SCI Government scientists say microbes eating BP oil without using up oxygen

Kent

Inactive
I know a few will discount this but, here it is:

Government scientists say microbes eating BP oil without using up oxygen

By The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Government scientists studying the BP disaster are reporting the best possible outcome: Microbes are consuming the oil in the Gulf without depleting the oxygen in the water and creating "dead zones" where fish cannot survive.

Outside scientists said this so far vindicates the difficult and much-debated decision by BP and the government to use massive amounts of chemical dispersants deep underwater to break up the oil before it reached the surface.

Oxygen levels in some places where the BP oil spilled are down by 20 percent, but that is not nearly low enough to create dead zones, according to the 95-page report released Tuesday.

In an unusual move, BP released 771,000 gallons of chemical dispersant about a mile deep, right at the spewing wellhead instead of on the surface, to break down the oil into tiny droplets.

The idea was to make it easier for oil-eating microbes to do their job. But the risk was that the microbes would use up the oxygen in the water. So BP had to perform a delicate balancing act.

"Has it hit the sweet spot? Yes. Was it by design? Partly," said Steve Murawski, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration senior scientist who headed the federal team of researchers.

One reason that oxygen levels didn't drop too low was the natural mixing of water in the Gulf, which kept bringing in oxygen from other areas, Murawski said. Oxygen levels would have had to fall by three-quarters for the water to be classified as a dead zone, he said.

The Gulf of Mexico already has a yearly major problem with a natural dead zone — this year, it is the size of Massachusetts — because of farm runoff coming down the Mississippi River. Fertilizer in the runoff stimulates the runaway growth of algae, depleting the oxygen in a giant patch of the Gulf every summer.

Federal officials had been tracking oxygen levels and use of dispersants since the spill, which spewed more than 200 million gallons of oil into the Gulf between April and July. Had the oxygen plummeted near dangerous levels, the dispersant use would have been stopped, said Greg Wilson, science adviser at the Environmental Protection Agency's emergency management office.

The use of dispersants has been a source of fierce debate because it involves an environmental trade-off: protecting the shoreline from oil at the risk of causing unknown problems in the deep. While dispersants make it easier for bacteria to degrade the oil, they tend to hide oil below the surface. There have also been concerns about the chemicals' toxicity and the long-term effects on marine life.

In May, the federal government convened about 50 scientists for advice on whether to continue using the dispersants. Though the researchers were divided before the meeting, they unanimously recommended continuing with the chemicals, said University of California Davis oil spill scientist Ron Tjeerdema.

"The best of two options — neither of which were great — was to continue dispersing," Tjeerdema said.

Louisiana State University researcher Ed Overton, who also was part of that meeting, said he feels vindicated. "Right now it looks like an incredibly good idea," he said. "It was a risky but necessary application. Damage was going to be done somewhere."

But Overton said it may be years before scientists know if there is long-term damage from the dispersants.

Last month, after federal officials said much of the oil had dissolved, dispersed or evaporated, outside researchers were skeptical. Two new studies called that into question, finding that invisible underwater plumes of oil remained deep underwater.

But Tuesday's report dovetails with another outside study, published last month, announcing the discovery of a new oil-consuming microbe in the Gulf that was flourishing on BP's spill.

The sagging oxygen levels also lend more weight to the government's claims last month that microbes are consuming oil, because there would be no dip in oxygen if the bacteria weren't feeding on the BP leftovers, Murawski said.

The new work is based on data collected from May through August at 419 locations by nine government and private research ships in the Gulf.

Larry McKinney, director of a Gulf of Mexico research center at Texas A&M University in Corpus Christi, said the new federal data showed that it was a "nearly perfect" outcome.

"They hit it on the head, which is good," said McKinney, who was not involved in the report.

http://lubbockonline.com/money/2010...y-microbes-eating-bp-oil-without-using-oxygen
 

PHD

Veteran Member
I've seen this and have difficulty believing it at first glance.

It is a simple stoichometry equation for the consumption of hydrocarbons by the bacteria. The breakdown has to take oxygen from the water and the bacteria gives off CO2.

However, they are seeing a 20% loss in oxygen. Certainly not a dead zone and could just be the result of simple replacement oxygen.

Stranger things have happened.
 

Barry Natchitoches

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Frankly, I don't believe a word that comes out of the PR machines of either BP nor .gov at this point, when it comes to the oil spill...


