Dear Artvoice Editor,
I wish to highly commend you on the excellent and no holds barred coverage of Niagara's environmental radiation history - and now current contamination nightmare - so eloquently reported by Louis Ricciuti and Geoff Kelly in "The Bomb That Fell On Niagara: The Sphere" featured at Artvoice:
As a frequent contributor of radiation-based articles at "Axis of Logic," I am quite familiar with the work of the two advisers quoted in this piece, Tedd Weyman of the outstanding Uranium Medical Research Centre, and Bob Nichols, an acclaimed Project Censored Award winning writer.
Kudos to your staff for snagging an interview with them, as these gentlemen are certainly two of the most knowledgeable and uncompromised Uranium experts your writers could have selected to interview.
The radioactive contamination of the US has been kept under wraps by a crooked government and its willing accomplice, the sold-out US mainstream media, since the early 1940's. As such, it is critical that forthright publications such as yours be read and supported. Thus, I am circulating this letter widely in the hope that others around the world will also read this important piece.
How many Americans even realize the US is the most-nuked nation in the world? Dr. Doug Rokke has dedicated his efforts to getting Uncle Sam to clean up his dirty messes http://tinyurl.com/4s6qwp but who will tell people these health-destroying, toxic, hazardous contaminated sites even exist... if not outstanding publications such as yours?
Kudos to you for going courageously where most other news sites do not go!
Best,
Cathy Garger
Maryland
Are the remains of an experimental reactor buried on the Niagara Falls storage site?
This is going to seem complicated and take a long way to get where it’s going. So here’s the gist, right upfront: Possibly, in Lewiston, are buried the remnants of an experimental nuclear reactor dating from the 1940s. This reactor would have been part of a secret program to weaponize poisonous materials—a program with roots in the study of poison gases in the First World War and whose culmination is found today in the use of depleted uranium munitions around the world.
Sure, it sounds like a plot inspired by Dr. Strangelove. But read on.
Amid the radioactive slurry and scrap interred in the 10-acre interim containment facility at the Niagara Falls Storage Site in Lewiston is a curiosity: a hollow industrial steel ball, 38 feet in diameter.
You won’t find that house-sized steel ball on any waste materials manifest, at least not on any manifest released to the public by the US Army Corp of Engineers, which is the site’s caretaker, or the US Department of Energy, which owns the site and the hazardous waste buried there.
The ball exists in aerial photographs taken of the site in the mid 1940s, however, and it appears to have been....
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