The following article HIGHLIGHTS EXACTLY WHAT I TALKED ABOUT in the Darren Wilson Day Post. The Environmental Protection Agency of Nazi-America is taking responsibility for the toxic spill from an old mine that had been corked. WHAT I NEED TO KNOW IS WHO OWNED THOSE MINES AND WHY HAVEN'T THOSE PEOPLE BEEN FORCED TO PAY UP FOR HAVING OVERRUN THEIR MINES WITH TOXIC WATER AND POLLUTANTS IN THE FIRST PLACE!
This article LISTS HOW LONG THIS SHIT! HAS BEEN ALLOWED TO FUCKIN PILE UP AND PILE UP AND PILE UP AND PILE UP! Meanwhile, NOBODY HAS BEEN HELD ACCOUNTABLE TO FUCKIN CLEAN IT THE FUCK UP!
Now? I know some of you might be like "Fuck are you mad about?" I'll tell you what the fuck I'm mad about.
I FUCKIN LIVE ON THIS PLANET, THAT'S WHAT THE FUCK I'M FUCKIN MAD ABOUT! AND I'M TIRED OF THESE SILLY-ASS FUCK-UP'S THAT GREEDY-ASS WHITES MAKE AND THEN NEVER GET CARTED OFF TO FUCKIN JAIL FOR IT!
The assholes in the upcoming article, have been playing TAG! For CLOSE TO 100 YEARS OF BULLSHIT! So the problem has been kicked down the road. Kicked down the road. KICKED DOWN THE ROAD! TILL!? OOPS!? I FUCKED UP! Sorry about that, NOW SHIT IS FUCKED UP!
THAT'S WHY I'M FUCKIN ANGRY!
Here's the fuckin article;
DURANGO, Colo. — The Animas River is the cultural soul of
this patch of southwestern Colorado, a sort of moving Main
Street that hosts multiple floating parades a year and is typically
bustling with rafters and kayakers. Schoolchildren study the
river. Sweethearts marry on its banks. Its former name, given by
Spaniards, is el Río de las Ánimas, the River of Souls.
But since Wednesday, the Animas has been grievously polluted
with toxic water spilled from one of the many abandoned mines
that pockmark the region — a spill for which the Environmental
Protection Agency has claimed responsibility, saying it accidentally
breached a store of chemical-laced water.
On Sunday, anger over the spill boiled over after the agency
announced that the amount of toxic water released was three times
what was previously stated — more than three million gallons rather
than one million — and that officials were still unsure if there was
a health threat to humans or animals.
The day of that announcement, State Senator Ellen Roberts, a Republican who lives near the river, cried softly as she considered the pollution, adding that she had dropped her father’s ashes in
the depths of the river, which pollutants had turned into an
unnatural-looking yellow-orange ribbon.
“It is not just a scenic destination,” Ms. Roberts said. “It is where
people literally raise their children. It is where the farmers and
ranchers feed their livestock, which in turn feeds the people. We’re
isolated from Denver through the mountains, and we are pretty
resourceful people. But if you take away our water supply, we’re
left with virtually no way to move forward.” (WELCOME TO THE
BLACK EXPERIENCE BITCH! ISN'T IT FUN! YAYYYYY! >_<)
On Monday, Gov. John W. Hickenlooper released $500,000 in
funds for assistance. The City of Durango and La Plata County
have declared states of emergency.
Soon after the spill was detected, city officials stopped pumping
water from the Animas into the reservoir that provides drinking
water for Durango’s 17,000 residents — taking action swiftly enough
that the contamination did not reach the drinking supply. The
reservoir still receives water from the Florida River, a tributary of
the Animas, but the city has asked local residents to conserve so that
the reservoir does not get too low.
Most people living outside the city use wells, and officials say about
1,000 residential water wells could be contaminated.
The river is closed indefinitely, and the county sheriff has hastily
recast his campaign signs into posters warning river visitors to stay
out of the water. The yellow plume has traveled down to New
Mexico — where officials in several municipalities have stopped
pumping river water into drinking water systems, fearing
contamination — and to the Navajo Nation.
Testing by the E.P.A. — an agency typically in the position of
responding to toxic disasters, not causing them — found that the
wastewater spill caused levels of arsenic, lead and other metals to
spike in the Animas River.
