required to dump nuclear-contaminated milk. I lived in the Catskills and the first time I remember the news reports of milk dumping across Pennsylvania (directly upwind from us) was after nuclear-air-burst tests in the Pacific in the late 1960's. Apparently this program was way too little and way too late.
-
This problem was well understood back in the 1950’s and in 1963 Kruschev and Kennedy signed the treaty banning atmospheric nuclear tests. It appears that the data upon which this treaty was based has not been made public. This data was clearly so disturbing that at the height of the Cold War the US and USSR stopped this activity.
-
Radioactive-Iodine appears to be the only material that the government accepts as directly related to nuclear testing. This is of course totally inconsistent with the aftermath of the Chernobyl accident and the major secret studies of children’s teeth that have been conducted for many years and the government hysteria over home-radon.
-
If you were born between 1930 and 1950 you were probably consuming large amounts of milk during the 1940’s and 1950’s. That would make you between 75 and 55 now. So the bottom-line is that those most affected by the milk issue will soon be gone. And IF the fallout is the “primary” contributor to the breast and prostate cancer rates then they should drop significantly after we’re gone. The tobacco time-frame is shifted by approximately 20 years and there are considerable differences in smoking rates between men and women over time. Also it appears that tobacco may continue to be a problem even without the fallout component. A key indicator of the connection was made many years ago in studying and comparing uranium miners who smoked with those who didn’t smoke with non-miners.
-
This hypothesis makes sense from a government point of view. It was the government(s) that did the testing, they had massive data in the 1960’s that they acted upon, they could not fix what was already consumed, and admitting the cause-and-effect relationship would have resulted in massive costs and adverse reactions from the populace. Perhaps someone some day will use the FofI Act to get all the data JFK had when he made the most important decision of his life and ours.
-




<< Home

Archives

February 2005   March 2005   April 2005   May 2005   June 2005   July 2005   August 2005   September 2005   October 2005   November 2005   December 2005   January 2006   February 2006   March 2006   April 2006   May 2006   June 2006   July 2006   August 2006   September 2006   October 2006   November 2006   December 2006   January 2007   February 2007   March 2007   April 2007   May 2007   June 2007   July 2007   August 2007   September 2007   October 2007   November 2007   December 2007   January 2008   February 2008   March 2008   April 2008   May 2008   June 2008   July 2008   August 2008   September 2008   October 2008   November 2008   December 2008   January 2009   February 2009   March 2009   April 2009   May 2009   June 2009   July 2009   August 2009   September 2009   October 2009   November 2009   December 2009   January 2010   February 2010   March 2010   April 2010   May 2010   June 2010   July 2010   August 2010   September 2010   October 2010   November 2010   December 2010   January 2011   February 2011   March 2011   April 2011   May 2011   June 2011   July 2011   August 2011   September 2011   October 2011   November 2011   December 2011   January 2012   February 2012   March 2012   April 2012   May 2012   June 2012   July 2012   August 2012   September 2012   October 2012   November 2012   December 2012   January 2013   February 2013   March 2013   April 2013   May 2013   June 2013   July 2013   August 2013   September 2013   October 2013   November 2013   December 2013   January 2014   February 2014   March 2014   April 2014   May 2014   June 2014   July 2014   August 2014   September 2014   October 2014   November 2014   December 2014   January 2015   February 2015   March 2015   April 2015   May 2015   June 2015   July 2015   August 2015   September 2015   October 2015   November 2015   December 2015   January 2016   February 2016   March 2016   April 2016   May 2016   June 2016   July 2016   August 2016   September 2016   October 2016   November 2016   December 2016   January 2017   February 2017   March 2017   April 2017   May 2017   June 2017   July 2017   August 2017   September 2017   October 2017   November 2017   December 2017   January 2018   February 2018   March 2018   April 2018   May 2018   June 2018   July 2018   August 2018   September 2018   October 2018   November 2018   December 2018   January 2019   February 2019   March 2019   April 2019   May 2019   June 2019   July 2019   August 2019   September 2019   October 2019   November 2019   December 2019   January 2020   February 2020   March 2020   April 2020   May 2020   June 2020   July 2020   August 2020   September 2020   October 2020   November 2020   December 2020   January 2021   February 2021   March 2021   April 2021   May 2021   June 2021   July 2021   August 2021   September 2021   October 2021   November 2021   December 2021   January 2022   February 2022   March 2022   April 2022   May 2022   June 2022   July 2022   August 2022   September 2022   October 2022   November 2022   December 2022   January 2023   February 2023   March 2023   April 2023   May 2023   June 2023   July 2023   August 2023   September 2023   October 2023   November 2023   December 2023   January 2024   February 2024   March 2024   April 2024   May 2024   June 2024   July 2024   August 2024   September 2024   October 2024   November 2024   December 2024  

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?