Every expert in science, finance, and health want control over what you think, achieving it through the "ministry of Truth" (fact checkers). They're all influenced by the same powers that run our governments. How else do they get their government grants, by telling the truth? Fauci Lied. Gates Lied. The climate "scientists" lied. Your news lied. Your doctor's lied. Your teachers lied. Your accountants and bankers lied. And they all lied to who they taught and mentored, trickling down to the local level. And we don't even need them.
We have millions of independent researchers and fact finders throughout the world, people with brilliant minds like Nikola Tesla, regardless of whether they went to college. These self-professed "experts" are irrelevant. We live in the age of information, and they're doing their damnedest to take that away from us.
If we include everything they aren’t telling us, that they are actually doing, perhaps then we would see a Revolution.
“In fact, data CNBC obtained from the Environmental Protection Agency reveals that only nine U.S. states are reporting safe levels of lead in their water supply. These include Alabama, Arkansas, Hawaii, Kentucky, Mississippi, Nevada, North Dakota, South Dakota and Tennessee.”
According to the EPA, 41 states had Action Level Exceedance (ALEs) in the last three fiscal years, meaning states have reported higher than acceptable levels of lead in drinking water. On its website, the EPA published a regulation in 1991 — known as the Lead and Copper Rule — to control lead and copper in drinking water.
“If the action level for lead is exceeded, the system must also inform the public about steps they should take to protect their health and may have to replace lead service lines under their control,”
The water situation in Newark, New Jersey, schools is now in the spotlight as well. John Abeigon, president of the Newark Teachers Union, told CNBC that Newark public schools are a “mini-Flint,” with tests revealing that at least 30 schools in the city show lead contaminated water samples.
Among the steps Brookings suggests that local areas can take to improve these issues includes increasing transparency on any water data collected, producing more detailed metrics of the infrastructure itself and conducting more frequent testing.
From 2016, Video: by 2020 we will be in bad trouble if nothing is done about this water problem: https://www.cnbc.com/2016/03/24/americas-water-crisis-goes-beyond-flint-michigan.html