Black Star shows tracks of Alpha particles in an Ape's lung much like yours
Notice: It is necessary for public health and because the many nuclear reactors are venting
radioactive gases and steam at nights and on weekends that all residents must stay inside
at nights and on weekends. Especially hard hit are the cities listed in YRTW ELE.
See the latest Your Radiation This Week for the most recent list of contaminated cities.
Bob Nichols
Black Star shows tracks of Alpha particles in an Apes lung much like yours
`
Good Day! This is “Your Radiation This Week ” for the past 2 weeks. These are the recorded Total Gamma Radiation in CPM and Sievert measured highs that affected people around the United States.
YRTW ELE is published every two weeks on Saturday. ELE is an acronym for “Extinction Level Event.” The amount of Rad in the air now Dooms Humanity to a relatively quick Extinction; Done In by our own war toys, how moronic is that! I can’t say it any plainer than that. The next publication dates are May 6 and May 20, 2017 on the Road to Extinction.
Table of Poisoned American Cities – Total Gamma Radiation
CPM and nanoSieverts by City and State
#
CPM,
CITY
STATE
#
nSv/Hr
10,933
CPM,
ColoradoSprgs
CO.
-
9,558
CPM,
Raleigh,
NC.
-
9,293
CPM,
Spokane,
WA.
-
8,848
CPM,
Portland,
ME.
-
8,775
CPM,
Little Rock,
AR.
-
8,335
CPM,
Navajo Lake,
NM.
-
8,174
CPM,
Denver,
CO.
-
8,017
CPM,
Kearney,
NE.
202
nSv/Hr
7,997
CPM,
Yuma,
AZ.
-
7,995
CPM,
Riverside,
CA.
-
7,897
CPM,
Worcester,
MA.
99
nSv/Hr
7,797
CPM,
Pierre,
SD.
-
7,688
CPM,
Fresno,
CA.
-
7,603
CPM,
Idaho Falls,
ID.
-
7,503
CPM,
Tucson,
AZ.
-
7,468
CPM,
San Diego,
CA.
114
nSv/Hr
7,465
CPM,
Bakersfield,
CA.
-
7,368
CPM,
Anaheim,
CA.
-
7,362
CPM,
Casper,
WY.
-
7,341
CPM,
Augusta,
GA.
-
7,289
CPM,
Louisville,
KY.
-
7,121
CPM,
Atlanta,
GA.
-
7,114
CPM,
El Paso,
TX.
-
6,807
CPM,
Pittsburgh,
PA.
-
6,782
CPM,
Los Angeles,
CA.
81
nSv/Hr
6,749
CPM,
Bismarck,
ND.
-
6,710
CPM,
Grand Junction,
CO.
-
6,672
CPM,
Boston,
MA.
-
6,669
CPM,
Concord,
NH.
-
6,666
CPM,
Harrisonburg,
VA
-
6,663
CPM,
Kansas City,
KS.
-
6,625
CPM,
Mason City,
IA.
-
6,569
CPM,
San Bernardino,
CA.
-
6,530
CPM,
Rochester,
NY.
76
nSv/Hr
6,458
CPM,
Phoenix,
AZ.
96
nSv/Hr
6,371
CPM,
Cleveland,
OH.
-
6,352
CPM,
Champaign,
IL.
-
6,189
CPM,
Dodge City,
KS.
-
6,086
CPM,
Shawano,
WI.
-
6,065
CPM,
Laredo,
TX.
-
6,050
CPM,
Rapid City,
SD.
-
5,997
CPM,
Tulsa,
OK.
-
5,953
CPM,
Reno,
NV.
-
5,928
CPM,
Hartford,
CT.
-
5,886
CPM,
Wichita,
KS.
-
5,877
CPM,
Billings,
MT.
-
5,861
CPM,
Virgina Beach,
VA.
-
5,858
CPM,
Charleston,
WV.
-
5,754
CPM,
Providence,
RI.
-
5,751
CPM,
Richland,
WA.
87
nSv/Hr
5,744
CPM,
Corpus Christi,
TX.
-
5,714
CPM,
Boise,
ID.
-
5,697
CPM,
Omaha,
NE.
127
nSv/Hr
5,656
CPM,
Lincoln,
NE.
-
5,641
CPM,
Detroit,
MI.
-
5,640
CPM,
Oklahoma City,
OK.
-
5,601
CPM,
Shreveport,
LA.
-
5,499
CPM,
Albuquerque,
NM.
-
5,477
CPM,
New York City,
NY.
68
nSv/Hr
5,455
CPM,
Madison,
WI.
-
5,441
CPM,
Tallahassee,
FL.
65
nSv/Hr
5,376
CPM,
Des Moines,
IA.
-
5,331
CPM,
Salt Lake City,
UT.
-
5,203
CPM,
Lexington,
KY.
-
5,020
CPM,
Ft Worth,
TX.
5,013
CPM,
Ft Smith,
AR.
-
4,896
CPM,
Lockport,
NY.
4,889
CPM,
Memphis,
TN.
-
4,836
CPM,
Duluth,
MN.
-
4,786
CPM,
Richmond,
VA.
-
4,747
CPM,
Amarillo,
TX.
-
4,625
CPM,
Montgomery,
AL.
