not one person has given a reason why those chemicals were not transferred to tanker trucks and hauled to their destination. that's not rocket science. they drilled holes in the tanks to let the slop drain into a ditch and burned. pure negligence or attempted mass murder!
No. Vinyl chloride is a gas at room temperature and pressure. The tanker contained liquid vinyl chloride which is maintained at a high pressure in order to be liquid. The failed journal box on the train caught fire. The fire was increasing the pressure of the vinyl chloride. The choice was: (A) do nothing and let the vinyl chloride tanks explode, turn into vapor, and descend upon everyone, or (B) pre-empt the explosion by draining the tanks into a burn ditch where the vinyl chloride could be safely converted into carbon dioxide, water, phosgene, and hydrogen chloride. Admittedly, it was more like a five of one, seven of the other kind of choice. Not negligence. Just a bad set of options.
There was no option to transfer the vinyl chloride. Not enough time to muster the required equipment and trained personnel, and no assurance that the plumbing would be oriented to permit evacuation of the tanks. It is by no means clear that any such equipment exists, because it would not have been a standard occurrence. It was, after all, a train derailment scene.
Pay attention to what is being carried on the rails. This is the way we transport many dangerous chemicals, because any other method involves more danger. Pipelines are not practical for most of these chemicals. Tanker trucks are exposed to more hazard on the highways. Things you wouldn't imagine (like molten sulfur). Our modern industry depends on these chemicals. Like I mentioned elsewhere, this has been so for nearly two centuries. These events are rare, but what has happened recently is not a bolt out of the blue. Past events have come and gone, and we have no social memory of them if they did not affect us personally.
You make a good point that this is something that could have been an accident and they didn’t have a good solution and had to choose the best of 2 evils. However if it’s really the case that it’s an accident, then why the media blackout? The media was more than happy to publish up to the minute covid deaths for 2 years..
Also, why did the CDC edit their phosgene profile two weeks before the derailment? They did the same thing with midazolam, the drug used to kill elderly patients in quarantine during the first wave of 'covid' deaths. With midazolam, the CDC increased the prescribed dosage to a lethal one on their website, which medical practitioners referred to during that time. During this time of silent war, I don't believe there are coincidences.
It was an accident. It is not reported because it occurs under the watch of present Department of Transportation head Pete Buttigieg, who must not be criticized or blamed (although some of that is happening anyway). It's all a matter of whose ox gets gored.
not one person has given a reason why those chemicals were not transferred to tanker trucks and hauled to their destination. that's not rocket science. they drilled holes in the tanks to let the slop drain into a ditch and burned. pure negligence or attempted mass murder!
No. Vinyl chloride is a gas at room temperature and pressure. The tanker contained liquid vinyl chloride which is maintained at a high pressure in order to be liquid. The failed journal box on the train caught fire. The fire was increasing the pressure of the vinyl chloride. The choice was: (A) do nothing and let the vinyl chloride tanks explode, turn into vapor, and descend upon everyone, or (B) pre-empt the explosion by draining the tanks into a burn ditch where the vinyl chloride could be safely converted into carbon dioxide, water, phosgene, and hydrogen chloride. Admittedly, it was more like a five of one, seven of the other kind of choice. Not negligence. Just a bad set of options.
There was no option to transfer the vinyl chloride. Not enough time to muster the required equipment and trained personnel, and no assurance that the plumbing would be oriented to permit evacuation of the tanks. It is by no means clear that any such equipment exists, because it would not have been a standard occurrence. It was, after all, a train derailment scene.
Pay attention to what is being carried on the rails. This is the way we transport many dangerous chemicals, because any other method involves more danger. Pipelines are not practical for most of these chemicals. Tanker trucks are exposed to more hazard on the highways. Things you wouldn't imagine (like molten sulfur). Our modern industry depends on these chemicals. Like I mentioned elsewhere, this has been so for nearly two centuries. These events are rare, but what has happened recently is not a bolt out of the blue. Past events have come and gone, and we have no social memory of them if they did not affect us personally.
You make a good point that this is something that could have been an accident and they didn’t have a good solution and had to choose the best of 2 evils. However if it’s really the case that it’s an accident, then why the media blackout? The media was more than happy to publish up to the minute covid deaths for 2 years..
Also, why did the CDC edit their phosgene profile two weeks before the derailment? They did the same thing with midazolam, the drug used to kill elderly patients in quarantine during the first wave of 'covid' deaths. With midazolam, the CDC increased the prescribed dosage to a lethal one on their website, which medical practitioners referred to during that time. During this time of silent war, I don't believe there are coincidences.
It was an accident. It is not reported because it occurs under the watch of present Department of Transportation head Pete Buttigieg, who must not be criticized or blamed (although some of that is happening anyway). It's all a matter of whose ox gets gored.