...did anyone read the actual article? It says "CTEH, a private contractor hired by Norfolk Southern to test water, soil, and air quality in East Palestine, Ohio, has a history of minimizing the effects of environmental disasters to satisfy its corporate employers, according to critics."
Who was it that orchestrated this crash? White-hats?
They were to be heading to the metal plant to help with enviornmental toxicology testing.
IF while testing they found toxic levels of a substance NOT originating from the metal factory their findings would have blown the lid off the E. Palestine cover-up. E. Palestine is not that far away from the metal plant. Keep in mind, their findings would have been used on any insurance and or litigation in the future for those injured or exposed to toxins from the metal plant. It would be adventagious for the metal plants insurance company and lawyers to clearly differentiate between harms caused by their plant accident vs those caused by some other enviornmental disaster to mitigate unneccessary payouts. The extent of the E. Palestine toxicity would be exposed.
...did anyone read the actual article? It says "CTEH, a private contractor hired by Norfolk Southern to test water, soil, and air quality in East Palestine, Ohio, has a history of minimizing the effects of environmental disasters to satisfy its corporate employers, according to critics."
Who was it that orchestrated this crash? White-hats?
Seriously. The idea the blackhats killed these people makes no goddamn sense unless you "but what if ..." yourself until you turn blue.
They were to be heading to the metal plant to help with enviornmental toxicology testing.
IF while testing they found toxic levels of a substance NOT originating from the metal factory their findings would have blown the lid off the E. Palestine cover-up. E. Palestine is not that far away from the metal plant. Keep in mind, their findings would have been used on any insurance and or litigation in the future for those injured or exposed to toxins from the metal plant. It would be adventagious for the metal plants insurance company and lawyers to clearly differentiate between harms caused by their plant accident vs those caused by some other enviornmental disaster to mitigate unneccessary payouts. The extent of the E. Palestine toxicity would be exposed.