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By Rady Ananda
Believe it or not, there is actually a product on the market called "Toxic Waste Short Circuits Bubble Gum." How's that for subliminally mind-warping your children into thinking toxic waste is fun and tastes good, too! Ironically, the Pakistani product has been recalled for "elevated levels of lead," per the FDA. Only Lot #15070SC12, shipped between January 4 and March 18, 2011, is involved.
The candies look like spent uranium fuel pellets from a nuclear power plant. Isn't that cute? Forget that this nuclear waste is more dangerous than the nuclear reactor itself. Those fuel pellets are stored in rod assemblies that are submersed in cooling pools on top of nuclear reactors, as I detailed in a recent post.
Quoting physician and nuclear activist Dr Helen Caldicott:
“There’s far more radiation in each of the cooling pools than there is in each reactor itself…. Now the very short-lived isotopes have decayed away to nothing. But the long-lived ones, the very dangerous ones, Cesium, Strontium, Uranium, Plutonium, Americium, Curium, Neptunium, I mean really dangerous ones, the long-lived ones – that’s what the fuel pools hold.”
Livermore Nuclear Weapons Lab whistleblower and geoscientist, Leuren Moret, recently gave a 65-minute interview where she reported that each of these tiny pellets contain 6% uranium. Hardly something we would want our children to think is fun or tastes good.
To help protect us from radiation poisoning, in the last two minutes of the interview, Dr Moret recommends a diet high in iodine, chlorella (chlorophyll), Miso soup, seaweed, greens, and dark vegetables, but also reverse osmosis filters on the water coming into our homes. (Also see Foods to resist radiation, Emergency Additions to Radiation Protocol, and Dr. Melissa Patterson's more extensive list of radiation resistance foods which also provides dosages for adults.)
Though most subliminal advertising uses sex to sell products, Fred Burks explains that a 2003 "patent describes technology used for behavior modification through TV, computer monitors, video, and DVD programming." According to the patent: “It is therefore possible to manipulate the nervous system of a subject by pulsing images displayed on a nearby computer monitor or TV set. For the latter, the image pulsing may be imbedded in the program material, or it may be overlaid by modulating a video stream.”
Burks notes, "The arsenal of behavior modification technologies developed by government and industry is vast. A number of well researched books on the subject have been published revealing the complexity and variety of these technologies. We highly recommend Dr. Armen Victorian’s Mind Controllers for an excellent overview of the subject." Click here for a 10-page summary.
Candy Dynamics of Indianapolis markets and distributes Toxic Waste Bubble Gum which is also sold in Canada and Switzerland. Given the horrors of nuclear meltdown, the company might want to rethink the candy's name. Astute parents should forbid the purchase of such a repugnantly named product.
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