Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Fukushima Fish Swims In The Food Chain (Video)


Before It's News | Popular Health

Fukushima Fish Swims In The Food Chain (Video)

By Susan Duclos
RT visits the fisheries closest to the Japan's crippled Fukushima nuclear plant and while it is explained in the beginning of the video below by workers that they do measurements and take readings and haven't had to dump a whole load as of yet,  RT says they were surprised to find out "most of" the seafood they saw will never make it to the shelves at fish markets or restaurant tables. Economist Hirokai Kurosaki explains in the interview towards the end, that almost everything caught within a 30 kilometer radius around Fukushima is all radiated and TEPCO is paying local fisherman for it, so they are happy to remain silent.
The worry is that the radiated fish are swimming in the food chain, not just for Japan but throughout the Pacific ocean which continues to have hundreds of tons of radioactive water poured in to it daily.

 



 



 


 


Susan Duclos owns/writes Wake up America

 



Dead Bald Eagles: Mystery Illness Kills More Than A Dozen In Utah Weeks After RADCON 5 Alert Was Issued!!!!!

Another story of mass animal deaths is brought to us from youtube videographer Ben Time Traveller from Utah of more than a dozen dead Bald Eagles that have died from a mysterious virus which has left them with tremors then full blown seizures, leading to their deaths. Does this have anything to do with extremely high levels of radiation that have been reported in recent days in Utah? Before It's News reporter Susan Duclos put out a story on November 11th of a RADCON 5 Alert issued in Salt Lake City, Utah. Extremely high radiation levels have also been reported in St. George, Utah numerous times recently. Is this mass bird death a metaphor for what is happening all over America?
SALT LAKE CITY — Since Dec. 1, 13 bald eagles have died in Utah, and no one knows why.
"All the birds that have been brought in have varying degrees of paralysis, weakness in the wings and legs, and then very quickly moving in to having tremors then full blown seizures," said DaLyn Erickson, Wildlife Rehabilitation Center of Northern Utah. "Once the seizures start, that's pretty much it."
"Typically, we'll get 3 bald eagles a year," Erickson said. "We're concerned just because it's something new. It's something we don't know. We have yet to ever see this quantity of birds coming in of one species in this short amount of time."
The birds have been found throughout northern and central Utah in Box Elder, Weber, Davis, Tooele, and Utah counties.
"We just don't know. We hope to have more information next week. Some more of the results should be coming in at that point, so we should know more then. But right now we just don't know what's going on," Erickson said.
"We'll be here Christmas morning taking care of these birds," said Erickson.





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