BOTH LOST ALL CREDIBILITY many hundreds of deliberate lies and purposeful distortions-of-truth ago...
 

Kent

Inactive
Frankly, I don't believe a word that comes out of the PR machines of either BP nor .gov at this point, when it comes to the oil spill...


BOTH LOST ALL CREDIBILITY many hundreds of deliberate lies and purposeful distortions-of-truth ago...

Lots of blogs in the same boat. I still remember the VOLCANIC TSUNAMI AND POISON GAS ALERT from http://www.33mm.eu/en/backgrounds/bp/index.htm based on crop circles.

It's best to research all info. I would like to see this report and the methods and results. Having said that, it is possible that they are right.
 

milkydoo

Inactive
Unfortunately, the the gov. and MSM have whitewashed this event like they have so many others.

Those who have been affected by this event, and who will continue to be affected by it, are now relegated to local 'tinfoil head' support groups. Countless millions may incur health problems and never have any clue as to where they actually came from.

The skeptics are completely and totally incapable of putting 2 and 2 together.
 

FarmerJohn

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Metabolized does not mean "cleaned up"

I guess it's good news that O2 levels have dropped 20% (if we can trust that figure) because it shows that there is aerobic metabolic activity going on down there.

Metabolized does not mean "cleaned up" but it is a step in that direction.
 

dissimulo

Membership Revoked
Part of the explanation is bound to be the fact that the bacteria produce CO2 as a waste product and, where sunlight is not limiting, phytoplankton growth is often limited by available CO2. So, add more CO2 from the hydrocarbon breakdown and get more phytoplankton and therefore more O2.

In addition, if we are comparing this to a non-dispersed oil spill, where the oil covers the surface, in that scenario phytoplankton cannot perform photosynthesis and oxygen is not easily exchanged at the surface. So, just keeping the oil off the surface is bound to result in an increased oxygen level.
 

Kent

Inactive
Unfortunately, the the gov. and MSM have whitewashed this event like they have so many others.

Those who have been affected by this event, and who will continue to be affected by it, are now relegated to local 'tinfoil head' support groups. Countless millions may incur health problems and never have any clue as to where they actually came from.

The skeptics are completely and totally incapable of putting 2 and 2 together.

You know, some people and governments would like to see us all cowering in fear over everything?

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/37520064/ns/disaster_in_the_gulf/
Skeptical public fears oil-spill health issues
Experts say medical risks will be mild, but many people just don't believe it
By JoNel Aleccia
Health writer

Images of oil-soaked birds and soiled beaches, combined with a general mistrust of industry and government, are making it hard for a skeptical public to believe there won’t be serious health effects from the devastating spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

For nearly seven weeks, local and national health officials have stressed that most medical risks likely will be mild and confined to workers exposed to oil and chemical dispersants at the source of the Deepwater Horizon disaster.

“The human toxicity of oil, it’s pretty low,” said LuAnn White, a toxicologist and director of the Tulane Center for Applied Environmental Health in New Orleans, La. “It looks awful, it’s coating the birds, but the toxicity of those compounds is very low.”

So far, that seems to be true. More than 20,000 workers have been sent to the site, but relatively few have reported illnesses, including up to 11 who were said to be treated and released at a hospital in the past week with flu-like symptoms.

About 70 people in five Gulf Coast states have reported to poison control centers health issues they think are from exposures to the oil spill, with common symptoms including throat irritation, headaches, nausea, cough and dizziness, officials said. About 60 people have reported spill-related exposure complaints to the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals, said spokeswoman Lisa Faust.

A poll of about 550 members by the American College of Emergency Physicians in Louisiana, Mississippi and Florida turned up one doctor who had seen a few patients with possible spill-related illnesses, none serious, mostly generalized malaise.

It's not clear whether the reported illnesses are actually related to the spill, whether they're related to environmental factors such as heat or fatigue, or something else entirely.
 

Kent

Inactive
Another report:


Will the Gulf oil spill cause any health problems? Experts to weigh in at New Orleans meeting

ATLANTA – ATLANTA (AP) — When an Associated Press reporter went scuba diving in the oil-streaked Gulf of Mexico this month, people commenting on websites worried about his health. But at the same time, the oil sure didn't bother some beachgoers in Alabama.

