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Plastic, cardboard boxes, pallets, and other waste are ground up and used in animal feed. The speaker shows videos of the process and expresses disbelief that it is legal. They point out that the official publication for animal feed in America allows plastics, other metal compounds, and contaminated food. The speaker stopped eating pork and wanted to raise awareness about the issue. They feel good when people appreciate their efforts to save lives, even though they are not a doctor.

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Approximately 50 million tons of aluminum, barium, and strontium are being spread annually on land masses worldwide, with catastrophic consequences. The concentration of aluminum in California soils has dramatically increased, affecting plant growth and potentially accumulating in plant tissue. While the amount sprayed may not immediately kill plants, it can accumulate in the soil and on leaves, potentially migrating into plant tissue and edible parts. This leads to nutrient deficiencies, lower health, and a cascade of negative consequences. The senseless application of aluminum is to blame for these issues.

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Plastic, cardboard boxes, and pallets are all ground up and fed to hogs. The speaker is shocked by this process and questions its legality. They show a video of the ground-up material and express disbelief. Another speaker points out that the use of plastics in animal feed is allowed according to the AAFCO, which is the official publication for animal feed regulations in America. They also mention other concerning substances like metal compounds and contaminated food. The first speaker continues to express their disbelief and frustration, emphasizing that they are providing clear explanations in each video.

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Two years ago, a train derailment caused severe chemical contamination near this building, leading to health risks and business disruption. Despite extensive remediation efforts around the site, no decontamination has been done on the building itself, which remains unsafe. The business, which created 50 jobs, has been forced to shut down, losing customers and workers. The owner feels ignored by authorities, who claim the area is safe despite lingering odors and health issues experienced by those who returned. The owner hopes for assistance from the government, particularly from President Trump, to help relocate the business and restore operations. Meanwhile, the site remains a tragic reminder of the disaster, with no clear resolution in sight.

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Speaker 0 states that Girl Scout cookies are a problem. They tested 13 different types of cookies from 25 states, including California, Iowa, and one other state, and the results were published on momsacrossamerica.org. The tests reported 100% positive for glyphosate and 100% positive for heavy metals, at alarming levels. Over 88% of the cookies contained all five of the toxic metals tested: aluminum, arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead. The speaker notes that some of these toxic metals can leave permanent lifetime damage. They claim that over 80% of the Girl Scout cookies had lead levels higher than what the EPA allows. They also state that the aluminum was up to 300 times higher than the exposure level people are supposed to be exposed to, with aluminum readings described as possibly being in the parts per million range (around 29 parts per million). The speaker suggests a possible source for the high aluminum levels, speculating that it could be related to geoengineering, since aluminum is sprayed to manipulate clouds to create rain, though they say further testing needs to be done on that hypothesis.

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The speaker believes the average Houston resident assumes their recycling is being processed, but it's actually sitting in a lot. The speaker placed 12 Apple AirTags in recycling bags to track their journey. Two bags ended up at FCC Environmental, one remained at the dump, and nine ended up at the same lot where the speaker is standing.

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An underground lithium battery storage plant for bicycle batteries was discovered, posing a significant hazard. Hazmat teams are working to contain the situation due to the dangerous nature of the materials. Air quality in the affected area remains very high and dangerous.

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My drone captures a massive camp with numerous houses and quarantine camps for children. The facility appears to be expanding, possibly funded by tax dollars. The speaker questions the legitimacy of the operation and notes the presence of surveillance and private property signs. They express concern over the scale of the camp and the unknown activities occurring there.

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It's alarming to see the amount of trash around here, especially along the road I drive my kids to school on. The sight of discarded appliances like fridges and ovens is horrific and unfortunately common. This isn’t an isolated incident; it reflects a broader issue in the area. One notable place, White Duck Taco, which I used to enjoy visiting with my wife, is completely gone. It's frustrating to think about the local community's inability to clean this up with the limited equipment available. Large machinery is necessary to handle the scale of the mess.

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A controversial project in Las Vegas plans to build 3,000 homes on the site of the "3 Kids Mine," a former manganese mine used during World War I. The soil contains arsenic, lead, and asbestos, posing health risks. The cleanup involves burying the toxic soil under 10 feet of clean soil because it is too toxic to remove. The cleanup is estimated to cost between $185 and $250 million. Future homeowners will pay for the cleanup through property taxes over 45 years.

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I'm here to show you these old turbine blades that have been dumped. Despite being called renewable energy, there's nothing renewable about them. These blades are quite short, around 20 meters, and they're worn out with not much life left. Recycling them is a challenge, and they sit here like massive beach whales. Compared to the ones in action, they're not that big. So when they run out, they'll just be sitting here, telling a story. The Chilumbin wind farm cost $1.4 billion, but in 15 years, these blades will still be here, not being used.

