Q being right again...2 years later.
(media.greatawakening.win)
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Watch the Water moment?
holy shit
You may be right! I previously thought "watch the water" referred to the DTCC (55 Water Street in NYC), and Robinhood (water = liquidity). But your theory seems to fit better
3 years, my bad!
They will just lye about this incident.
“Vaccines (not all)”
I heard today from friends working in corrections. The Moderna vaccine is being given/offered to all employees, those with antibodies not exempted. Inmates not getting it. New inmates not even tested. Employees being tested weekly, inmates only when complaining of symptoms and then out in ISOLATION. Who would speak up to get put in ISO?
Seems like a recipe for disaster!
Moderna vax is the one correlating with the cytokine storm. RN said it’s 3x’s more “potent” than the other vax. The employees are all getting sick with fevers, aches, etc. I’m praying hard for them all.
I hear from med provider friends, no one has a choice which vax they receive. So far it is optional. Some providers outright lying to patients, telling them it’s “just like the flu vax.”
Modern RNA, er, Moderna! Who wouldn't want to modernize their RNA? Big pharma obviously knows better than God
Why are such systems able to be manipulated remotely?
Lazy admins who don't change default password and stupid managers who insist on being able to remotely check in on things from outside the office at any time.
Or Water treatment facilities control water delivery all over the city too. Everything is controlled remotely from one location. It’s not that their lazy, it’s that one person can’t physically operate a citywide water treatment facility manually.
3 year delta.
I wonder if this is somehow related to that solar wind hack? And if so, how many have been hacked in other cities? I hope they put out a water check alert, I don't live that far from Oldsmar, I better call someone in my county utilities dept tomorrow and ask .
Are you able to connect everything else?
Maybe you should take a look as well, see if anything catches your eye. It's impossible to catch everything as a normal human.
Ironic how the control mechanism of fear is masked as compassion and care for the people. :/
It seems Tampa has been a hot spot of sort lately for things going on. I guess I might get a front row seat, so to speak since I live here. I've been through Oldsmar many of times.
REVELATIONS....spooky
https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/security/lye-poisoning-attack-florida-shows-cybersecurity-gaps-water-systems-n1257173
Secret Service guards the CiC, VP,their famlies,the Treasury etc. This USSS more likely is the United States Signal Service.
Why is the Secret Service investigating a water plant in a county that no-one’s heard of? If it’s somewhere in Virginia, maybe it makes sense but I still don’t know.
What kind of water do you drink bro?!?
WTH?!
NaOH vs. H2O
Your comment is nonsense.
Do you mean dihydrogen monoxide? Because Sodium hydroxide is most definitely not water. That much should be obvious by the "sodium" alone.
But Sodium hydroxide is not toxic. The worst it would do is irritate your eyes in the shower. Its used to make soaps and cleaners. Not sure why they went through all that trouble to be slightly annoying to people in that city's water treatment range.
Contact with sodium hydroxide can kill skin and cause hair loss, according to the National Center for Biotechnology Information. Ingestion can be fatal.
Direct contact or a ridiculously concentrated solution. But once introduced into the water i cant see how they could ever add enough to cause any issues.
I mean they normally add 100ppm to disinfect and remove heavy metals but osha only allows 1.2ppm max daily exposure. So basically none of that ever reaches your faucet.
Even at 11,000ppm i wonder how much would actually reach the faucet.
As someone who once had a weak NaOH solution get in through a paper cut I sure as hell wouldn't want to drink water that had it at that concentration in the article.
Of course everything is concentration dependent but NaOH is a strong base. It is commonly used to neutralize strong acids. In higher concentrations it will melt you. Even in relatively low concentrations usually found in cleaning solutions, NaOH is still very harmful to flesh (you must wear protective gear/gloves/googles, etc.).
I highly recommend you don't drink it because you will certainly die (extremely toxic). People that clean up road kill use it to dissolve biomatter (liquification). Bones left over turn to dust upon touch.
I'm not sure what you are thinking of, but its not Sodium Hydroxide.
All bar soaps have sodium hydroxide in them. How many kids have had bar soaps in their mouths for swearing lmao.
Even if you ate that bar of soap you'd be fine.
Like i said, they already add 100ppm to city drinking water as a disinfectant everyday. None of it reaches your faucet. Most of the amount he added would have added would likely have been absorbed along the way.
But like you said concentration matters. I wonder what the exact concentration would have been at the faucet if it wasnt caught.
Sodium hydroxide may be used in the making of soap (I don't know I'd have to look it up but I don't care, I know chemistry), but it is not "in soap." That's not how chemistry works.
Maybe, but soap is not a NaOH solution.
