Sunday, 15 May 2016

AREA-51 WORKERS DIED FROM RADIATION POISONING


In the early 1990's Walter “Wally” Kasza, Robert “Bob” Frost, their widows and twenty-five other Area-51 contractors, represented by Washington D.C. based lawyer Jonathan Turley -filed a lawsuit against the United States government for being exposed to “toxic waste." The contractors had radiation burns that caused their skin to fall off and other symptoms that were consistent with radiation poisoning. 



Enter Bob Lazar, the infamous Office of Naval Intelligence "whistle blower" from Area-51, who came out of the woodwork in May of 1989, a month after the announcement of the SR-71's retirement, alleging that Extraterrestrials, from Zeta Reticuli, were working with humans at the base. Where flying saucers were being reverse engineered. Lazar claimed they were working with the special element 119, not listed on the periodic table, which fueled the saucer. 



According to Lazar, he was hired to work at the base, after two workers were killed in an explosion caused by opening an operating reactor. This story, following the basic outline of what happened to Kasza and Frost, was clearly a dog whistle to the families of the dying and dead workers from Area-51, who came down with radiation poisoning during the decommission of the SR-71 in 1989. Lazar was cluing in these families to shut up. At least twenty-five workers were poisoned during the decommissioning of the Blackbird.  



So, what really happened at AREA-51 in 1989 was a Chernobyl level nuclear accident. An accident that killed dozens of Americans. 








SOURCES:
"Bob Lazar". En.Wikipedia.Org, 2018, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Lazar. Accessed 31 Aug 2018.

"Radon In The Home". Centers For Disease Control And Prevention, 2018, http://www.cdc.gov/nceh/radiation/brochure/profile_radon.htm. Accessed 31 Aug 2018.


Richelson, Jeffrey. "Air Force Tries To Shoot Down Its Own Spy". Los Angeles Times, 9 April 1989, http://articles.latimes.com/print/1989-04-09/opinion/op-1582_1_air-force-chief-blackbird-spy-plane. Accessed 31 Aug 2018.


Turley, Jonathan. "Area 51: The Real Cover-Up". Los Angeles Times, 21 August 2013, http://articles.latimes.com/2013/aug/21/opinion/la-oe-turley-area-51-20130821. Accessed 31 Aug 2018.







Video time 07:40-08:29
Interviewer: A bunch of scientists were killed in the project. What exactly happened there?
Bob Lazar: Allegedly, obviously I did not see this. I do not know it to be fact; but this is what I was told. I was hired to replace one of a couple people who were killed while working on one of the reactors on the crafts. Apparently, they for whatever reason cut open an operating reactor and the device exploded killing both of them. The scientists that were killed there allegedly the detonation from the explosion was fairly large. It would have rivaled a small tactical nuke. So, it was done at the Nevada Test Site and it was to be passed off as an unannounced nuclear test. 

SOURCES AND QUOTES: 
Vulliamy, E. (1994). DYING FOR AN AMERICAN DREAMLAND. The Observer, p.15.
He lost weight rapidly, developed rashes and weeping sores, his stomach swelled, his face peeled, his skin began to crack and bleed. He was cold even in the sweltering desert summer. When he died he was almost blind.

Leiby, R. (1997). Secrets Under the Sun; Out in the Nevada desert is Area 51, a military base so hush-hush it does not officially exist. Tell that to the widows of the men who died there. The Washington Post.
But if the site stokes distrust, it should be for something more down to earth. Mr. Bush's order effectively lets the Air Force flout environmental laws without a public accounting. That is understandably upsetting to a group of former workers and two widows represented by Jonathan Turley, a George Washington University law professor who filed suit in 1994, claiming that exposure to toxic materials illegally burned on the grounds had caused gruesome skin rashes and respiratory ailments.


The New York Times (2003). The Truth Is Out There, but It's Classified. [online] p.Pg. A14. Available at: https://www.nytimes.com/2003/09/27/.../the-truth-is-out-there-but-it-s-classified.html [Accessed 18 Apr. 2018].
But if the site stokes distrust, it should be for something more down to earth. Mr. Bush's order effectively lets the Air Force flout environmental laws without a public accounting. That is understandably upsetting to a group of former workers and two widows represented by Jonathan Turley, a George Washington University law professor who filed suit in 1994, claiming that exposure to toxic materials illegally burned on the grounds had caused gruesome skin rashes and respiratory ailments



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