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The speaker shows a dumpster filled with various products, including lemon juices, gift bags, toys, Scotch tape, and scissors. They express their frustration and disbelief at the amount of waste, mentioning that even the recycle bin is full. The speaker feels overwhelmed and mentions needing a semi truck to handle the situation. They find it disgusting and express the need to do a lot of work.

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A large number of new fashion products are discarded or incinerated, highlighting a troubling aspect of the fashion industry. This practice contributes significantly to greenhouse gas emissions and positions the industry as one of the major environmental polluters.

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I'm here to show you these old turbine blades that have been dumped. Despite being called renewable energy, there's nothing renewable about them. These blades are quite short, around 20 meters, and they're worn out with little life left. Recycling them is a challenge. Compared to the massive ones we've seen in action, these blades are not that big. When they run out, they'll just sit here like beached whales. This highlights the story of the Chilumbin wind farm, which cost $1.4 billion but will end up abandoned in 15 years.

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Solar panel waste is highly toxic and requires special disposal. However, due to the high cost involved, discarded panels are being sent to landfills in poor countries instead. Research shows that by 2030, there will be around 8 million tons of green waste, which is expected to increase to 80 million tons by 2050.

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This area in Portland is the worst I've seen so far. It stretches along both sides of the street for quite a distance, specifically at 33rd and Columbia. The extent of the problem is hard to believe.

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He just drove from way down there. Now he's over here. Load not bins and shitter, it looks like. All of this will just be taken out of here and driven straight out of here onto the highway. No decontamination protocol, no scraping of the kill pen hay before they leave. Nobody's wearing hazmat stuff anymore or PPE. Just loading up bins driving through kill hay weird stuff with sprayers in bathrooms And the destruction of the garlic property. At least the drones and the warming tent and most of the RCMP surrounding this property have left. Such a skeleton crew, I would say now.

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Minerals being tested include arsenic, barium, cadmium, chromium, lead, mercury, selenium, silver, and manganese. The results show significant exceedances above permissible levels: arsenic (0.01 vs. 8.27), barium (0.05 vs. 853.73), chromium (0.05 vs. 57.42), lead (0.05 vs. 194.06), and selenium (0.2 vs. 2.26). Bumpus Cove has a history of nuclear fuel activity and dumping over decades. It's unclear if the contamination is due to Hurricane Helene or past dumping. The sample was taken from the mud flats in Bumpus Cove, suggesting that the contamination may stem from the silt of the Nolichucky River after the hurricane, rather than groundwater issues from the 1980s.

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I'm here to show you these old turbine blades that have been dumped. Despite being called renewable energy, there's nothing renewable about them. These blades are quite short, around 20 meters, and they're worn out with little life left. Recycling them is a challenge, so they end up sitting here like beached whales. This is the fate of the turbines from the chilumbin wind farm, which cost $1.4 billion. In 15 years, they'll still be sitting here, telling a story of wasted resources.

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We attempted to unload a heavy container but couldn't get it off the trailer. A crew was sent to another yard, and I received a call about a serious issue. One worker collapsed, revealing a mutilated body. It was shocking to see the remains of infants, with body parts scattered. The sight was horrifying and made us feel sick. The container was filled from front to back with these remains. As a supervisor, I learned through the media that 17,000 infants had been stored in the container. An investigation was requested, revealing that about 190 were over 20 weeks old, some as old as 27 weeks.

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Copper and aluminum are the primary beneficiaries of the grid spending increase. That $800,000,000,000 is going to buy copper, which is money. The oil market, compared to the metals market, is dwarfed by the demand for metals like copper, aluminum, iron ore, gold, and nickel, which are said to be so thinly traded and critical that there is no chance to get off crude oil. You can’t build electric cars, windmills, solar, or a modern military without these metals. Underwater power cables are expensive, and offshore wind and bringing that electricity green requires copper—copper, copper, copper. Copper now is described as a trillion-dollar annual market by tomorrow morning. There is no copper inventory to meet this demand. Since Mohenjo Daro, humanity has mined 700,000,000 metric tons of copper. If we put that in a big cube for scale (about 4 thirty-meter sides), approximately 80% of all the copper ever mined is still in human possession. Recycling could recover about 80% of that 700,000,000 tons, but it would require tearing down every building in the United States, Europe, Japan, and China. We can recycle copper from buildings and even from the university in front of us, but the consequence would be living in the dark. Currently, we consume 30,000,000 tons of copper per year, with only 4,000,000 tons recycled. To maintain 3% GDP growth with no electrification, this speaker claims we must mine the same amount of copper in the next eighteen years as we mined in the last ten thousand years. In the next eighteen years, we would need to mine the same copper volume as mined in the entire previous span of human history, without electrification, without data centers, without solar and wind, and without the greening of the world economy. Since 1900, the energy required to produce copper has increased sixteen-fold, and as ore grades decline, more energy is needed to produce the same metal while water consumption has doubled. Grades are declining globally, and easy copper mines are depleted; Chile is highlighted as a major producer (24% of global copper mine production), yet costs are in the third or fourth quartile. They burn coal in the Chilean grid, and solar is ineffective for mining because the sun only shines a few hours a day; solar is useless without grid-scale storage. The speaker asserts we are heading for a train wreck in Chile and that we need six giant tier-one mines online every year from now until 2050 to meet copper demand for electrification, data centers, and grid upgrades—40% of the production to come from new mines. All the hype about AI is dismissed as fantasy because we do not have the energy. Nuclear power is proposed as a solution, but what are those plants made of? All the metals mentioned earlier. The country reportedly does not have the capability to weld containment vessels in a traditional nuclear power plant anymore, whereas Korea can build a nuclear power plant.