On the day of the accident, a team from the agency had been
investigating an abandoned mine about 50 miles north of here.
Called the Gold King, it is roughly 1.5 miles long and about 700
feet tall at its highest point. The mine had been abandoned for
nearly a century, but between roughly 1890 and 1920 it produced
350,000 ounces of high-grade gold, according to its owner.
For years, the Gold King has leaked toxic water at a rate of 50 to
250 gallons a minute. The agency had planned to find the source
of the leak in the hope of one day stanching it. Instead, as workers
used a backhoe to hack at loose material, a surprise deluge of
orange water ripped through, spilling into Cement Creek and
flowing into the Animas. The burst did not injure workers.
In his first interview since the spill, the owner of the mine,
Todd Hennis, said the spill was probably the fault of another
mine company — the Sunnyside Gold Corporation — that had
built retention walls inside an abandoned mine near the Gold King
, part of an old cleanup agreement with the federal government.
Once the Sunnyside mine filled with wastewater, the water
probably spilled into the Gold King, and then into the Animas,
Mr. Hennis said.
He urged Sunnyside’s parent company, the
Kinross Gold Corporation, to clean up the mess. “They’ve got to
step forward and be responsible,” he said of Kinross (AFTER THE
FUCKIN FACT! NOW THAT SHIT IS FUCKED UP!). A spokesman
for Sunnyside, Larry Perino, said the company had no role in
Gold King spill.
Since the 1870s, metal mining has both enriched and poisoned
this region, turning the earth under portions of southwest Colorado
into a maze of tunnels and leaving behind shuttered sites oozing
with chemicals. There are about 200 abandoned mines in the
Animas watershed. Sunnyside was the last to close, in 1991.
On Sunday night, residents packed a school auditorium in
Durango for a meeting with the E.P.A.’s regional director,
Shaun McGrath. During a public comment session that lasted more
than two hours, residents flouted a sign on the wall that instructed
the auditorium’s typical patrons — middle schoolers — to refrain
from calling out, jumping up or insulting others during assemblies.
Shouts rang out. A few people cried. One resident questioned whether
the agency had refashioned itself into the “Environmental Pollution
Agency.” (ANNNNNNNNNNND, WHITE PEOPLE! So these
DUMB-FUCKS DON'T GET IT! THAT SHIT HAD BEEN SITTING
AND GETTING WORSE AND WORSE FOR FUCKIN DECADES!
BUT IN TYPICAL FUCKIN WHITE FASHION, DON'T GIVE TWO
FUCKS AS LONG AS IT WAS OUT OF SIGHT! OUT OF MIND!
BUT WHEN WE DO THAT KIND OF SHIT, THEY PUT US ON
BLAST AND HAVE NEWS MEDIA FIELD DAYS OVER OUR
IGNORANCE OF HOW BAD SHIT TRULY WAS, FUCK OUTTA
HERE! THESE FOOLS! AREN'T TALKING ABOUT THE FUCKIN
WHITE WEALTHY AND RICH-WANNA-BE'S WHO STARTED
THIS SHIT!) Others demanded to know what would happen to
wildlife, livestock, water wells, sediment and river-based jobs.
“When — when can we be open again?” asked David Moler, 35,
the owner of a river-rafting company who had approached a
microphone. “All I hear is a handful of ‘gonna-dos,’ ” he added.
“What should I tell my employees?” (TELL THEM THEY HAVE NOW
ENTERED, THE BLACK PEOPLE ZONE! PLEASE STANDBY FOR
HELP THAT IS NOT FUCKING COMING! FIGURE SHIT OUT
BITCHES! FIGURE SHIT OUT OR DIE!)
Mr. McGrath and his colleagues urged patience and assured
residents that they would provide information about health
risks once they had it. The agency, he said, is awaiting test results
to determine whether the water poses a risk.
“We’re going to continue to work until this is cleaned up,”
Mr. McGrath said, “and hold ourselves to the same standards
that we would anyone that would have created this situation.”
(HOLD UP!? HAHAHAHAHAHHAHAAH! BUT YOU WERE
CLEANING SHIT UP THAT CAUSED THIS MESS!? BECAUSE
YOU DIDN'T HOLD THEM ACCOUNTABLE IN THE FIRST
FUCKIN PLACE! IDIOT!)
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