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The Water Cooler
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vermont nuke to be buried in texas
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<blockquote data-quote="TinkerTanker" data-source="post: 3909836" data-attributes="member: 50228"><p>To add some context (and some text for searching, like all posts need....) The Vermont power plant was decommissioned in 2014 when the greenie weenies threw a fit and nat gas was undercutting the cost to sell the electricity.</p><p>The plant was sold a couple of times but now it's being torn apart. In West Texas, where there's plenty of "red clay" (uh oh) they can semi-safely bury these radioactive bits and leave them for the thousands of years necessary to let them bleed out. Apparently it's a common thing to do. This one plant has 54 million pounds of radioactive material they're burying out there, and this isn't the first.</p><p></p><p>Anyway, Texas is the place they put stuff that makes you glow because of the ground materials. I think the Texas governor should step up and say they have to take 15 thousand illegals for every truck of radioactive waste though.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TinkerTanker, post: 3909836, member: 50228"] To add some context (and some text for searching, like all posts need....) The Vermont power plant was decommissioned in 2014 when the greenie weenies threw a fit and nat gas was undercutting the cost to sell the electricity. The plant was sold a couple of times but now it's being torn apart. In West Texas, where there's plenty of "red clay" (uh oh) they can semi-safely bury these radioactive bits and leave them for the thousands of years necessary to let them bleed out. Apparently it's a common thing to do. This one plant has 54 million pounds of radioactive material they're burying out there, and this isn't the first. Anyway, Texas is the place they put stuff that makes you glow because of the ground materials. I think the Texas governor should step up and say they have to take 15 thousand illegals for every truck of radioactive waste though. [/QUOTE]
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