"I was in the water two hours yesterday," said Robert Theil, a French visitor to Orange Beach, as his sister acted as translator. "I'm not worried. It would take a lot before it could hurt you."

Health officials say there seems to be little reason to worry at this point. But some note that health effects months or years from now remain a question mark, particularly for the workers who are in the thick of it, cleaning up oil from the BP spill in the Gulf.

Public health officials and scientists will take up the topic at a two-day meeting beginning Tuesday in New Orleans, organized by the Institute of Medicine at the request of the Department of Health and Human Services. The group will also talk about how best to watch for any potential problems.

HHS has already set aside $10 million to study cleanup workers and Gulf residents over time.

Q: Has anyone gotten sick from the oil spilled in the Gulf?

A: Yes, there have been reports of illnesses, but relatively few among people not involved in the spill cleanup. Most of the reported illnesses were related to odors or fumes. Almost all were mild and temporary, and many were in early May, within the first few weeks of the April 20 explosion. The reports are based on a doctor's assessment, not on lab testing.

All but 35 of the 109 spill-related illnesses in Louisiana have been workers. Alabama has 29 reports of illnesses that might be related to the spill, and Florida and Mississippi have had none.

Q: So, what about the air? It safe to breathe?

A: For those along the coast, for the most part, yes. The Environmental Protection Agency has been monitoring the air since shortly after the spill; readings posted Friday show mostly good air quality. Some earlier results have found low levels of pollutants that can cause temporary problems like headaches, nausea or irritation of the eyes, nose and throat.

The pollutants have periodically pushed an industrial smell onshore in some place — one beachgoer compared it to a machine shop. But an oily odor does not necessarily mean it's harmful, said LuAnn White, director of Tulane University's Center for Applied Environmental Public Health.

Officials continue to test. "We are still concerned," said John Howard, director of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.

And out on the water, tests have detected vapors from benzene, one of the chemicals in the oil that scientists say can cause cancer. The good news is that benzene can evaporate or burn off quickly, so the concentrations are much lower toward land.

Q: What about all those tar balls and splotches of oil on some beaches?

A: It's best to avoid them. Oil on bare skin should be washed off as soon as possible, health officials say. Soap and water, baby oil or petroleum jelly are the best way to remove it. Longer contact can cause skin to redden, swell and burn. The problem can get worse if the skin is exposed to the sun.

White compared it to spilling motor oil on your hands.

"Are you going to get sick? Probably not. But do you want to do it? I don't think so," she said.

But another expert cautioned that some chemicals in the oil and dispersants used in the cleanup can be easily absorbed through the skin. "People aren't paying close attention like they should," said Robert Herrick, an industrial hygiene expert at the Harvard School of Public Health.

Q: Can I swim in it?

A: Better not. You could get oil on your skin, and there's the added possibility of accidentally swallowing whatever's in the water. Louisiana beaches have been closed in Grande Isle and Fourchon, but because of cleanup efforts, not for health reasons. Alabama late last week lifted swimming advisories for beaches in Mobile County, but they remain in place for Baldwin County, near Florida.

Q: Are people along the Gulf coast worried they'll get sick?

A: Some are. Most aren't. There apparently haven't been any surveys asking Gulf residents if they're concerned about their health. But calls to poison control centers have been lower than expected, and officials in some Gulf states say they've heard more angst over the impacts on the environment and local business than about health.

"I look at it this way: It's from the Earth. If you drank it in your drinking water every day it would hurt you. But spend a week in the water on vacation and it's not going to," said Elaine Fox, who visited Orange Beach, Ala., with a group from Family Church in West Monroe, La.

She spent time photographing her pregnant daughter-in-law Christi Fox, 25, who lounged in the surf draped in a white cloth covering a white bikini. A few tar balls stuck to her bathing suit as she walked back to their condominium.

Q: How about the seafood? Is it safe to eat?

A: The president thinks so. Barack Obama ate Gulf seafood during his last visit to Mississippi. He declared that seafood from the region is safe, and also announced stepped-up inspections.

Parts of the Gulf with oil have been closed for fishing. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the Food and Drug Administration are sampling fish from the Gulf and are to begin checking fish that come in to docks.

However, inspectors have yet to make an appearance at docksides, and some restaurants have been putting up signs saying they do not sell Gulf seafood. Some critics say testing needs to improve.

