Heeding nuclear expert Arnie Gundersen's call to monitor and share radiation data, a St. Louis citizen reporter has demonstrated with a Geiger counter on Saturday that background radiation in St. Louis Missouri was 178 times normal after the rainout, according to ENEWS. Gundersen predicted that as Japan burns contaminated materials, radiation levels in the United States and Canada would escalate in rainouts for another year.
"St. Louis rain sample shows radiation dose on August 20 almost triple previous high reading," ENEWS reported Sunday.
"Fukushima is far from stabilized according to energy advisor veteran with 39 years of nuclear power engineering experience, Arnie Gundersen who told Solar IMG Saturday that Americans, not just in the northwest, are unaware of being rained on with Fukushima nuclear hot particles and eating Fukushima contaminated food because the US government has deliberately minimized the catastrophe, partially due to a pact Secretary of State Hillary Clinton signed with Japan."Gundersen, with a team of other scientists, intends to prove government statements about Fukushima are false." (http://www.examiner.com/human-rights-in-national/radiating-americans-wit...)
"The Japanese are allowing the contaminated material to be burned as long as it's less than 7000 Becquerels. What they're also allowing is, if you have a high concentration material and a low concentration material, you can average those two out."
"The radioactive contaminated material being burned in one prefecture in Japan goes into the neighboring prefecture and contaminates it.
"It eventually ends up into the Pacific Northwest, either into B.C., Oregon, Washington or California. The process of burning the radioactive material means they're kicking the can down the road."
"He said that, "now with lots of citizens having Geiger counters," they can help with the new study by wiping a surface one meter by one meter with a cloth after a rainout, and placing that cloth under the Geiger counter."If you get a positive reading on the cloth, I'd like to see the cloth," he said.
















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