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PORTLAND OREGON – Nuclear Guardian News Service announces Nuclear Weather Forecast Newswire for community and college and K-12 news. (Info: by email or website.)
Focus is on communities within 25 miles of working or closed nuclear reactors, campus reactors, test grounds, downwinders, uranium refineries, dumps, mines, transportation corridors or affected by global nuclear disasters; and health affects of[1] nuclear waste and fallout on kids, learning, oceanic- (whales, dolphins, salmon, tuna, star fish, tide pool life) and land-based species like mammals (including dogs, cats, people, cows, horses), invertebrates, insects, butterflies, bees, bacteria, viruses[2], forests, flowers, plants and crops[3] documented by scientists and public health spokespersons worldwide. Documentation[4] [5] is in an objective e-book with 9,011 headline-&-descriptive-blurb links to 25,000-to-35,000 pieces of published mainstream and essential scientific documentation[6] accessible by search engine[7] [8] [9] [10] and accompanied by a subjective interpretive narrative e-book.
NWF is founded in response: to citizen scientists and parents trending to sample local soil, water and air for fallout, sending samples to NGOs then licensed labs for analysis …and to public outcry of related health affects[11] for families and teachers in a 25-mile radius by reactors, dumps and test grounds globally[12] …and to cancer rates of women and girls living within 25 miles of a nuclear reactor (far greater than for males or those living farther away) …and cancer rates of kids under 5 living within 5 miles of nuclear reactors exceeding kids’ at ten miles.
Co-founder Alan Kernoff says in memoriam, “Sister Rosalie Bertell, thank you for your devotion and epidemiology using nuclear industry stats to prove 41,000 people every day get fatal or non-fatal cancer from nuclear industry, (1.2 billion since 1940); this is no longer America’s best kept secret.”[13]
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[1] airborne, seaborne and landborne [2] Yablokov_Chernobyl_book.pdf Published by New York Academy of Sciences, Chernobyl: Consequences of the Catastrophe for People and the Environment, written by scientists who used health data from 1986 to 2004; edited by Janet Sherman. Chernobyl: Consequences of the Catastrophe for People and the Environment: Chapter 11 Chernobyl’s Radioactive Impact on Microbial Biota, by Alexey V. Yablokov [3] News focus is on communities within 25 miles of working or shut down nuclear reactors or dumps and global events and affects of airborne and seaborne nuclear fallout and waste on life in the Pacific Ocean, west coast of the Pacific Basin. of America from Mexico, California, Oregon, Washington, Vancouver CAN, Alaska, to the sub-Arctic, Arctic, Russia, Japan, Hawaii, South Pacific across continental U.S, Europe, Eastern Europe, Eurasia, India and northern hemisphere. All news is documented in our e-book nuclear fallout and fallout directory, comprised of 9,0ll headline-and-descriptive-blurb links to 25,000-to-35,000 published documents (and photos not before available to the general public or scientific community as a whole), primarily of a mainstream nature and secondarily of relevant scientific documentation. [4] from credited published mainstream and/or scientific sources; also, to wit: te 9,011 links to 25,000-to-35,000 published documents; also, there is a separate smaller but all scientific and medical documentation section on the website. [5] in our website and e-book encyclopedic reference database for K-12 kids, parents, college students, scientists and educators who love animals and nature [6] 85-to-95% mainstream and 5-to-15% essential scientific documentation [7] Primarily of a 90% mainstream media and secondarily of a 10% scientific content including 120 pictures never seen by the public or scientific community-as-a-whole. [8] never before aggregated in an e-book for the general public or scientific community [9] (The objective fact filled e-book is accompanied by a companion e-book subjective interpretive narrative. Both e-books have 120 science pictures never seen in one place by the general public or scientific community.) [10] And a relatively smaller documentation section on the website. [11] (epidemic radiation sickness, fetal-, pregnancy and early-childhood issues, birth deformities, learning disabilities, lowered IQ’s, ADHD, immune deficiency diseases, cancer and leukemia) [12] across America, Europe, Ukraine, Belarussia, Kazakhistan, Asia, India, United Kingdom and South Pacific [13] And to Janet Sherman for unwavering life-long devotion to protecting women and children.” And, Arnie & Maggie Gundersen, of www.Fairewinds.org. And, Alexei Yablokov of Russia and Greenpeace founder in Russia, who reported on Russia dumping nuclear reactors and ships in the Arctic; “a man upon whom the authorities had no influence.” .
OUR WEBSITE’S TWO COMPANION E-BOOK VOLUMES
Nuclear Waste & Fallout Reference Database For Citizens Citing Nuclear Reactors: Because Nuclear Power Is Not Safe And Clean
The Pacific Ocean Is Dying and You Don’t Even Know: The Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s Final Solution For Mammals, Gaia And Divine Order
Nuclear Waste & Fallout Reference Database For Citizens Citing Nuclear Reactors: Because Nuclear Power Is Not Safe And Clean
The Pacific Ocean Is Dying and You Don’t Even Know: The Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s Final Solution For Mammals, Gaia And Divine Order
These are our two companion e-books available on our site, www.nuclearweatherforecast.com: the reference database is objective and cold facts presented as 9,011 headline-and-descriptive-blurb links to 25,000-to-35,000 pieces of published documenation, (90% local mainstream coverage and pictures never before presented in one document; and 10% exquisite scientific documentation with 120 pictures never before seen by the general public or scientific-community-as-a-whole collection).
The companion volume is a subjective descriptive narrative based on the emotional impact of reading 9,011 links objectively detailing the destruction and suffering of sentient life in the Pacific Ocean and on land caused by nuclear industry.
The accompanying website strives to keep up-to-date, and provides additional information as to other things (besides nuclear industry) destroying life in the Pacific Ocean and across the planet.
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