Q: Will there be long-term health effects?

A: They don't know. Some health officials say they don't think long-term illnesses are likely. But they've never seen pollution of this scale, and there are just too many unknowns to say for sure.

"It's theoretically possible, but at this point of time not something people are predicting will happen," said Dr. Thomas Miller, an assistant state health officer with Alabama's health department.

Some chemicals in the oil are associated with a cancer risk. But it can take decades for an environmental trigger to result in cancer. And when cancers do occur, it's difficult to sort out the real cause — for example, whether oil fumes inhaled over two months played a greater role than cigarette smoke inhaled in bars over the course of a lifetime.

While the oil is often described as toxic and poisonous, Tulane's LuAnn White said that can give the wrong impression.

"As a toxicologist, when I think of toxic, I think of something that will cause harmful effects at very low concentrations. Some of these components could cause effects — usually mild effects — but at very high concentrations," she said. "So when we look on a toxicity scale, these are not very toxic compounds."

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2010/06/2...roblems-experts-weigh-new-orleans-meeting/___

AP writers Stephanie Nano in New York and Jay Reeves in Orange Beach, Ala. contributed to this report.
 

Beetree

Veteran Member
Kent I so like your positive attitude. Thank you for sharing it. The article is accurate..probably. You put a lot of thoughts in these posts. From sick people to crop circle stuff :) Why did you put the crop circle stuff? However you might be trying to pacify us folks who are concerned about the marine life dying. You really can't do that if you aren't addressing the marine life. You did not address the marine life at all. Let us face it..BP does not care about the marine life and in every pretty FULL page add they put in the newspapers they say they will clean up the COAST. They never say they will clean the GULF. They say they will clean the OIL. And that is what the dispersants do isn't it? They make the oil dissappear off the SURFACE! They never say that they care about the water in the Gulf. The people that LOVE the Gulf of Mexico don't care about some bacteria, paid scientist or rigged questionaire. They care about the delicate marine life and creatures that have lived and thrived for thousands of years until BP ruined it all. And all the propaganda in the world will not hide the evil they are doing from the millions of us who know what is going on. Don't they know we all see through it? You think that the folks who have SEEN the MILLIONS OF DEAD FISH AND MAMMALS believe that OXYGEN hock of crock!? Thanks for trying. Big question here...
WHY AREN'T THEY TALKING ABOUT THE MARINE LIFE?
CAN IT BE BECAUSE THEY ARE SCOOPING IT ALL UP AT NIGHT...DEAD?


THE TRUTH IS IN THE ARTICLE and it is this TRUTH that has and IS continuing to DESTROY the Gulf of Mexico! See the snip below:

Fair use snip from post #1: The use of dispersants has been a source of fierce debate because it involves an environmental trade-off: protecting the shoreline from oil at the risk of causing unknown problems in the deep. While dispersants make it easier for bacteria to degrade the oil, they tend to hide oil below the surface. There have also been concerns about the chemicals' toxicity and the long-term effects on marine life. Unsnip

And in the snip below apparently there was a VOTE. And do we get to see the QUESTIONARE? No, we do not. What if the question was: Do you think that the dispersant will benefit the BEACHES? See snip below.

Snip: In May, the federal government convened about 50 scientists for advice on whether to continue using the dispersants. Though the researchers were divided before the meeting, they unanimously recommended continuing with the chemicals, said University of California Davis oil spill scientist Ron Tjeerdema.
Unsnip
 

Kent

Inactive
Kent I so like your positive attitude. Thank you for sharing it. Why did you put the crop circle stuff?

Because post # 4 on http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?t=366586 used it as a source for a post that a VOLCANIC TSUNAMI was going to happen July 22 because of the oil rig. I posted a source th some thought was credible as an example of how some blogs were filled with untrue stuff too

However you might be trying to pacify us folks who are concerned about the marine life dying. You really can't do that if you aren't addressing the marine life. You did not address the marine life at all.

My first post contained Government scientists say microbes eating BP oil without using up oxygen, of course Marine life needs O2


Let us face it..BP does not care about the marine life and in every pretty FULL page add they put in the newspapers they say they will clean up the COAST. They never say they will clean the GULF. They say they will clean the OIL. And that is what the dispersants do isn't it? They make the oil dissappear off the SURFACE!

