Heißer Fisch – schwarzer Regen.
Kategorien:Graue Membran, Zeichen
Graue Membran
Heißer Fisch – schwarzer Regen.
Kategorien:Graue Membran, Zeichen
Tagged as: Umerziehung
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Expert: Billions of pieces Fukushima nuclear fuel have spread pretty much everywhere — “It’s truly frightening… wherever there’s cesium, there’s plutonium” — Atomic bomb had one pound of uranium… Fukushima had hundreds of tons — TV: “Abundant quantities” of plutonium are being found (VIDEO)
http://enenews.com/nuclear-engineer-billions-plutonium-particles-fukushima-nuke-plant-spread-pretty-everywhere-frightening-cesium-going-be-plutonium-atom-bomb-1-pound-uranium-fukushima-reactors-hundreds-tons-tv
NEPHILIM ARMY Coming? CERN’s “Black Rain” Video Suggests The ABYSS Will Open
… Black rain/goo describes an infection that entered into humanity through humanity and passed through generations. Interestingly, the term black rain was coined in WW2 to describe nuclear devastation and the effects it has on the human body. …
– See more at: http://thephaser.com/2016/05/nephilim-army-coming-cerns-black-rain-video-suggests-the-abyss-will-open/
Chernobyl effect: Survivors struggle in Russia’s most radioactive area
… When Novozybkov was hit by radioactive rain at the end of April 1986, none of its 40,000 residents could imagine what they would have to go through. It was a warm and sunny day, and the city was preparing for the May holidays.
Sergei Sizov, a basic military combat instructor at the local pedagogical college, was the first person to detect radiation.
At that time, he was teaching his students about a device called radiation dosimeters. When on April 28 national television briefly reported about a “small release” of radiation at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, Sizov decided to check it out himself.
„At eight in the morning on April 29, there was a radiation dose of 11 microsieverts per hour on this corner, and 65 under the drain pipe (a radiation dose of 0.15 microsieverts per hour is seen as normal in Russia),” Sizov said from the exact same spot where he stood 30 years ago.
He tried to raise the alarm in the town, but the local authorities decided to wait for instructions from Moscow. No instructions came for over a week. During this period, Sizov gave iodine drops to his children and students, and forced them to change clothes. By doing so, he saved the children from thyroid cancer. …
http://rbth.com/politics_and_society/2016/04/22/chernobyl-effect-survivors-struggle-in-russias-most-radioactive-area_584671