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Speaker 0: And it's no secret that the government always approves of some new way to poison us, but liquefying bodies and potentially putting them back into the drinking supply is a whole new level of ick. It's called alkaline hydrolysis, and it is water cremation. Being coined as the new cleaner, greener, and eco friendly way to dispose of your loved ones. But here's what really happens. A body is placed inside of a steel vat with chemicals, typically potassium hydroxide, where it is heated under a high temperature, which liquefies the body. All that's left is the bones, which are then ground up and give back to the family as ashes. The rest is flushed down the drain. That liquefied human goes through the wastewater treatment and gets recycled back into the municipal water supply, the same water supply that comes out of your tap if you're on city water. Now they advertise this as biologically sterile, but here's what can survive. Prions, they're tiny misfolded proteins typically found in the brain. Mad cow disease, heat resistant pathogens like hepatitis a, pharmaceutical residues like chemotherapy, antidepressants, and hormones, heavy metals like those nice mercury fillings, lead and arsenic, synthetic materials from implants, or medical devices. Standard treatment doesn't eliminate those things. We are not just talking about contamination here. As if it's not gross enough, people flush their pharmaceuticals, their aborted babies, and everybody's goes down it. Now we're adding liquefied human remains. Let's call it what it is, ritualistic state approved cannibalism. Most of you don't even know you're consuming trace amounts of the dead. This is not just disrespectful. It's a spiritual, ethical, and biological violation, all in the name of sustainability. And news flash, it's legal in 28 states.

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People in Houston dropping off plastic might assume it goes to a recycling center, but bags with Apple trackers ended up at Wright Waste Management. Drones revealed piles of plastic waste stacked over 10 feet high. Storing plastic outside in the heat is a fire problem. Documents show Wright Waste Management has failed three county fire safety inspections. As of the date of filming, the company had applied to store plastic waste but had not been approved.

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Minerals being investigated include arsenic, barium, cadmium, chromium, lead, mercury, selenium, silver, and manganese. The following elements exceeded permissible exposure levels: arsenic (0.01 vs. 8.27), barium (0.05 vs. 853.73), chromium (0.05 vs. 57.42), lead (0.05 vs. 194.06), and selenium (0.2 vs. 2.26). Bumpus Cove has a history of nuclear fuel activity and dumping over decades. It's unclear if the soil contamination is due to Hurricane Helene or past dumping. The sample was taken from the mud flats in Bumpus Cove, suggesting the contamination may be from the silt of the Nolichucky River after the hurricane, rather than groundwater issues from the 1980s.

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The speakers describe an eerily devastated site with extensive property damage and a semi-dismantled kill pen in the background, suggesting blood, carnage, and possible biohazard concerns. They note that the perpetrators “drove all around it and left,” then disappeared, leaving behind an impression of what happened. Speaker 1 observes enormous bales—much larger than typical hay bales—stacked on the property, describing them as about a foot to four feet high. They remark that birds are landing inside the area and pecking at whatever is there. They reference video from the day with dead ostriches still present, noting flocks of birds arriving, implying concern about the bird flu. The speakers recount that “they drove all around in the killing fields” and “kicking up hay as they left,” describing the act as tearing down their operations and leaving in a dismissive manner after terrorizing the family for a long period and slaughtering many birds. They mention “a thousand rounds” fired by marksmen that night, and state that this had “nothing to do with avian flu,” asserting that those shots were unrelated to the flu. Speaker 0 points to a pickup they saw stuck and seized in the area, with windows left open, illustrating the chaos and mess left behind. They emphasize the long duration of distress endured: “eleven months of hell, over six weeks or something like that of having this occupied land,” with RCMP provoking people and CFIA marksmen shooting, followed by the aftermath. Speaker 1 echoes the mess, suggesting it would have been easier to stack the birds or manage them differently, rather than creating the visible wreckage. They reiterate the claim that if the situation is labeled a biohazard, wild birds are currently seen around the area. They observe birds flying over the site, including a duck, indicating ongoing wildlife presence. Both speakers conclude by questioning the process: with an anonymous tip or accusation triggering CFIA involvement, suspicion alone seems to trigger actions that lead to destruction of holdings. They assert that CFIA will come in, destroy everything, and leave scorched earth, killing all animals, presenting this as the outcome. They end with the statement that this is Canada, folks.
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