No, dispersants break the oil into smaller drops that bacteria can eat faster


They never say that they care about the water in the Gulf.

Would you believe them if they said it?

The people that LOVE the Gulf of Mexico don't care about some bacteria, paid scientist or rigged questionaire. They care about the delicate marine life and creatures that have lived and thrived for thousands of years until BP ruined it all. And all the propaganda in the world will not hide the evil they are doing from the millions of us who know what is going on. Don't they know we all see through it?

That why I posted "I know a few will discount this but, here it is:"


You think that the folks who have SEEN the MILLIONS OF DEAD FISH AND MAMMALS believe that OXYGEN hock of crock!? Thanks for trying. Big question here...
WHY AREN'T THEY TALKING ABOUT THE MARINE LIFE?
CAN IT BE BECAUSE THEY ARE SCOOPING IT ALL UP AT NIGHT...DEAD?

Source?


THE TRUTH IS IN THE ARTICLE and it is this TRUTH that has and IS continuing to DESTROY the Gulf of Mexico! See the snip below:

Fair use snip from post #1: The use of dispersants has been a source of fierce debate because it involves an environmental trade-off: protecting the shoreline from oil at the risk of causing unknown problems in the deep. While dispersants make it easier for bacteria to degrade the oil, they tend to hide oil below the surface. There have also been concerns about the chemicals' toxicity and the long-term effects on marine life. Unsnip

And in the snip below apparently there was a VOTE. And do we get to see the QUESTIONARE? No, we do not. What if the question was: Do you think that the dispersant will benefit the BEACHES? See snip below.

Snip: In May, the federal government convened about 50 scientists for advice on whether to continue using the dispersants. Though the researchers were divided before the meeting, they unanimously recommended continuing with the chemicals, said University of California Davis oil spill scientist Ron Tjeerdema.
Unsnip

I am posting a side of the story most here will never see any where else. True or not? You decide.
 

Beetree

Veteran Member
Thanks for posting it Kent. I have seen people swimming in the Gulf. It is just hunky dory. Glad they are doing it. Thanks to BP, right! Thank you BP. But..what about the marine life? Doesn't it count too? And like I said it is the TRUTH that is just killing us. Those of us who are keeping up read those sides you read too. We discern. In fact the Captain that committed suicide from the grief and pain of what he saw..said in his final breath.."Its' all for show". He was working for BP. If you could ask BP about the gyrees what do you think they would say? Theres films of it. There are interviews with fishermen that have seen what is going on. Scientists begging and begging for it to stop. You decide. But it is most likely TOO LATE. If you haven't seen the people I have seen break down and cry and wail for hours digging their hands in the sand on the beaches of what used to be a prolific pristeen water full and teeming with mammals and bait fish and God's special delicate creations, then you truly do not know. I have talked to divers who found the crap under the water, and dove down to try to find the bottom of it and could not. The spray is just sinking it and putting sh-- in the water that should not be there. And from what the fishermen are saying..it is causing massive fish kills every time they spray that stuff. The fish can't swim under the oil and get away from it. Because it makes the oil insidious, everywhere. Everyone who loves the Gulf says that any idiot would know that. But the business suits don't know that do they? They have a business, and their business is spraying chemicals and the hell with the rest of us. They talk of oxygen, and bacteria while the fish, porpoises, whales, and well just everything is dying. And they know it but they don't care.
 

milkydoo

Inactive
Warm and fuzzy. I wish I could just believe it.

There is so much contrary information out there that I wouldn't even know where to begin, and I don't have the time and engery to post much of it.

It is a common PTB and skeptic tactic, to tackle certain aspects of a problem, while leaving others completely out of the picture. It's the whole picture that matters, not just one or two items which may or may not be a big deal.

And the government telling us that something isn't harmful enough to worry about? You've got to be kidding me! That's an automatic signal for a full independent investigation!

How many poisons is our government responsible for allowing into our lives, our food, air, water and 'medicine'. How many people have they murdered with their propaganda?

For those that aren't quite ready to buy the usual Fed/Corporate line of BS, bookmark the links in my sig, including Rense, and stay up to date.

Let's not forget that BP has lied from the getgo, and the feds deliberately bumbled around from the getgo.