62
nSv/Hr
4,528
CPM,
St George,
UT.
-
4,477
CPM,
Dallas,
TX.
60
nSv/Hr
4,433
CPM,
Birmingham,
AL.
53
nSv/Hr
4,423
CPM,
Indianopolis,
IN.
-
4,408
CPM,
San Francisco,
CA.
-
4,388
CPM,
Aurora,
IL.
-
4,340
CPM,
Burlington,
VT.
63
nSv/Hr
4,320
CPM,
Knoxville,
TN.
-
4,314
CPM,
Carlsbad,
NM.
-
4,311
CPM,
Philadelphia,
PA.
57
nSv/Hr
4,252
CPM,
Chicago,
IL.
60
nSv/Hr
4,142
CPM,
Paducah,
KY.
-
4,092
CPM,
Houston,
TX.
53
nSv/Hr
3,868
CPM,
Nashville,
TN.
-
3,867
CPM,
Eureka,
CA.
-
3,823
CPM,
Miami,
FL.
-
3,691
CPM,
San Jose,
CA.
51
nSv/Hr
3,509
CPM,
Baton Rouge,
LA.
45
nSv/Hr
3,491
CPM,
St. Louis,
MO.
58
nSv/Hr
3,314
CPM,
Yaphank,
NY.
46
nSv/Hr
3,111
CPM,
Anchorage, MIA
AK.
55
nSv/Hr
2,928
CPM,
Tampa,
FL.
37
nSv/Hr
2,867
CPM,
San Antonio,
TX.
53
nSv/Hr
2,675
CPM,
Washington,
D.C.
49
nSv/Hr
2,018
CPM,
Fairbanks,
AK.
42
nSv/Hr
Park, Tokyo,
JP
56
nSv/Hr
Fukushima Liability set by Japanese Court
What? Sue TEPCO and the Government of Japan over Fukushima Daiichi … and Win! Incredible! You bet your bottom dollar!
Lead Attorney Katsuyoshi Suzuki is the Super Lawyer who beat the combined forces the Tokyo Electric Power Company [TEPCO,] a huge corporation and the Japanese government. He and the legal team are to be applauded world wide.
The District Court ordered “the two to pay damages totaling ¥38.55 million to 62 of 137 plaintiffs from 45 households located near the plant, which suffered a triple meltdown caused by the tsunami, awarding ¥70,000 to ¥3.5 million in compensation to each plaintiff.”
As one person wryly observed “it’s a judgement against a shell company and a bankrupt extinct-ed country. So what? there is nothing there.”
As they say, we will see what happens. The Japan Times said “In first, the ruling was the first of 30 similar class-action suits filed nationwide involving more than 10,000 plaintiffs.”
YRTW ELE readers can read the Japan Times article “In First, Government and TEPCO Found Liable for Fukushima Disaster.” Anyone can lookup the case on my Soc Media accounts. See under “Resources” below.
Have a wonderful radioactive weekend and remember to Dodge the Rads, it’s dangerous out there.
These stations’ Radiation equals Total Gamma Radiation. Gamma Radiation Monitors are reporting publicly at all these locations.
CPM. “Although we can’t see it, taste it, smell it or hear it we can measure radiation and observe its effects. One way to measure radiation which the United States Environmental Protection Agency [EPA] has chosen to use on its radiation websites is in Counts Per Minute or CPM. Each Count is One Radioactive Decay.” Quote from the ‘Your Radiation This Week’ Apr 3, 2015.
Radiation destruction of chitin, IAEA, by Ershov, B.G.; Sukhov, N.L.; Nud’ga, L.A.; Baklagina, Yu.G.; Kozhevnikova, L.G.; Petropavlovskii, G.A. (Institute of Physical Chemistry, Moscow (Russian Federation)
EPA Proposal Allows Radiation Exposure in Drinking Water Equivalent to 250 Chest X-Rays a Year
“Forty-five (45) years later, the Nuclear States officially raise the amounts of “permitted radiation levels” by hundreds and sometimes thousands of times to maintain the utter and absolute dominance of the Nuclear State over everything, everywhere, for all time. No tolerance given.”
“News Release, New Aerial Survey Identifies More Than 100 Million Dead Trees in California,” USDA Office of Communications, “This brings the total number of dead trees since 2010 to over 102 million,”
“Facing a Dying Nation,” a line from the 1979 Tribal Rock Musical HAIR. A scene with “Facing a Dying Nation” starring Treat Williams from the movie is here: The character Pfc. Berger is KIA in Vietnam in 1968. Or YouRepeat.com
sie·vert, ˈsēvərt/, noun Physics, noun: sievert; plural noun: sieverts; symbol: Sv, the SI unit of dose equivalent (the biological effect of ionizing radiation), equal to an effective dose of a joule of energy per kilogram of recipient mass. Google: Sievert
Bob is a long-standing senior fellow with VT Foreign Policy since 2010. He is also a Project Censored Award winner, a former correspondent for the San Francisco Bay View newspaper, and a frequent contributor to various online publications.
He reports on war, politics, and the two nuclear weapons labs in the Bay Area. Nichols is writing a book based on 20 years of nuclear war in Central Asia. He is a former employee of an Army Ammunition Plant.
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