Why your kid’s school can’t visit the Refuge
Got that? “Although certain officials have said the site is safe, I thought that, in solidarity with our partners, like Denver Public Schools and Adams (county school districts) that it would be beneficial to forgo those field trips.” [bottom first box at right]
There is not a single ‘scientist’ among the Peace&Justice crew capable of or interested in examining the actual dose from inhaling or ingesting plutonium in dust. As you have seen elsewhere on our website, 50-year doses from alpha radiation are comparable to that from eating xx bananas.
In episode 5 of his podcast series Changing Denver, Paul Karolyi was troubled by this cascade of misinformation. Read how Lisa Flores defended her position here. One dose of P&J fear mongering caused an inadequately prepared and totally clueless school board to capitulate. Then all P&J needs to do is point out to other school boards the action of the first. Voilà: a domino effect of ignorance and fear, with international attention, without an iota of scientific evidence.
Although we’ve made it fairly easy for school districts to back off from these pathetic episodes, probably the most effective approach is the threat of legal action, one of the reasons we need external help.
Read the inept response of Lisa Flores to Paul Karolyi’s queries about the school board ‘decision’. She said nothing about experts at that time, nor are there experts on the anti-Refuge side. There is no dissent among those who understand plutonium dosimetry.
Once again, the fatuous “not the cleanup we paid for” argument, a favorite of anti-Refuge people who know neither the chemistry or physics, or the history.
Dr. Mark Johnson has made his legacy one of fear mongering and reluctance or inability to read the scientific literature about Rocky Flats, although he had 30 years to acquaint himself with the issues.