Here's a few stories off of Florida Oil Spill Law to remind you that the problem is still real!

http://www.floridaoilspilllaw.com/a...directions-water-as-shallow-as-300-feet-photo

ALERT: Scientists find “THICK” layer of oil on seafloor for “DOZENS of miles in ALL directions” — Water as shallow as 300 FEET (PHOTO)

http://www.floridaoilspilllaw.com/feds-now-say-relief-well-kill-may-be-pushed-back-to-october-video

Feds now say relief well kill may be pushed back to OCTOBER (VIDEO)

http://www.floridaoilspilllaw.com/f...o-be-nuked-only-things-alive-are-the-microbes

FALLOUT: Researchers find “layer of oil buried about 3 cm deep” 30 km from wellhead; Bottom-burrowing creatures appeared to be “NUKED”, only things alive are the microbes

http://www.floridaoilspilllaw.com/s...q-miles-of-the-gulf-for-shrimping-and-fishing

Scientist: NOAA used data from just 12 (73 individual -me) SAMPLES of shrimp to say it was safe to reopen 5,130 sq. miles of the Gulf for shrimping and fishing

http://www.floridaoilspilllaw.com/p...es-this-planet-has-ever-seen-with-lab-results

Project Gulf Impact Update: The BP oil disaster “will go down in history as one of the biggest catastrophes this planet has ever seen” (with Lab Results)

http://www.floridaoilspilllaw.com/m...s-scan-of-their-lungs-brain-liver-and-kidneys

MORE Gulf residents blood tests show ethylbenzene, xylene and high levels of hexane — “Told they need a hi-res scan of their lungs, brain, liver and kidneys”

http://www.floridaoilspilllaw.com/a...5-minutes-testing-crew-quickly-abandoned-area

Air monitoring in Orange Beach, AL reported to have reached 110 ppm of VOCs within 15 minutes — Testing crew quickly abandoned area

http://www.floridaoilspilllaw.com/d...ludge-like-waves-bp-says-seaweed-no-oil-video

Destin, FL: “Smelly black mat, hundreds of yards long” trapping marine life; “Nothing but pitch black water” with “sludge-like” waves — BP SAYS “SEAWEED”, NO OIL (VIDEO)

http://www.floridaoilspilllaw.com/a...-catastrophic-1-ppb-of-pahs-damaged-fish-eggs

“A failed year classes” of shrimp or menhaden “could be catastrophic” — 1 ppb of PAHs damaged fish eggs

http://www.floridaoilspilllaw.com/a...m-other-from-gulf-fda-officials-not-concerned

ALL NINE Florida shrimp samples show @ 28 to 31 ppm PAHs, about 30 TIMES more than samples from other from Gulf — FDA officials “NOT concerned”


....and plenty more where those came from. This ain't over by a long shot....
 

denfoote

Inactive
Part of the explanation is bound to be the fact that the bacteria produce CO2 as a waste product and, where sunlight is not limiting, phytoplankton growth is often limited by available CO2. So, add more CO2 from the hydrocarbon breakdown and get more phytoplankton and therefore more O2.

In addition, if we are comparing this to a non-dispersed oil spill, where the oil covers the surface, in that scenario phytoplankton cannot perform photosynthesis and oxygen is not easily exchanged at the surface. So, just keeping the oil off the surface is bound to result in an increased oxygen level.

I bet Algore is going NUTZ right now!!
 

Kent

Inactive
Warm and fuzzy. I wish I could just believe it.


How many poisons is our government responsible for allowing into our lives, our food, air, water and 'medicine'. How many people have they murdered with their propaganda?

For those that aren't quite ready to buy the usual Fed/Corporate line of BS, bookmark the links in my sig, including Rense, and stay up to date.

Rense? I don't know about the others but I know about Rense. For those that aren't quite ready to buy the usual Fed/Corporate line of BS, but will buy the one from Rense. Lets see what they are headlining.

Proven 9-11 Nukes = US Government Involvement
our government used mini nukes to destroy the twin towers

Beware Bogus 9-11 Mini-Nuke Theory
our government did not use mini nukes to destroy the twin towers

The 9th Anniversary of Israel's Attack on the United States.
Israel helped to destroy the twin Towers

The Gulf Blue Plague is Evolving - Part II:
Corexit + Bacteria = Mutated Viruses

The State And Local Bases Of
Zionist Power In America

David Duke for President

US pro-Israel bias demonizing Islam

And lots of others, a few are even good.
 
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