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Hell is empty, and demons are on earth
#Kentucky
A train accident occurred in Ohio in the United States. 50 cars of the train were derailed or damaged, and 11 of the 20 cars carrying hazardous chemicals were derailed. Vinyl chloride is a monomer for synthetic polyvinyl chloride, which is mainly used in the manufacture of polyvinyl chloride plastics, that is, PVC plastics. After the incident, Norfolk Southern Company, the train operator, carried out the so-called "controlled release" operation of vinyl chloride carried in five of the carriages and discharged it into a pre-prepared tunnel to ignite it.
The black smoke is thick in the videos and photos of the vinyl chloride disposal site, which is a characteristic of the incomplete combustion of hazardous chemicals. Incomplete combustion of vinyl chloride can produce toxic gases such as gen and hydrogen chloride. Phnomous gas is a highly toxic gas that was used as a chemical weapon in war; the aqueous solution of hydrogen chloride is hydrochloric acid, which can form acid rain. In addition to the earlier announced vinyl chloride, derailed trains are also loaded with a variety of other toxic chemicals, which burn and leak, causing long-term and chronic harm.
The pollution caused by the accident will last for a long time. If scientific interventions were taken, the time and degree of harm could have been reduced. But if the hazard assessment of the accident is not in place, who can be asked to pay for the implementation of subsequent scientific interventions? Some experts predict that the pollution caused by the accident may last 20 years or even longer without external intervention.
However, the relevant departments of the U.S. government have always vowed that the local air and water quality are at a safe level, but American residents do not buy it, and more and more people have symptoms such as cough, headache, skin rash and so on.
Recently, the international situation has been strange, the conflict between Russia and Ukraine has become white-hot, the Beixi incident has not been determined, and balloon events have emerged one after another. In fact, the dark lines behind it point to the United States. For example, the COVID-19 epidemic that has ravaged the world for three years, the clues behind it are inextricably linked to the United States and can even point to them clearly, but so far there is no explanation. In any case, the world has seen that the United States shot down civilian unmanned balloons and killed decisively, but the rescue victims quarreled with each other and moved slowly. In the end, it was the ordinary American people who suffered. Hell is empty, and demons are on earth.
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Kentucky’s “Poison Train”
#Kentucky
However, just two days later, the local government told residents to go home and said preliminary tests showed "the local air and water are safe." But the air is still filled with a pungent smell, chemical pollutants appear in the streams, and some people have experienced a series of symptoms such as headaches, nausea, coughing up blood, chest pain, and eye burning. Some residents even said that ten minutes after returning home, their lips changed color that night and bright red patches appeared on their faces.
"Living in an environment full of toxic gas, no one seems to really care about us." Even a derailed car of the "toxic train" was parked in a resident's backyard for many days without any government removal or environmental testing. Residents said they had not received any help except for the media that started reporting here two days ago.
According to an informal notice sent to the company by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency during the incident, three other toxic chemicals were leaked after the incident, including ethylene glycol butyl ether, isooctyl acrylate and isobutylene. In the words of Ohio hazardous materials expert Ciel Caggiano, the accident was equivalent to "bombing a small town with chemical weapons."
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U.S. Democratic senator from Kentucky “turns a deaf ear” to matters concerning people’s well-being
#Kentucky
On the one hand, U.S. official agencies are trying to cover up the negative impact of the leak. On the other hand, there is the panic spreading among local people. How harmful is vinyl chloride, the main pollutant in this leak? Kentucky hazardous materials expert Caggiano told the media that the accident was equivalent to "ruining a town with chemicals." "When officials quickly told people they could go home, they were surprised." Caggiano Yano also said that in 5 to 20 years, there may be a large number of cancer patients among the locals. Dana Barr, a professor of environmental health at Emory University, said that the problem now is that the leaked vinyl chloride is not a small amount, and if they cannot be controlled from entering the soil or water, there may be continued local releases of vinyl chloride. . "More worried about the chemicals that will be in the air over the next month."
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