Again, I'm not going to look it up because its irrelevant. If you add it to water as a disinfectant you are doing one of two things, neutralizing overly acidic water, or killing bacteria (because it strongly kills things). If you use it to kill bacteria you can then follow up with an acid to neutralize it.
Again, do NOT consume NaOH. EVER.
Yeah no doubt, it can be absolutely dangerous. But hydrochloric acid will absolutely destroy you, but can be completely neutralized with a 1:1 ratio of water.
After leaving the treatment plant it would be introduced to a million gallons of water.
What concentration would that have been when it reached the faucet? Hard to tell, im sure someone can figure it out. They increased the concentration 100x at the facility. But there are several more steps to the treatment before even leaving the facility.
Im not downplaying the possibility of how dangerous it is, but the concentration at the faucet would likely have been nothing more than a mild irritant.
For example, apples contain arsenic and cyanide. Concentration matters.
No! Please look up Saponification. There is a chemical reaction between fats and lye (sodium hydroxide), and what remains is a type of salt. This is why real soap tastes salty. If you have lye heavy soap, it can burn your skin. Soaps/detergents might say lye/sodium hydroxide, but that's what goes into making them, not what's left in the final product.
If you've seen Breaking Bad, Sodium Hydroxide is what they put in the bathtub. They also used it in Fight Club when making soap with fat.
Yeah no doubt, it can be absolutely dangerous. But hydrochloric acid will absolutely destroy you, but can be completely neutralized with a 1:1 ratio of water.
After leaving the treatment plant it would be introduced to a million gallons of water.
What concentration would that have been when it reached the faucet? Hard to tell, im sure someone can figure it out. They increased the concentration 100x at the facility. But there are several more steps to the treatment before even leaving the facility.
Im not downplaying the possibility of how dangerous it is, but the concentration at the faucet would likely have been nothing more than a mild irritant.
For example, apples contain arsenic and cyanide. Concentration matters.
Agreed. The fact they can mess with drinking water is terrifying, though.
I worked at a plant way back when and we talked about that all the time. Our infrastructure is basically unprotected. Definitely terrifying that it was done online.
No, no, no, no, no...
HCl can be EXACTLY neutralized by a 1:1 with NaOH. This produces a salt [NaCl] water precipitate with neutral pH.
HCl and NaOH are sorta opposite sides of the same toxic coin. They are both pretty much equally harmful at equal concentrations.
A 1:1 solution of HCl and H2O produces an extremely high molar concentration of Hydrochloric Acid. PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE DO NOT MAKE SUCH A SOLUTION AND CONSUME IT. IT IS NOT NEUTRAL!!!!
You would literally melt. Same as a 1:1 solution of NaOH and H2O.
Please learn chemistry before giving advice on chemical consumption safety. Please. I'm not trying to be demeaning. Please.
There is no NaOH at the faucet. That's not how it works. NaOH in solution splits into the ions Na+ OH-. In a bottle these will for the most part stay in the solution and do nothing. But in a system where it moves, flows, encounters other things such as a cities water supply, the OH- will be neutralized by other things (free H+ from random acids) and the Na+ will either stay in solution or precipitate out with other ions it may encouter (such as Cl-).
It also may be that a cities water supply is slightly basic and there is a predominance of OH-. I don't know, also don't care. That is not a proof that NaOH is "safe" in any way shape or form for consumption.
In this we are in complete agreement.
Sorry its 1:1 with NaOH, but 1:10 to neutralize HCL in water which gives you what a ph of 7? But thats a typo that i will correct.
If NaOH completely disassociates in water then it would never make it out of the plant, which is my point. You have the disinfection stage, then filtration, sedimentation and settling, a chemical coagulation and further settling, aeration, etc etc.
Thats all before it joins the rest of the city water and pumped into a tower, before returning down to city pipes then to your house. It would come in contact with millions of gallons of water and loads of heavy metals along the way from zinc coated steel pipes and lead.
I have a little bit of a chemistry background and worked a water treatment plat for few years in my youth so no need for the condescending tone.
To me this seemed more like an attack on the plant itself then an attempt to poison the water supply. It probably made one hell of a show at the plant when they introduced all that NaOH to water.
Depends on the concentration. NaOH is imported by tankers and gauged the same way as oil, diesel, FO etc. It is very nasty at those concentrations. I can't remember what that is; but it is slimy, viscous like warm maple syrup, and extremely caustic. If you don't immediately wash it off with water vigorously it burns very quickly. And God help you if you ever fell into a tank of that stuff. It's a strong base, and dissociates completely into it's Na and OH. If there's a spill just wash it down with large amounts of water (I'd guess, though who knows what the protocol is). Solution by dilution. Incidentally, one or two drops of regular bleach per gallon of water can help purify water
Dihydrogen monoxide is water.
Umm, no.