Tens of thousands of brave Americans go to work every day in chemical plants, knowing the risks and working as safely as possible. You NEVER hear about the 99.999% of things that went right. You only hear about the 0.001% of things that went wrong.
Still... they stay and deal with it.
I talked to a man once who had my respect. He worked at a mixed-grade gas pumping facility South-West of Houston. If there was ever a major leak and explosive vapors were released that could endanger residential areas nearby, someone would need to set the gas aflame. His job would be to evacuate whoever he could, and then strike a match.
That's the definition of a man. Someone who is willing to sacrifice himself for keeping the community safe. You'll find a lot of that in the Houston chemical plants. People take their responsibility seriously.
... problems with chemical plants, here and abroad...
Recent Global Incidents & Crises
Longview, Washington (USA - April 2026): A chemical implosion at a pulp, paper, and liquid packaging facility (the Nippon plant) killed one worker and left others missing. The incident involved a massive tank failure.
Garden Grove, California (USA - May 2026): A 34,000-gallon tank containing methyl methacrylate at a GKN Aerospace facility began overheating and cracking. This sparked a major state of emergency and the evacuation of roughly 16,000 to 50,000 residents as authorities worked to avoid a catastrophic explosion.
Tiszaújváros (Hungary - May 2026): An explosion and fire in the Olphin 1 unit of a major MOL petrochemical facility resulted in one death and multiple burn injuries. The blast occurred during plant restart operations following scheduled maintenance.
I worked at this mill many, many times before it was sold to Nippon.
It used to be Wheyerhauser paper products.
Maybe someone forgot to open the vent? Or the pressure differencial regulator was stuck?
Tens of thousands of brave Americans go to work every day in chemical plants, knowing the risks and working as safely as possible. You NEVER hear about the 99.999% of things that went right. You only hear about the 0.001% of things that went wrong.
Still... they stay and deal with it.
I talked to a man once who had my respect. He worked at a mixed-grade gas pumping facility South-West of Houston. If there was ever a major leak and explosive vapors were released that could endanger residential areas nearby, someone would need to set the gas aflame. His job would be to evacuate whoever he could, and then strike a match.
That's the definition of a man. Someone who is willing to sacrifice himself for keeping the community safe. You'll find a lot of that in the Houston chemical plants. People take their responsibility seriously.
" He worked at a mixed-grade gas pumping facility South-West of Houston. "
"Cleaned a lot of plates in Memphis
Pumped a lot of 'pane down in New Orleans"
...big wheel keep on turnin'...
It is starting to look like sleeper cells.
...do you see what I see...
What do you see pup?
" What do you see pup?"
... problems with chemical plants, here and abroad...
Recent Global Incidents & Crises
Longview, Washington (USA - April 2026): A chemical implosion at a pulp, paper, and liquid packaging facility (the Nippon plant) killed one worker and left others missing. The incident involved a massive tank failure.
Garden Grove, California (USA - May 2026): A 34,000-gallon tank containing methyl methacrylate at a GKN Aerospace facility began overheating and cracking. This sparked a major state of emergency and the evacuation of roughly 16,000 to 50,000 residents as authorities worked to avoid a catastrophic explosion.
Tiszaújváros (Hungary - May 2026): An explosion and fire in the Olphin 1 unit of a major MOL petrochemical facility resulted in one death and multiple burn injuries. The blast occurred during plant restart operations following scheduled maintenance.
...copied/pasted AI Drivell...
...don't try this at home...
The infrastructure sure seems to be under attack.
If the globalist cabal can't win they'll burn it all down. Evil has a different mind set that most normal folks just can't fathom.
I worked at this mill many, many times before it was sold to Nippon. It used to be Wheyerhauser paper products. Maybe someone forgot to open the vent? Or the pressure differencial regulator was stuck?
Paper mills are nasty!
Oh yes...my eyes are wide open...👀